Talk:Leon Trotsky/Archive 1
This is an archive of past discussions about Leon Trotsky. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 |
Contradiction
It says here that Trotsky was expelled from the Politburo in 1927, but under the Politburo of the CPSU Central Committee page[1] it says he was expelled in 1926. I have no idea how to tag it as contradictory, but that might be an idea? I would fix it myself but i'm not a member. 17:36, 16 December 2006 (UTC)
Why was the ice axe the weapon of choice?
Was it ever revealed why the instrument was used? Was it just simply the only available weapon laying about?
-G
Lies?
I would like to see a source for the claim that Trotsky's ship was full of gold. This seems like an anti-semetic attack that would come from a Stalinist.
- It's not a Stalinist claim, for a change. You can find it in the (now mostly forgotten) writings of the "Bolshevism as an international conspiracy of Jewish bankers" folks. Not all of them were Nazis, amazingly enough :-) Ahasuerus 01:50, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
You can find this claim on any number of rabid anti-semitic web sites on the net. Try this search: Trotsky gold -kahlo -wikipedia jew
CPMcE 00:25, 1 December 2005 (UTC)
The claim is repeated all over the web that Trotsky traveled from New York to Russia with twenty million dollars worth of gold provided by Jacob Schiff. The claim is preposterous on a number of levels.
First, given that the average price of gold in 1917 was $20.72 per ounce, this means that Trotsky would have been carrying approximately 30 tons of gold. Ever try to travel with 30 tons of gold?
Second, the British naval authorities at Halifax would certainly have noticed it and, in all likelihood, would have noted it in their official reports on Trotsky's detainment there. What they noted, in fact, was that Trotsky was carrying $10,000 in American currency. The origin of these funds is an interesting question and full of intrigue itself, but it would drag me too far off topic, so I won't get into that here.
Third, if it were true, one would have to assume that Jacob Schiff, senior partner at Kuhn Loeb, was essentially ignorant of banking practices. Wouldn't it have been far easier and safer to simply arrange a credit for the Bolsheviks through, say, Nya Banken of Stockholm via Olof Aschberg?
Apparently, this claim is an embellishment of an article appearing in the New York Journal-American of February 3, 1949, wherein it is reported that John Schiff, Jacob's grandson, claimed that Jacob invested about $20 million in the Bolshevik Revolution. While this is certainly not beyond the realm of possibilities, given Schiff's widely known and public anti-Czarist position, and given other documents corroborating Schiff's financing of the Bolsheviks (see, for example, U.S. State Department Decimal File 861.00/5339), it seems doubtful that he would have done so by placing a big pile of gold aboard a ship.
Hope this helps.
--Sabean 22:42, 9 July 2006 (UTC)
Old talk
The changes by the 143... ip quad - that's me - one of these days I'll remember to sign in - maybe not. In any event, this still needs some work.
Trotsky was not killed in Frida Kahlo's house, he was killed in his office at his own home. The author is confusing the fact that for a while Trotsky lived in Frida's house.
Tony Acosta
Not ice pick
The "ice pick" is a widespread mistranslation: it was an ice axe, a tool used by mountaineers; it had most of its handle sawn off to facilitate hiding it in clothing. --Jerzy 06:18, 2004 Feb 16 (UTC)
- Actually, mountaineers commonly call their ice axes "ice picks" (Google for 'ice-pick' + 'mountaineering'), so it's not just a matter of a mistranslation. In any case, "ice axe" is a lot less ambiguous. –Hajor 14:02, 5 Mar 2004 (UTC)
I heard it was an ice pick (looks like a sharp screwdriver), not an ice axe. Does anyone have a source for this?
- Well, this Trotsky pictorial biography says it contains a picture of the Mexican police holding the murder weapon, referred to as an "Alpinist's icepick"; that would be an ice axe. I'd sure love to see this book... --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 02:37, 2 May 2005 (UTC)
Replace photo
Seriously, we need to replace that photo with one of him a tad older. he looks seriously goofy and hardly recognizable. --206.172.139.168 05:49, 5 Mar 2004 (UTC)
There I did it. Its changed. --JessPKC 03:53, 25 Mar 2004 (UTC)
I've inserted the (may i emphasise) strict translation of his name "Trocki". I have not removed the alternate spellings, as to prevent uproar. =]
If you look around at other English language wikipedia articles you'll see that when we refer to transliteration we mean transliterations into English. Trocki is the transliteration of Trotsky into Hungarian and Slovenian so it shouldn't be listed. Otherwise we should also list the transliteration into Chinese, Hindi, Arabic, Hebrew and a dozen other languages. AndyL 05:40, 30 Oct 2004 (UTC)
Personally i dont see the big deal.. so it was something translated wrong, i mean come on.... what the deal with all this??? i just dont get it, i mean, what is wrong with you people! this is the past, we need to get over it?!? why can we not focus on the FUTURE? as that is what were looking to.....
Location of ice pick/axe?
Does anyone know where the ice pick/axe that killed Trotsky is? Like, is it in a museum somewhere?
I don´t know where the axe is. But I heard that the guy that killed Trotsky had a fake relationship with trotskys maid or sombody working close to him. The "hitman" who did it all worked for a very long time that's for sure.
The ice pick has surfaced!! Does somebody want to update this page and Ramon Mercader's page too? Link - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4103306.stm
-- Peripatetic
It is just a claim that it is the weapon, not yet proven. Also looks like a pick rather than axe in picture (but not very clear).
-- Clive Power
Date of Death
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe he was killed in 1941.
- You're wrong, and you're corrected. Everyking 14:05, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)
He died one day after the attack, not one year. I think you may have mixed it up.
-G
Red Terror, misc corrections
Hello all, despite being a newbie to the English part of the Wiki, I added the section called A Father of Red Terror. I tried to obey all the rules. If you would like to argue, please back up your point with specific references. If need be, I can provide more references for concentration camps in addition to the ones already given by someone in the Lenin article.
Also, cannot help but notice (do page search): "He was expelled from the Soviet Union in 1929" and later, "Trotsky was deported in 1928". Which one is true? Guinness man 08:46, 24 August 2005 (UTC)
- Both are true: internally deported [to Alma Ata] and then expelled the next year. --DuncanBCS 21:15, 6 December 2005 (UTC)
- That was many many many versions ago :) Ahasuerus 21:34, 6 December 2005 (UTC)
Léon or Leon
I'm not sure the name is correct on this page. I've seen stuff signed by this man, and he put an accent on the "e". Should we not move the article to the correct spelling of his French name, Léon Trotsky? I put a redirect on that spelling in the interim. --Grcampbell 16:00, 24 August 2005 (UTC)
- I agree, for what it's worth --DuncanBCS 21:14, 6 December 2005 (UTC)
Film Career
Shouldn't there be a mention of Trotsky's supposed film career? From time to time I've seen it reported as fact that he was a Hollywood bit-part actor. Even though I have also seen it stated that this is a misidentification, I do think it ought to be mentioned. --A bit iffy 04:26, 14 September 2005 (UTC)
- There are two separate stories here. There is a minor 1930s "Hollywood history" documentary (they were popular at the time) that includes an 8-10 second excerpt from a ca. 1917 silent movie with a Trotsky lookalike making a brief appearance as an extra. The announcer claims that it's the man himself supplementing his income while in NYC in early 1917. The episode is very minor and played for laughs. You can catch it on Turner Classic Movies from time to time. Kevin Brownlow argued in Behind the Mask of Innocence: The Social Problem Films of the Silent Cinema, New York, Knopf, 1990, that it couldn't possibly be Trotsky, but even in the unlikely event that the extra in question was indeed Trotsky, it wouldn't be particularly notable.
