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Home > Politics > History > Stalin and His Role In Br...
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Stalin and His Role In Bringing Communism to Russia
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Joseph Stalin was one of the original revolutionaries for communism in
Russia. Ironically, Stalin’s idea of the communist state was much more
about privilege and dictatorship than equality for the people.
Stalin and His Role In Bringing Communism to Russia
Joseph Stalin, born Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili, was the second
communist leader of the Soviet Union. Originally educated to become a
priest, Stalin (he adopted the name in 1913) became involved with the
socialist and Marxist parties while at seminary school. He spent many
years throughout this period campaigning for the Communist party, being
jailed for his beliefs and even exiled to Siberia. Stalin and Communism
are two terms that go hand in hand, as his rise to power in the party
cemented Communism as the political system for the Soviet Union.
Stalin started his Communist rise to power in the year 1912. At this
time, he was brought into the Bolshevik's Central Committee at the
Prague Party Conference. Stalin was already the editor of the Communist
newspaper “Pravda”, and used his influence with the paper to push
against the agenda of Vladimir Lenin. After the February Revolution, in
April 1917, Joseph Stalin was elected to the Central Committee, and by
May was also elected to the Politburo of the Central Committee, a
position that he held onto for the rest of his life.
Most accounts state that Stalin did not actually play a major role in
the November 7 revolution, although later books written by him and his
staff state that he was in fact a huge part of the revolution. He
created a fictional “Party Centre” where he and his staff were
controlling all that went on during this time. On April 3, 1922, Joseph
Stalin was elected to the position of the General Secretary of the
Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party. From this vantage
point, he managed to build up the position to the most powerful one in
the country.
Stalin surprised his fellow party members by the way he was filling the
major party offices with his allies, and he even took the dying Lenin
by surprise. Lenin proposed that the “rude” Stalin should be removed
from his office, but upon a vote from congress, this was denied – Lenin
was deemed to be too ill to know what he was writing. Upon Lenin's
death, Stalin and Communism took a sharp turn. Stalin knew that he had
to appear loyal to Lenin in order to be seen as the next Communist
leader, so he made sure to arrange Lenin's funeral and profess his
loyalty. He undermined his biggest opponent, Trotsky, so that he could
usurp the position.
Stalin gained his supreme rulership in 1928, after expelling much of
his opposition from the party. He gained the trust and adoration of the
people at first by proclaiming himself “a man of the people”. By this
time, however, Stalin made it so no one could oppose him even if they
wanted to, he had supreme power.
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