So much for the organization, with
its Communist Party, its system of meetings and counter-meetings,
its adapted Trades Unions, its infinitely various
propaganda, which is doing its best to make headway
against ruin. I want now to describe however
briefly, the methods it has adopted in tackling the
worst of all Russia’s problems-the non-productivity
and absolute shortage of labor.
I find a sort of analogy between these
methods and those which we used in England in tackling
the similar cumulative problem of finding men for
war. Just as we did not proceed at once to conscription,
but began by a great propaganda of voluntary effort,
so the Communists, faced with a need at least equally
vital, did not turn at once to industrial conscription.
It was understood from the beginning that the Communists
themselves were to set an example of hard work, and
I dare say a considerable proportion of them did so.
Every factory had its little Communist Committee,
which was supposed to leaven the factory with enthusiasm,
just as similar groups of Communists drafted into the
armies in moments of extreme danger did, on more than
one occasion, as the non-Communist Commander-in-Chief
admits, turn a rout into a stand and snatch victory
from what looked perilously like defeat. But this
was not enough, arrears of work accumulated, enthusiasm
waned, productivity decreased, and some new move was
obviously necessary. This first move in the direction
of industrial conscription, although no one perceived
its tendency at the time, was the inauguration of
what have become known as “Saturdayings”.
Early in 1919 the Central Committee
of the Communist Party put out a circular letter,
calling upon the Communists “to work revolutionally,”
to emulate in the rear the heroism of their brothers
on the front, pointing out that nothing but the most
determined efforts and an increase in the productivity
of labor would enable Russia to win through her difficulties
of transport, etc. Kolchak, to quote from
English newspapers, was it “sweeping on to Moscow,”
and the situation was pretty threatening. As
a direct result of this letter, on May 7th, a meeting
of Communists in the sub-district of the Moscow-Kazan
railway passed a resolution that, in view of the imminent
danger to the Republic, Communists and their sympathizers
should give up an hour a day of their leisure, and,
lumping these hours together, do every Saturday six
hours of manual labor; and, further, that these Communist
“Saturdayings” should be continued “until
complete victory over Kolchak should be assured.”
That decision of a local committee was the actual beginning
of a movement which spread all over Russia, and though
the complete victory over Kolchak was long ago obtained,
is likely to continue so long as Soviet Russia is
threatened by any one else.
The decision was put into effect on
May 10th, when the first Communist “Saturdaying”
in Russia took place on the Moscow-Kazan railway.
The Commissar of the railway, Communist clerks from
the offices, and every one else who wished to help,
marched to work, 182 in all, and put in 1,012 hours
of manual labor, in which they finished the repairs
of four locomotives and sixteen wagons and loaded
and unloaded 9,300 poods of engine and wagon parts
and material. It was found that the productivity
of labor in loading and unloading shown on this occasion
was about 270 per cent. of the normal, and a similar
superiority of effort was shown in the other kinds
of work. This example was immediately copied on
other railways. The Alexandrovsk railway had
its first “Saturdaying” on May 17th.
Ninety-eight persons worked for five hours, and here
also did two or three times as much is the usual amount
of work done in the same number of working hours under
ordinary circumstances. One of the workmen, in
giving an account of the performance, wrote: “The
Comrades explain this by saying that in ordinary times
the work was dull and they were sick of it, whereas
this occasion they were working willingly and with
excitement. But now it will be shameful in ordinary
hours to do less than in the Communist ‘Saturdaying.’”
The hope implied in this last sentence has not been
realized.
In Pravda of June 7th there is an
article describing one of these early “Saturdayings,”
which gives a clear picture of the infectious character
of the proceedings, telling how people who came out
of curiosity to look on found themselves joining in
the work, and how a soldier with an accordion after
staring for a long time open-mouthed at these lunatics
working on a Saturday afternoon put up a tune for them
on his instrument, and, delighted by their delight,
played on while the workers all sang together.
The idea of the “Saturdayings”
spread quickly from railways to factories, and by
the middle of the summer reports of similar efforts
were coming from all over Russia. Then Lenin became
interested, seeing in these “Saturdayings”
not only a special effort in the face of common danger,
but an actual beginning of Communism and a sign that
Socialism could bring about a greater productivity
of labor than could be obtained under Capitalism.