- The second episode is described here:
- Recorded on the Fox lot in Hollywood on January 27, 1928, the Dedication of "Park Row" footage constitutes one of the earliest synchronous-sound newsreels. [...] However, the real star here is this "Leon Trotsky of the Soviet Republic!" Exactly what Trotsky is doing in Hollywood seems to bewilder even those standing behind him in this film. More bewildering still to most viewers in 1928 is the fact that his Russian goes untranslated. Is this confirmation that it is really he? It looks like Trotsky, albeit a little younger and leaner than he was at the time. While we, like they, might have wondered, for the Russian-speaker the joke is given away immediately. The actor's words (delivered haltingly, with a Slavic accent) can be translated as:
- Comrades, by the irony of fate I play the role of Trotsky in the new Raoul Walsh production by the Fox studio. In this production, he will show the very best anyone has ever seen. Raoul Walsh is famous for this staging of What Price Glory?, and in this production he'll show something truly special. [Translation by Alexander Ogden and Judith Kalb]
- Of course, Trotsky was still in the USSR in 1928, so it was just a publicity stunt.
- And that, folks, is the rest of the story :) Ahasuerus 19:01, 2 November 2005 (UTC)
Table?
It has to be said - that is a pretty abysmal first picture of Trotsky and is really no way to start a page! Considering Trotsky's rather high ideological stature (i.e. his thinking differed enough from Leninism to be called Trotskyism and with subsequent parties following it), do we think he deserves a table like Lenin and Stalin or is this reserved only for leaders/heads of state?
I've drawn one up just in case:
Office | Chairman of the Revolutionary Military Council |
Term of Office: | 1918-1925 |
Successor: | Mikhail Frunze |
Date of Birth: | November 7, 1879 |
Place of Birth: | Yanovka, Ukraine |
Date of Death: | August 21, 1940 |
Place of Death: | Coyoacán, Mexico |
Political party: | Soviet Communist Party |
If I'm right in guessing tables are only for leaders of states, then I'll just put that picture as the first one, cuz to be fair that other ones awful and there are plenty more of his young self there!
this one could be an excellent first picture too
let me know! thanks
px
rewrite critcism
The criticism section is being used as a freepass for false and strongly worded attacks against the subject of this article. These are not even valid criticisms, in that they do not even represent the real critics of Trotsky... Find some real critics of Trotsky, quote them and cite their works. Do not take quotes directly from Trotsky to be used as critiques (how can a person critique themselves...?)
- Since nobody disputes this, the criticisms section will be removed. Anyone is free to add a better written one. I would like to reserach and write a coherent criticisms section, but I am very busy with college atm. If anyone else is interested feel free to ask help for any research you will need to do. The criticisms section should definetly have past criticisms mostly, since Trotsky was mostly influential (he was an avid critic of Stalin.....) during 1920-40. Contemporary criticisms would belong in trotskyism wouldn't they? Unless this article begins to cover Leon Trotsky's current influence... but again... wouldn't that be trotskyism?--So Hungry 22:05, 26 September 2005 (UTC)
Consolidating versions
The current version is quite messy. Many details are either off or completely wrong. For example, Trotsky didn't lead the "Mezhraiontsy", which had been formed in late 1913, he just joined them for a couple of months in mid-1917 before they merged with the Bolsheviks. Bukharin dind't "join Trotsky in the Joint [United] Opposition" after 1927, and so on and so forth.
The article also makes many statements that are at best tangentially relevant and at worst POV, e.g. "This destruction of the leading members of the Chinese party led to the rise of Mao, then a supporter of Stalin." Some statements, e.g. "In March 1921 anarchists organized the Kronstadt Rebellion to overthrow the Bolshevik government. The was the last major threat to Bolshevik rule." would be relevant if Trotsky's not inconsiderable role in the suppression of the Kronstadt rebellion was spelled out or at least mentioned.
The last major revision wasn't perfect either, but it is better written and overall it's the lesser of two evils. Revert and then revise to incorporate any useful changes from the last 5-6 versions, perhaps? Ahasuerus 18:29, 23 September 2005 (UTC)
- I'll support anything which brings this article to a higher standard. Another thing which needs fixing (as mentioned in the above discusion) is the criticisms section, it is just of poor quality and a series of statements simply meant to attack Trotsky and not provide criticisms... It mostly just talks about Communism and Terrorism and doesn't show any current or past critiques at all... It should either be removed or totally remade.
- Would you consider the article on Grigory Zinoviev, which I just finished polishing, an acceptable template? I could probably do something similar for Trotsky, although it may take a while. Ahasuerus 04:29, 24 September 2005 (UTC)
- yeah. Trotsky's article should have topics focusing on key events such as the one about Grigory Zinoviev, instead of the few it currently has (revolutionary, post-revolution, exile and theory are too little to describe Trotsky. The only difference I see is that trotsky's modern interpretations be represented pretty well, since he isn't just a historical figure. Wikipedia is great at providing modern interpretations of things, and--koenige 20:13, 1 October 2005 (UTC) so many want to learn more about Trotsky, not just why he is remembered today but what his current influence is.
- The Grigory Zinoviev is a good template, but I think the real question is where to put in the historical accounts and the modern ones...--So Hungry 13:28, 24 September 2005 (UTC)
- OK, the first draft of the Brest-Litovsk episode is done. Let's see if this is acceptable and reasonably non-controversial :=) Ahasuerus 06:31, 27 September 2005 (UTC)
- Perhaps the top of the page should have something meaning: This article is a biography about Leon Trotsky and his theories during that time. For modern interpretations of Trotsky, refer to Trotskyism.
- Added 1896-1903 details. More to follow, time permitting. Ahasuerus 01:36, 29 September 2005 (UTC)
Leon Trotsky is my great uncle. My grandfather's brother, i feel special now.
removed okhranka_mugshot.gif
I removed the photo okhranka_mugshot.gif on the "Revolutionary activity" section because I think it was overcrowded: not so much text, so 2 pictures disturbed reading flow. The remaining photo is more than enough, it's clearer and gives us a pretty good idea of what Trotsky looked like at the time. The curious can always look for more in the commons. This also goes for other sections: there's far too many photos on top of each other. Either we spread them more evenly throughout the page, or we should remove some. I'll try something here in the future. --koenige 19:16, 1 October 2005 (UTC)
reorganized pictures in last section
Following my previous attempt at improving the layout, I reorganized the way too overcrowded last section. That meant, unfortunately, removing some pictures (Farrell Dobbs and Trotsky, Trotsky on his deathbed) and moving around the remaining. I'm no graphic designer, but I believe it looks better now. Let me know if you disagree. --koenige 20:13, 1 October 2005 (UTC)
- You know, this is so weird... I was thinking about reorganizing the pictures merely a few hours before you did this today! It's so weird... So, I was thinking about it but then I realized, although overcrowded, each image did relate to the text that it was near, and was very informative. Although I do think the new layout is pretty good too.
- One more thing to add to this discussion page, unrelated to koenige's post, Trotsky shouldn't be in the assasinated politicians category since he wasn't really a polotician, ESP during the 11 years of his exile and the time he was infact assasinated...--So Hungry 20:39, 1 October 2005 (UTC)
- Oh and whoever added the category "Old Bolsheviks" ? I don't think Trotsky was with the Bolsheviks long enough at all to be an Old Bolshevik? So I'm going to remove that category, until someone can show to me how he is an "Old Bolshevik".--So Hungry 20:45, 1 October 2005 (UTC)
- That's a tricky question. Technically, Trotsky and other revolutionary internationalist social democrats (but not "social democrats-internationalists" or the left wing of the Mensheviks which was also called "internationalist" -- yes, it gets confusing) joined the Bolsheviks at the VIth Party Congress in July-August 1917. Since the most common definition of an "Old Bolshevik" is "a member of the Bolshevik faction or, later, the Bolshevik party prior to October 25, 1917 (O.S.)", that would make Trotsky an "Old Bolshevik". On the other hand, the term "Old Bolshevik" was also used to distinguish between those who were Bolsheviks prior to 1914, when the intra-Party lines were redrawn by WWI, and those who were not. Zinoviev and Stalin used this definition extensively to emphasize Trotsky's "non-Bolshevism" in 1923-1924. Trotsky used yet another definition in Behind the Kremlin Walls:
- In the hard period between the first and the second revolution, Yenukidze, like the majority of the so called “Old Bolsheviks,” wandered away from the party. ... The revolution aroused many old Bolsheviks, but they had a perplexed and unfriendly attitude toward Lenin’s program of taking power. ... These “Old Bolsheviks,” who in the period of reaction had broken with the party, were admitted during these years to posts in the Soviets but not in the party.
- and there is some truth to it since many Bolsheviks (and other revolutionaries) did abandon revolutionary activities after 1907 and many were indeed less than happy with Lenin's move to the Left in 1917. But that definition would exclude Zinoviev, Kamenev, Stalin, Bukharin and most other people that we normally think of as "Old Bolsheviks", so it's very narrow. On balance I'd say that it's 50-50. Ahasuerus 00:13, 2 October 2005 (UTC)
1896-1917
- Updated the childhood section based on My Life.
- Created an article for Olga Kameneva, Trotsky's sister and Lev Kamenev's wife.
- Polished 1896-1903 and greatly expanded 1904-1917, but the latter could still use more work.
- Next: The Civil War, first conflicts with Stalin and Zinoviev, the 1920-1921 discussion which leads to a purge of Trotsky's supporters in March, Lenin gets nervous over attempts to oust Trotsky in mid-1922, proposes an alliance against Stalin, etc etc.
- Related issues: Trotsky is now 33K and will be likely 50k by the time I am done. Split? Also, need to re-write Mezhraiontsy, which is a complete mess.
Ahasuerus 20:40, 2 October 2005 (UTC)
- Nice work. As for a split... Well, I don't think articles should ever be split. 50k and 2k are no different in performance, but many/some feel this weird need that articles shouldn't be too long... but it is even more weird that people feel the need to omit useful information just because the scroll bar is getting small or w/e... so... I am only for organization based solely on content and not at all size. To me, organization by content makes complete sense and that standard would be best for well any wikipedia article. So yeah I prolly could go on and on about this lol... I'll stop now.--So Hungry 17:20, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
- Although it's true that a biographical article is hard to divide logically, the main problem with extra-long articles is that it takes a long time for dialup users to download them. However, one would think that this is a case when a picture is worth a thousand words :=) I suppose I'll leave it as is for now unless there are complaints.
- Anyway, sorry about the delays, I cleaned up Adolph Joffe and Christian Rakovsky in the meantime. With any luck, I should get back to Trotsky in the next few days. Ahasuerus 03:45, 9 October 2005 (UTC)
- OK, 1896-1917 sections are as comprehensive as I am likely to make them without descending into minutiae. I'll give 1918-1919 a shot next. Ahasuerus 00:39, 17 October 2005 (UTC)
- The article said nothing at all about the November 7th uprising itself. Added Stalin's assessment of Trotsky's role in 1917. (This from a book in my possession). Camillus McElhinney 07:27, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
Terrorism and Communism
The book was quoted in the Criticism section, but then the whole section got zapped pending a rewrite, so the answer to the question is "No, not at the moment" :) Ahasuerus 03:13, 15 October 2005 (UTC)
1918-1928
Starting work on 1918. For a biographer, it's the most difficult period of Trotsky's life with a lot of important things occurring in a compressed timeframe. I am not sure how deeply we want to go here. I suppose it's important to show the roots of Trotsky's conflicts with Stalin and Zinoviev, but should I describe the collision with Smilga in mid-1919, which eventually made the latter Trotsky's friend and supporter (until mid-1929)? I guess I should, otherwise it's hard to understand why Trotsky was sent to the South in July. Ahasuerus 00:27, 18 October 2005 (UTC)
- Expanded October-November 1917 and added March-September 1918. I am really not sure if this is the right level of detail, though. Am I digging too deep? Not deep enough? Just about right? Ahasuerus 01:47, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
- 1918-1922 are done. The article is at 60Kb or so and will be closer to 80-100Kb once all is said and done (need many more footnotes, references, etc). Clearly, something will have to be done. Anybody want to volunteer to write two paragraph summaries of the currently existing high level chapters so that we can move them to separate articles? And, um, I assume somebody is reading this, right? :) Ahasuerus 03:16, 25 October 2005 (UTC)
- The only advantage of reducing an article from something like 100k to seperate articles of 30-40k is reducing the bandwidth burdern on wikipedia's web server. I use 28k connection (not even 56k...) and wikipedia loads at just the same rates as when I'm on my campus's high speed connection at their labs. I think the entire article should contain all portions of Trotsky. Unless, there is something in this article that is really seperate from the biography of trotsky, like trotskyism for example, and anything contemporary would go there as opposed to in this article. Tell me what you think.--So Hungry 23:30, 26 October 2005 (UTC)
- Well, the larger the body of the article, the more likely it is that your typical casual reader may jump right to the section that he is most interested in, usually the section that relates to the article that led him here in the first place. For example, if the reader follows the "Leon Trotsky" hyperlink in the "Stalin" article, then he will be most likely interested in Trotsky's conflict with Stalin in 1922-1928. But when he jumps to that section, he will be bewildered by references to Zinoviev, Kamenev, Smilga and other actors whose significance was explained 10-30K earlier. I am not sure there is an easy way to fix the problem, though. Ahasuerus 13:10, 27 October 2005 (UTC)
- A rough draft of 1918-1928 is finished. Still need to flesh out 1926-1927, especially re: the issues that the Opposition and the Stalinists disagreed on, plus add sources and attributions throughout. Then onto 1929-1940, although the current version is not too bad. Ahasuerus 03:34, 29 October 2005 (UTC)
- Hmm yeah it is more difficul to scroll a large article as opposed to one that is 2 screens. But I gotta say that the ToC solves just that problem, although for those who do not normally use the ToC and like to scroll, that would be an annoyance for them unless they figure out how to use the ToC someday. If you can come up with a really good multiple article organization then go for it. I firmly think that the organization should be... what we in the computer sci would say, very well encapsulated. That is, divide it up into seperate articles which strongly relate to 1 subject and then put all relating contents into that article and only that article.--So Hungry 18:32, 29 October 2005 (UTC)
Cannon on Trotsky
The following quote has been added up top:
- "Trotskyism is not a new movement, a new doctrine, but the restoration, the revival of genuine Marxism as it was expounded and practiced in the Russian revolution and in the early days of the Communist International." - James P. Cannon in History of American Trotskyism.
I am not sure this is a good place for this particular quote. Not only is the format questionable (a quote in the summary of someone's biography?), but it is also POV and relates to Trotskyism more than to Trotsky proper. Should it be moved to Trotskyism where it will hopefully find a loving home?