He wrote: “This is a work of great difficulty
and requiring much time, but it has begun, and that
is the main thing. If in hungry Moscow in the
summer of 1919 hungry workmen who have lived through
the difficult four years of the Imperialistic war,
and then the year and a half of the still more difficult
civil war, have been able to begin this great work,
what will not be its further development when we conquer
in the civil war and win peace.” He sees
in it a promise of work being done not for the sake
of individual gain, but because of a recognition that
such work is necessary for the general good, and in
all he wrote and spoke about it he emphasized the
fact that people worked better and harder when working
thus than under any of the conditions (piece-work,
premiums for good work, etc.) imposed by the revolution
in its desperate attempts to raise the productivity
of labor. For this reason alone, he wrote, the
first “Saturdaying” on the Moscow-Kazan
railway was an event of historical significance, and
not for Russia alone.
Whether Lenin was right or wrong in
so thinking, “Saturdayings” became a regular
institution, like Dorcas meetings in Victorian England,
like the thousands of collective working parties instituted
in England during the war with Germany. It remains
to be seen how long they will continue, and if they
will survive peace when that comes. At present
the most interesting point about them is the large
proportion of non-Communists who take an enthusiastic
part in them. In many cases not more than ten
per cent. of Communists are concerned, though they
take the initiative in organizing the parties and
in finding the work to be done. The movement
spread like fire in dry grass, like the craze for roller-skating
swept over England some years ago, and efforts were
made to control it, so that the fullest use might
be made of it. In Moscow it was found worth while
to set up a special Bureau for “Saturdayings.”
Hospitals, railways, factories, or any other concerns
working for the public good, notify this bureau that
they need the sort of work a “Saturdaying”
provides. The bureau informs the local Communists
where their services are required, and thus there
is a minimum of wasted energy. The local Communists
arrange the “Saturdayings,” and any one
else joins in who wants. These “Saturdayings”
are a hardship to none because they are voluntary,
except for members of the Communist Party, who are
considered to have broken the party discipline if
they refrain. But they can avoid the “Saturdayings”
if they wish to by leaving the party. Indeed,
Lenin points, out that the “Saturdayings”
are likely to assist in clearing out of the party
those elements which joined it with the hope of personal
gain. He points out that the privileges of a Communists
now consist in doing more work than other people in
the rear, and, on the front, in having the certainty
of being killed when other folk are merely taken prisoners.
The following are a few examples of
the sort of work done in the “Saturdayings.”
Briansk hospitals were improperly heated because of
lack of the local transport necessary to bring them
wood. The Communists organized a “Saturdaying,”
in which 900 persons took part, including military
specialists (officers of the old army serving in the
new), soldiers, a chief of staff, workmen and women.
Having no horses, they harnessed themselves to sledges
in groups of ten, and brought in the wood required.
At Nijni 800 persons spent their Saturday afternoon
in unloading barges. In the Basman district of
Moscow there was a gigantic “Saturdaying”
and “Sundaying” in which 2,000 persons
(in this case all but a little over 500 being Communists)
worked in the heavy artillery shops, shifting materials,
cleaning tramlines for bringing in fuel, etc.
Then there was a “Saturdaying” the main
object of which was a general autumn cleaning of the
hospitals for the wounded. One form of “Saturdaying”
for women is going to the hospitals, talking with the
wounded and writing letters for them, mending their
clothes, washing sheets, etc. The majority
of “Saturdayings” at present are concerned
with transport work and with getting and shifting wood,
because at the moment these are the chief difficulties.
I have talked to many “Saturdayers,” Communist
and non-Communist, and all alike spoke of these Saturday
afternoons of as kind of picnic. On the other
hand, I have met Communists who were accustomed to
use every kind off ingenuity to find excuses not to
take part in them and yet to preserve the good opinion
of their local committee.
But even if the whole of the Communist
Party did actually indulge in a working picnic once
a week, it would not suffice to meet Russia’s
tremendous needs. And, as I pointed out in the
chapter specially devoted to the shortage of labor,
the most serious need at present is to keep skilled
workers at their jobs instead of letting them drift
away into non-productive labor. No amount of
Saturday picnics could do that, and it was obvious
long ago that some other means, would have to be devised.