- Quote is valueless. Morwen - Talk 15:35, 27 October 2005 (UTC)
- Quote is gone. Bronks 27 october 2005
- Thanks :) Ahasuerus 20:23, 27 October 2005 (UTC)
Language issue
In performing disambiguation link repair I somehow managed to screw up the link for the language labeled "zh" and my browser doesn't have characters that would allow me to fix it. If someone with the proper characters could change the word for that language back to what it was in the previous version, I'd appreciate it. --Polotet 04:33, 28 October 2005 (UTC)
- I think we are OK now. And thanks for the disambiguation help :) Ahasuerus 11:30, 28 October 2005 (UTC)
Ukrainian/Jew
Moving the recent addition of "Ukrainian-Jew Bolshevik" here. I would advise against adding this text since it would be rather misleading in the summary paragraph. Trotsky was neither religiously Jewish nor ethnically Jewish and to the extent that he identified with a particular national culture, it was Russian and not Ukrainian culture.
Admittedly, the question is a complicated one due to the evolution of the "Ukrainian" and "Jewish" identities over the last century+, but I don't think you can usefully explain all (or even some) of it in the first paragraph. Should we add a discussion of the issues involved to the "Youth and Family" section or perhaps a footnote? Ahasuerus 02:59, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- Well... according to the Jew and Zionism articles on Wikipedia, a person from a Jewish family doesn't need to be religious to be considered a Jew; there's a known secular-jewish culture and even well-known godless jews. --MaGioZal 04:50, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- That's just the definition used by the 1950 Israeli Law of Return, which was formulated to be as broad as possible to maximize the number of potential immigrants. Even within Israel, the law is only used for immigration purposes whereas internally a different, Halakhic, definition is used. Not that Trotsky, who had little use for Zionism and who was killed when the state of Israel was but a pipe dream -- or, as he called it, a tragic mirage -- would have been affected one way or the other :)
- "Who is a Jew?" is a very old and peculiarly complicated game that has been played in different societies for generations. See Who Is a Jew? for an analysis, but basically you can define Jews based on ancestry ("the Jewish race", as they used to say); ethnicity/culture (Hebrew/Yiddish); religion; or some combination of the above. For Wikipedia purposes, when a person has Jewish ancestors but is neither religiously Jewish nor has any definite links to the Jewish language(s)/culture, it is probably safer to refer to him/her as a person "of Jewish extraction" or "Jewish descent" -- see the current verbiage in the article to that effect. Otherwise we are more likely to confuse the reader than to provide useful information.
- Another thing to keep in mind is that in some countries (including the United States) the term "Jew" and "Jewish" is typically used to refer to religion and you have to explicitly qualify it if you are talking about something else, e.g. "ethnically Jewish". In other countries, however, the usage may be different, so it's conceivable that we may have a cross-cultural problem here. Ahasuerus 06:53, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- From this point of view, Leon Trotsky, who was born in a Jewish family and had a tipically jewish surname, was a Jew; and he was even later persecuted by White Army propaganda because of this. --MaGioZal 04:50, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- But why would we use the POV of Trotsky's enemies (the White Army) or the laws of a state that didn't even exist in his lifetime to define him? Ahasuerus 06:53, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- Although Ukraine got formal independency as a nation-state only in 1991, the fact is that Ukrainian identity begun to develop in the second half of the Middle Ages, since the destruction of the old slav kingdom of Kievan Rus by the Mongols and Turks. Trotsky was born in a Ukrainian region of the Russian Empire, and according to the text he spoke Ukrainian (and Russian) at home, --MaGioZal 04:50, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- It is certainly true that a separate Ukrainian identity already existed when Trotsky was growing up. However, Trotsky's family and friends weren't a part of this renaissance of Ukrainian culture. True, at a child he spoke a mix of Russian and Ukrainian just like his parents did, e.g. he writes in his autobiography:
- I learned that scores of words which seemed beyond question at home were not Russian but Ukrainian jargon.
- but from the time he moved to Odessa at the advanced age of nine, he lived in the family of a Russian speaking publisher (again, see his autobiography) and went to a school where he was taught Russian, German and French, but not Ukrainian. Tellingly, even rabbinical instructions were in Russian.
- Most importantly, Trotsky left Ukraine when he was 18 and never went back except for a few brief visits during the Russian Civil War, notably in mid-1919. We don't call Albert Gallatin a Swiss politician or Alexander Hamilton a West Indian one, do we? :) Ahasuerus 06:53, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- just changing completely to Russian after university in Odessa, which was passing by a process of cultural Russification at the time. --MaGioZal 04:50, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- Oh no, Trotsky never went to college to pursue that degree in mathematics that he wanted. He chose another career with exceptionally well known results :) His younger son (Sergei Sedov), on the other hand, had little interest in politics and became a prominent engineer at a relatively young age. Ahasuerus 06:53, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- So, I think that we can call Leon Trotsky a Ukrainian Jew. --MaGioZal 04:50, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- I beg to differ. I don't think inserting these two words in the summary paragraph would add anything useful to the article and will more than likely confuse potential readers. Ahasuerus 06:53, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- The Jewish secular culture and the non-religious jewish Zionists existed well before 1950; some of them were the forerunners of the Zionist movement in the turn of the 19th to 20th centuries. MaGioZal 08:53, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- That is certainly true, but what does it have to do with Trotsky, who was not influenced by the Jewish culture, secular or otherwise, and was never active in the Zionist movement? He later wrote somewhat ambiguous things about Zionism (although he always emphasized that the "Jewish question" would only be fully resolved by a social revolution), but the comments were clearly those of an outsider. Ahasuerus 18:12, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- There wasn't a "renaissance of Ukrainian culture" in the end of the 19th century, at least on the Russian-controlled Ukraine; to the contrary, the Ems Ukaz was supressing Ukrainian language completelly. MaGioZal 08:53, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- Again, it's true that the Russian Empire suppressed Ukrainian language and culture in the 1860s-1910s. It is also true that the Ukrainian renaissance was mostly occurring in Galicia, which was ruled by Austria. However, although Russian Ukrainophiles encountered numerous difficulties within the Empire, they were able to contribute to the process. To quote John-Paul Himka's "The Construction of Nationality in Galician Rus': Icarian Flights in Almost All Directions" in Intellectuals and the Articulation of the Nation (University of Michigan Press, 2001, ISBN 0472088289):
- For all their weakness, the Ukrainophiles of the Russian Empire were not an entirely negligible ally. By social origin they were mostly descendents of the Cossack starshyna or officer class, and hence of gentry status, and hence also by and large of greatre wealth and higher social prestige than their Galician counterparts, who were priests and priests' sons. Someone someday shoudl make a detailed list of all the material aid that Ukrainophiles from Russia gave the Galician movement. They contributed money to publish Pravda, they were the main benefactors of the Shevchenko society, they were the primary source of income of the press associated with the Ukrainophile radical current. I would not be surprised to learn that the sum total of their contributions approached that of Russia's investment in the Russophiles.
- And once all that literature was printed in Galicia (mostly in Lemberg, now Lviv), it was in part smuggled back to Russian-ruled areas of Ukraine and available to those who were interested in such things, although not without risk. That's what laid the foundations of the outburst of Ukrainian national feelings in 1917-1919 and to the well known explosion of Ukrainian culture during the Ukrainization years (1920-1932). Trotsky, however, was not a part of that movement. Ahasuerus 18:12, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- When a person lives their first 18 years of life on a determined region, I think we can say that a person is from that region, specially during the crucial formation years of childhood and teenage years. MaGioZal 08:53, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- Here is what Trotsky wrote in his autobiography about the role played by "nationality" during his formative years:
- In my mental equipment, nationality never occupied an independent place, as it was felt but little in every-day life. It is true that after the laws of 1881, which restricted the rights of Jews in Russia, my father was unable to buy more land, as he was so anxious to do, but could only lease it under cover. This, however, scarcely affected my own position. As son of a prosperous landowner, I belonged to the privileged class rather than to the oppressed. The language in my family and household was Russian-Ukrainian. True enough, the number of Jewish boys allowed to join the schools was limited to a fixed percentage, on account of which I lost one year. But in the school I was always at the top of the grade and was not personally affected by the restrictions.
- It hurt me quite as much to see the concealed cad in Lyubimov’s [one of his teachers] attitude toward Poles, as to see the spiteful captiousness of Burnande [another teacher] with Germans, or the Russian priest’s nodding of his head at the sight of Jews. This national inequality probably was one of the underlying causes of my dissatisfaction with the existing order, but it was lost among all the other phases of social injustice. It never played a leading part not even a recognized one in the lists of my grievances.
- Lenin's case is a simple one because he was born in Russia, was culturally Russian and spent his life engaged in Russian politics. Well, unless one subscribes to the racial theory of ethnicity, I suppose, in which case Lenin is not "Russian" either, but that's a decidely fringe approach these days.
- Stalin's case is more complicated. On the one hand, his early career in his native Georgia was not a terribly notable one whereas his subsequent Russian career was highly notable. On the other hand, unlike Trotsky, who was culturally Russian (although his German was very good and his French was decent), Stalin was at best bilingual (his Russian was heavily accented and he sometimes spoke Georgian with his Georgian associates). Also, Stalin rose to power at least in part due to his ethnic background. In 1913 the Bolshevik leadership tried to build him up as a counterweight to the Georgian Mensheviks who were so important in the RSDLP -- see his Marxism and the National Question. He subsequently became the Soviet "nationalities" expert and, unlike Trotsky, who wasn't involved in Ukrainian politics, Stalin remained involved in Georgian politics after the Soviet re-conquest of Georgia in 1921. And yet, in spite of all of that, most dictionaries out there refer to him as a "Soviet leader" or a "Soviet dictator" and not a "Georgian politician" or even a "Soviet leader of Georgian origin". Surely Trotsky's connections to Ukraine in general and Ukrainian Jews in particular were vastly weaker than Stalin's connections to Georgia?
- In the end, the decisive question here is whether adding a particular appellation clarifies or obfuscates things. When someone who doesn't know who Trotsky is looks him up, does she benefit more from learning that Trotsky was "a Ukrainian-Jew Bolshevik revolutionary" or that he was "a Russian Bolshevik revolutionary"? Ahasuerus 18:12, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
Links to various modern day Trotskyist organisations
DuncanBCS added a lot of links to the above. I think they belong in the article "Trotskyism", not here, so I say they should be removed. CPMcE 00:25, 1 December 2005 (UTC)
- If my eyes are not deceiving me, he just reordered the URLs, although some of them do look like they could be moved to Trotskyism or at least better labeled to show how they relate to this article. Which reminds me that I still need to expand 1930-1940 when I get a chance... Ahasuerus 01:37, 1 December 2005 (UTC)
Indeed, I alphabetised the list. Camillus has a good point. Since some of these are linked to resources about Trotsky and others are links to Trotskyists [the CWI and WSWS links], I will keep the former on this page and move the latter to Trotskyism --DuncanBCS 08:44, 1 December 2005 (UTC) PS I also cut the link to Dewey's book, which looks wonderful, but it not really concerned with Trotsky. --DuncanBCS 08:52, 1 December 2005 (UTC)
Was Trotsky Crucial to the success of the Bolshevik Revolution?
I would argue yes:
role in organising the October Revolution: Petrograd Garrison alliegience Chairman of Petrograd Soviet Supported Lenin on Central Committee Planning of takeover
role in civil war: Organising/Coercing/ecouraging Red Army increasing red army size to 2 million in a few months ruthlessness
If you want to see my rather more detailed essay on this please ask
Discuss!
-- 21:04, 6 December 2005 (UTC)
Yes, please add an URL to your essay here.
Yes probably, but perhaps also crucial to its failure. If Trotsky had oriented to the Bolsheviks much earlier, then the notions in 'Our Polotical Tasks' and 'Results and Prospects' could have innoculated more communists against the political errors that Stalin developed. --DuncanBCS 21:11, 6 December 2005 (UTC)
- During the days leading up to the October Revolution, Trotsky was Lenin’s greatest supporter for the idea of armed uprising, in a time when many of the other prominent Bolshevik leaders, Zinoviev, Kamenev, Kalinin… were very hesitant to the idea of seizing power. Bronks december 13, 2005.
- Excellent point! --DuncanBCS 17:41, 14 December 2005 (UTC)
Trotsky himself, in his diaries, writes that he did not consider himself crucial for the October Revolution: the only important thing was that "Lenin was there and leading the Bolsheviks". He considered the struggle against Stalin as the only historical duty that needed his direct involvement, otherwise it was doomed for failure. 151.80.6.66 10:56, 5 May 2007 (UTC)
surrealism, literature
perhaps something should be mentioned of trotsky's correspondence/meetings with andre breton (leader of the surrealist movement) while he was in mexico, since the document "manifesto towards a free revolutionary art" written jointly by the two has long since been considered a defining text concerning revolution and art. though i do not know much about the biographical details, i've only read the essay.
Categories: Communists, Russian Revolution people
User:Dahn removed Trotsky from these two categories, without explanation. I'm putting them back in. Camillustalk|contribs 23:45, 22 December 2005 (UTC)
- I now understand that User:Dahn and User:Wknight94 are involved in a project to tidy up these categories. Camillustalk|contribs 01:04, 23 December 2005 (UTC)
Way too long
According to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Article_size this article is way too long and should somehow be spit up. It is currently 95kb which is much more than the reccomended 20-30kb. Hell, its over twice as long as this talk page.Shadow demon 01:44, 10 January 2006 (UTC)
- It isn't really any fault of the writers that this article is so large. Trotsky accomplished much. The article could be split up. This would be nice for those who do not want to download 95kB (aprx 32 seconds over a 28kbps connection). However, 32 seconds isn't that much compared to slicing this article into categories that must be browsed thru. Either way, a large artile is going to require a minor amount of time to browse through and/or download no matter how it is organized. Slicing it up into seperate articles can increase this time for everyone (requiring the user to read through the article and find the links they want instead of just displaying the content, the user must now find links to the content...), even the dial-up user (who must d/l the template again, for each sub-article).--So Hungry 02:07, 10 January 2006 (UTC)
- I believe splitting this up into several articles is a very good idea. I agree that he accomplished much in his life, but so did Stalin (76 kb), Hitler (86 kb), Dubya (61 kb), FDR (84 kb), and on and on and on. I can't find a single article in a few minutes of searching that has over 90 kb. Trust me, I'm not saying that the information shouldn't be in Wikipedia, but rather that many readers aren't necessarily going to be willing to read a book to get some basic dates and facts on this guy, and that the really in-depth info would be more appropriate in a different article (or articles).Shadow demon 07:23, 28 January 2006 (UTC)
The guidelines have been eclipsed in so many articles - I strongly oppose splitting the article up - check out length anarchism if u have a strong heart -- max rspct leave a message 16:49, 10 January 2006 (UTC)
Ice Axe or Ice Pick?
Was Trotsky killed by an Ice Axe or an Ice Pick? Look at this picture: [2], I say it's an Ice Axe! Bronks 17 January 2006
It's an ice axe. --DuncanBCS 09:30, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
It is an Alpine Ice Axe, used for Mountaineering - specifically for climbing Glaciers. It is also sometimes referred to in Europe as an Ice Pick - the problem is that this term confuses it, in tropical climes, with the screwdriver shaped tools used to break up Ice for drinks & chilling foods. User:Trotboy
Trotsky's view on the future of the Jewish community
The hebrew wikipedia claims that Trotsky was convinced that the jewish people had no future as a nation and sided with assimilation. Maybe this should be added to this article? --UVnet 01:00, 29 January 2006 (UTC)
- Is there a reference? Of course, assimilation was the general approach of communists. Trotksy also opposed the Bund in 1905... --Duncan 17:11, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
- Read this, an excerpt of an interview with Trotsky On the Jewish Question[3]
--Bronks 25 January 2006
- This is a useful interview, thank you Bronks. It seems to disprove both the idea that Trotsky was an 'assimilator' (indeed, he rejects the term explicitly). Far from saying that the Jewish people had no future, he argued that socialism is the most effective way to win an independent Jewish state. Bronks: seriously, many thanks. I have had this pamphlet 15 years but had totally forgotten Trotsky's conclusions. I don't speak Hebrew, but this correction would be worth pointing out to colleagues on the Hebrew Wikipedia. --Duncan 19:29, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
It doesn't seem like Trotsky to argue for an independent Jewish state. As an atheist, he did not favor one religion over the other. Kozlovesred 20:57, 26 January 2006 (UTC)
- In the communist tradition, the right to self-determination can exist, but need not always be used. I don't recall Trotsky's position, but certainly many communists have recognised the right to a Jewish state, while opposing it as a strategy for fighting anti-semitism. Again, we need to cite source material here. --Duncan 18:07, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
- There is an excellent survey of Trotsky's view in Enzo Traverzo's book on the Jewish Question. Trotsky's view is presented as being quite distict from that of other, earlier, Marxists. --Duncan 19:14, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
Trotsky was, first, NOT a Zionist. He never expressed sympathy for, or belief in, a "Jewish State in Palestine". I think all of us can agree with this. By and large, he was opposed to recognition of Jews as a nationality. His view of Judiasm, was, by and large, restricted to European Jewry, and not "Jews in General". Ergo, when he postulated in ONE interview (and I can't think of which one right now) that there could be, under terrible circumstances, support by communists for some sort of Jewish political entity. But he was, largely, referring to Eastern European Jews, not Jews in general. --David Walters
Trade Union Debate
The section on "The Trade Union Discussion [sic]" is very underdeveloped. I think it would be safe and NPOV to say that it wasn't a discussion, it was a debate. Trotsky played a very important part in this debate, representing an important tendency. Not only is Trotsky's part in the debate not represented in the article; there is NOTHING specific about the debate other than there being a "heated and increasingly acrimonious discussion over the role of trade unions in the Soviet state." Given that the "discussion" was "heated and acrimonious," I move to re-title the heading using the word "debate" and hopefully flesh out what the content of it was. In short, I want to BE BOLD, but want some input from everyone as well. Dialecticas 18:26, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
- It is certainly true that the current version of the article doesn't cover the theoretical part of the controversy. If you want to flesh it out, more power to you :)
- As far as "debate vs. discussion" goes, in this case these terms are used interchangeably by historians. A quick search on print.google.com returns 8 hits for ("trade union discussion" trotsky), 11 hits for ("trade union debate" trotsky), 8 hits for ("trade union controversy" trotsky) and 2 hits for ("trade union debates" trotsky). Certainly no harm in changing it from "discussion" to "debate". Ahasuerus 18:46, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
Trotsky in Literature
Any objections to my adding Dr. Zhivago to the "Trotsky in Literature catagory"? The character of Pasha Strelnikov was a fictional version of Trotsky (not in the strict biographical sense, of course, because of the character's intimate relationship with the primary fictional characters and, of course, his suicide after being ejected from the party).
- I have objection. Trotsky was a member of Communist, Strelnikov is not. Trotsky's range was an equvalent of the Minister for War, Strelnikov is a few steps below. Trotsky had wide artistic connections, Strelnikov does not care about art. Trotsky in the height of power was very supportive for his relatives, Strelnikov does not care about his own wife. Trotsky was a career conspirator in the tsaris Russia, Strelnikov did not. Trotsky was a Jew, Strelnikov was Russian.
- In the Civil War there were zillions geeks becoming murderers becoming victims, Pasternak certainly knew quite a number of them, he did not need Trotsky for the prototype. abakharev 04:12, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
- The only main similarity I can see is the train! Bronks 24 march 2006.
This is interesting, my history professor @ the University of Utah made a reference to Strel being based on Trotsky. I do see some more similarities: the train -and especially how Strel is associated with his train, as was Trotsky-, Trotsky was the military leader of the Red/White War, very idealistic, and the Communists did turn on him. I can't remember if Strel ever said he was a Communist in the book, but he definently had Communist sympathies. There are enough similarities there to form a connection, though maybe not to say that Strel was based on Leon Trotsky. The dissimilarities can maybe be attributed to the fact that Strel is a major character in a fictional book, so to flesh him out he can't be a copy of Trotsky. Strelnikov with his disillusionment and coldness is not Trotsky, but they have interesting biographical similarities. My main problem with this is that I can't find much on the web academic-wise that links the two, but here is what I did find: http://www.cishsydney2005.org/images/ZajdaAIO24.pdf -- page 10
I think the Trotsky thing should be left up but maybe changed to simply saying there are similarities (unless we can find evidence that the author said the character was really based on him)User:Dzzycicero
Assassination Issues
Poskrebyshev, a supporter of Stalin, Eitingon and an Armenian, possibly called Gaik
Ovakimian were also taking part in the murder. The spelling "Eitigon" is sometimes used.
I have removed the remark about Trotsky's chess-playing cousin. I see only the vaguest relation to the life of the subject. If someone is terribly attached to this, throw it into the trivia section. JGray 00:23, 4 December 2006 (UTC)
Trotski's language and conversion to leftism
Trotski falsely claimed that he did not speak Yiddish. He went to a Yiddish-speaking school at the age of 4 and his English is full of Yiddish. Trotski only adopted leftism when the Jewish quota was full, having previously rejected leftism. This was said by Ziv, who knew him at that time.
- According to Trotkiy's self-biography he studied actually in a Christian School where he studied German which is quite similar to Yiddish. Also, it is common for Eastern European Jews to speak Yiddish wether they study it at a school or not, it's very commonly used among Eastern European Families and mostly during those times. Either case is that quite relevant? 201.129.240.39 17:09, 27 July 2006 (UTC) ZealotKommunizma
- I assume the source of this information is what the catalog of the Library of Congress describes as "G. A. Ziv. Trotskii; kharakteristika (po lichnym vospominaniiam), New York, Knigoizdatel'stvo 'Narodopravstvo', 1921, 96p." Ziv was a friend of Trotsky's in the 1890s, but then their paths diverged and Ziv emigrated to America. Trotsky scholars (from Deutscher, who did a lot of cross-checking, on) tended to be careful with Ziv's memoirs since Ziv relied on his often imperfect memory of 20+ year old events.
- We are probably better off sticking to Wikipedia's policy on sources and using academic and other reputable historians, who analyzed and partially incorporated Ziv's book in their research. For example, Deutscher writes (The Prophet Armed, p.9) that:
- "He was seven when his parents sent him to school at Gromokla, a Jewish-German colony only a couple of miles away from Yanovka. There he stayed with relatives. The school he attended may be described as kheder, a Jewish private religious school, with Yiddish as its language. Here the boy was to be taught to read the Bible and to translate it from Hebrew into Yiddish; the curriculum also included, as sidelines, reading in Russian and a little arithmetic. Knowing no Yiddish, he could neither understand his teacher nor get along with his schoolmates. ... His stay at Gromokla was brief, for after a few months the Bronsteins, seeing the boy was unhappy, decided to take him back home".
- Trotsky does mention the episode in his autobiography, but his account is very brief:
- I often left school and returned to my village, remaining there almost a week at a time. I had no intimate friends among my schoolmates, as I did not speak Yiddish. The school season lasted only a few months. All of which may explain the paucity of my recollections of this period. And yet Shufer —that was the name of the Gromokley teacher—had taught me to read and write, both of which stood me in good stead in my later life, and for that reason I remember my first teacher with gratitude.
- Moving on, I am not sure where the notion that Trotsky's "English was full of Yiddish" originated. Trotsky's primary languages were Russian, German and French, in that order. His English was rather imperfect as you can see in the few surviving newsreels from the 1930s where he is reading from his notes. Given Trotsky's fluency in German, it's entirely possible that his English was contaminated with German (which is close to Yiddish), but I wonder what the source of this information is?
- As far as the idea that Trotsky had "previously rejected leftism", he admitted as much himself in Chapter VI of his autobiography:
- It is remarkable that at first in conversations I was the stubbornest opponent of “socialist utopias.” I played the part of the skeptic who had passed beyond all that. My reaction to political questions was always one of ironic superiority.
- He became interested in radical politics at the end of HS, which, according to Trotsky's account, would be years after the "the Jewish quota was full":
- The law limiting the admission of Jews to the state schools to ten per cent of the entire number was first introduced in 1887. It was an almost hopeless effort to gain entrance into a gymnasium, requiring “pull” or bribery. The realschule differed from the gymnasium in the absence from its curriculum of ancient languages and in its broader course in mathematics, natural sciences and modern languages. The ten per cent statute applied also to the realschule. In the case of the latter, the stream of applicants was smaller and the chances for admission were therefore greater. ...
- In the fall, I took my examinations for the first class of the St. Paul realschule.. I passed the entrance examination with average marks: a “s” in Russian, a “” in arithmetic.* This was not enough, as the ten per cent statute meant the most rigid selection complicated, of course, by bribery. It was decided to put me in the preparatory class, attached to the school as a private institution. Jews were transferred from there to the first class according to the statute, it is true, but with preference over outsiders.
- So the incident with the "Jewish quota" (unless there was another one) apparently occurred ca. 1888-1889 when Trotsky was ten, years before he became politically active. Ahasuerus 19:19, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
- I have to agree with the comment about the closeness of Yiddish and German, especially when dropped into English. They are as close as Flemish and Africaans. One would tend to drop in individual words, such as nouns that one didn't know in the other language. Of course there's a big difference when written, but not when spoken. However in the best know transcripts of Trotsky, the discussions on the Transitional Program, this doesn't happen. --Duncan 20:42, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
Oy! This is getting impossible. FACTS: Trotsky came from a RUSSIAN culture. He did not speak Ukrainian at home, he spoke RUSSIAN. One speaks one or the other as they too close in syntax and grammer to speak alternatly in the same household. He did NOT know Hebrew OR Yiddish as no one in his family spoke it. He comments in 1938 or so that he LATER had to learn Yiddish so as to correspond with Yiddish speaking communists in Paris that were drawing close to the Fourth International. If people are intent on defining Trotsky as "Jewish" then it must be like this: Trotsky, from a Russian family living in the Ukraine, of Jewish descent. That would cover it. Again, *factually* being of Jewish descent meant absolutely nothing to him and there is little evidence to contridict this. I actually think he spoke French better than German in that he focused far more on French culture and politics than German.--David Walters, Admin, Leon Trotsky Internet Archive —Preceding unsigned comment added by 216.203.27.99 (talk • contribs) 02:47, 6 November 2006
Possible earlier attempt
There seems to have been an earlier atttempt on Trotsky's life by Stalin in 1938. It is referred to by Conquest in "The Great Terror".
- So you're saying Stalin physically tried to kill Trotsky? Look there is a difference between Stalin saying "I want this man to be killed" (proof?) and someone who is a Stalinist that tries to kill Trosky for his views.
-G —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 134.117.157.66 (talk) 22:41, 10 December 2006 (UTC).
Trotsky a Mexican Jew?
What is he doing in the Mexican Jews category? Unless he was naturalized, I think he should be removed. I think this category is meant for Jewish people whose ancestors have settled there or who naturalized there, not someone who lived there as an exile in adulthood and doesn't otherwise have a personal connection to Mexico.
- No, this is crap, I have removed it. Bronks 13:33, 9 September 2006 (UTC)
My Life
I've started writing an article on My Life (Leon Trotsky autobiography). -Bronks 13:33, 9 September 2006 (UTC)
Article
yeah, quite good article...--Walter_Humala wanna talk? 04:00, 4 November 2006 (UTC)
time for some cleanup
i know very little about trotsky and can say that this article was little help at all. it is overly long and detailed. wiki articles should be ~20kb or so but this one is currently over 100kb.
could the trotsky experts try to nail down a few key elements and move the details off into other articles so us poor noobs can get a handle on the man? i know it is tough to decide what is important and what isn't quite as important but you'd be doing the world a service if you gave it a shot.
thanks fellas YkstortNoel 06:57, 4 December 2006 (UTC)
Removed External Link
There a link to an online discussion between two people on the Maoist Internationalist Movement site that merely asserted (rediculously of course) that Trotsky was in league with Japanese Imperialism. There were no citation, just the one sentence. IT has no business on a wiki extranal link list. I also added the Leon Trotsky Internet Archive link direcly.
Hope all this is ok --'''David Walters'''
- Thanks David. --Duncan 12:01, 31 December 2006 (UTC)
Renominating for Featured article
This article looks brilliant - how about a renomination for Featured status?
Also, I removed this picture, as it was stuck in an awkward place, and we already have one of Trotsky's grave.--90.240.34.177 00:48, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
On second thoughts, the other one is copyrighted whereas this is released under GNU. Whoops! I'll swop them round. This picture on the left is the copyrighted one.--90.240.34.177 00:57, 27 January 2007 (UTC)
Source choice and "slimming"
Many quotes of Trotsky are linking to this source: http://users.cyberone.com.au/myers/worst.html This doesn't seem like a very good citation to have for an encyclopedia (we're citing quotes of Trotsky by linking to an unauthoritative web page of quotes of Trotsky), especially since it is totally unnecessary: the full text of Trotsky's writings are available online and can be linked to directly. I propose removing this citation from the article, and citing the quotes with links directly to the full text. Are there any objections to this? Otherwise I'll go ahead and make the change.Bluevanagon 18:09, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
Okay, I'm going to go ahead with this and start some clean-up of this very long article. For now, I'm starting with the 1918 section from the Civil War. Here are some changes I'm making:
I'm removing references to this source, since it does not reference leon trotsky and so seems to have little bearing on the main subject of the article: http://fmso.leavenworth.army.mil/documents/blockdet.htm
I'm removing some paragraphs such as the following one:
In opposition to some other Bolsheviks, Trotsky insisted that former officers (from Czarist Russia) should be used as military experts within the Red Army and, in the summer of 1918, was able to convince Lenin and the Bolshevik leadership not only to continue the policy in the face of mass defections, but also to give these experts more direct operational control of the military. In this he differed sharply from Stalin who was, from May through October 1918, the top commissar in the South of Russia. Stalin and his future defense minister, Kliment Voroshilov, went so far as to refuse to accept former general Andrei Snesarev who had been sent to them by Trotsky. Stalin's stubborn opposition to Trotsky's military policies led to an acute personal conflict, which continued, in various forms, for the next 10 years, until Trotsky's expulsion from the Soviet Union.
Which seem far too specific for this article, and which seem to contain some "original research" as well (claims about what led to Trotsky's expulsion from the Soviet Union, for example).
I'm also removing these paragraphs for the same reason:
In September 1918, the Soviet government, facing continuous military difficulties, declared what amounted to martial law and reorganized the Red Army. The Supreme Military Council was abolished and the position of the commander-in-chief was restored, filled by the commander of the Red Latvian Rifleman Ioakim Vatsetis (aka Jukums Vācietis), who had formerly led the Eastern Front against the Czechoslovak Legions. Vatsetis was put in charge of day to day operations of the Red Army while Trotsky was appointed Chairman of the newly formed Revolutionary Military Council of the Republic and retained overall control of the military. Trotsky and Vatsetis had clashed earlier in 1918 while Vatsetis and Trotsky's adviser Mikhail Bonch-Bruevich were also on unfriendly terms. Nevertheless, Trotsky eventually established a working relationship with the often prickly Vatsetis.
The reorganization caused yet another conflict between Trotsky and Stalin in late September - early October 1918 when the latter refused to accept former imperial general Pavel Sytin, who had been appointed by Trotsky to command the Southern Front. As a result, Stalin was recalled from the South Front. Lenin and Yakov Sverdlov tried to get Trotsky and Stalin to mend fences, but their meeting was unsuccessful.
Wow, this article is still WAY too long. I think the Civil war section is a good section to cut from (since it has its own article, unlike some other sections). Next on the list should be 1919 and 1920. How do people feel about the changes?Bluevanagon 23:57, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
- People feel very simply: one more massive deletion without discussion and you will be blocked from editing. `'mikka 00:16, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- These deletions have been shown to be unwise, since a revert war is opening up. It's clearly highly POV to add in, or weed out, references to Trotsky's civil war role in such a highly partial way. I suggest we win agreement here and stop editing that part of the page, reverting it to before the start of these edits. What do people think? --Duncan 15:10, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- I'm happy to discuss any issues people have with the page and try to reach common ground or mutual understanding. TheQuandry 15:13, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- Longer Trotsky quote seems fine. I think there have been issues in the past with over-long quotations (in some cases, if you're using a great deal of text it may even be considered copyvio), but if you want to include the rest it doesn't bother me. TheQuandry 16:08, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- The "longer quote" was mostly just combining the two pieces of the quote that were already on the page into one place. Now we have the part about the train twice. Why not just have the full quote first and ditch the second instance?Bluevanagon 01:32, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- My goal was primarily to reduce the size of this monstrous article. It is probably about 3x too large. Where do we think we should cut? Also, is anybody defending the use of the worst.html source? Otherwise will someone remove it? These citations should be replaced with links to full text.Bluevanagon 00:48, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- I did attempt to cut down the size of the article and make it less of a hatchet job. But my edits were reverted. ابو علي 08:51, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
(reset indent) I think almost everything (if not all) under "Trotsky in the arts" should come out. Do we really need to know that there's a Uruguayan punk band named after him? This will cut down a decent amount of garbage. It also seems like everything under "Contributions to theory" could be cut and replaced simply with links to the main articles. What do you think? TheQuandry 15:01, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- I agree about "Trotsky in the arts". But Trotsky's contribution to theory is extensive and an important part of his notability, so a summary should stay in the main article. ابو علي 15:10, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- Ok, but his philosophies and theories are important enough to have their own articles, so maybe we can slim the summaries down a bit? I'll delete the Trotsky in the arts junk. TheQuandry 17:24, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
Please stop your improper "slimming" attempts. Please read the rule "wikipedia is not paper". A distinctive feature of wikipedia is that you can find here things you can find nowhere else. You think it is junk, others probably disagree, not to say that the word "junk" is an insult to fellow contributors. Please see "Wikipedia:Summary style" for explanations how to do "slimming" properly. Please also take a look at category:In popular culture and its sub-category:Representations of people in popular culture for a hint what you may do in this particular case. `'mikka 19:28, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
I give up. Y'all can work out amongst yourselves what to do about this. TheQuandry 19:57, 1 March 2007 (UTC)- I changed my mind. I came back and deleted the trivia-like section. As someone else put it very nicely on the discussion page of a different article: WP: Not a paper encyclopedia does not mean that an article can bloat indefinitely. TheQuandry 15:23, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
Blocking Units
Can we have a reliable source for this? i.e. not http://users.cyberone.com.au/myers/worst.html ابو علي 20:36, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
It seems like this source should be removed entirely. It is a collection of quotes, and seems to be of lower quality than the wikipedia article.Bluevanagon 00:51, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
How about, for now, we just remove it as a citation and put it in the "links" section? Bluevanagon 01:24, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- Fine. But do we have a good source for the Blocking Units claim? Otherwise they should be removed from the article? ابو علي 08:48, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- I will try to look up in Russian language sources. `'mikka 19:28, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
OK. This was an easy one. this cyberone is a collection of quotes, but it gives references. It the "blocking units case" it is [ Dmitri Volkogonov, Trotsky: The Eternal Revolutionary, tr. & ed. Harold Shukman, HarperCollinsPublishers, London 1996, pp. 179, 180]. So "cyberone.com" may be easily replaced with original sources. I will do it right now. `'mikka 19:58, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- Can anyone tell us what the relevant passage of Dmitri Volkogonov's book actually says? Do we have any other references? We need multiple reliable sources to establish notability. ابو علي (Abu Ali) 00:17, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
- I'm removing this: 'Though he and Trotsky were later to become mortal enemies, Stalin was influenced by Trotsky's use of disciplinary measures, and expanded the use of blocking units well into World War II', since it is unreferenced, disconnected from the the text around it (this is the only current mention of blocking units in the article, for example), and is apparently not notable in an article about Trotsky (give reliable references of this statement to establish notability if you disagree). Perhaps this is suitable in the article about Stalin? wes 05:35, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
Officer's families
The section on officers' families needs a real source. The current [14] links to a Russian page and an English page which doesn't contain the quote being cited. The only other source we have for this is the http://users.cyberone.com.au/myers/worst.html page. What do people think?Bluevanagon 01:29, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- No opinions on this? How long should I wait before removing this citation?? Bluevanagon 01:06, 5 March 2007 (UTC)
- I plan to on Wednesday, March 07 remove references to the worst.html source and replace them with direct sources, when I can find them, and citation needed tags when I can't. This will have been a week without anybody responding to the issues here.Bluevanagon 17:07, 5 March 2007 (UTC)
- Again, the English page cited in the current [14] is apparently irrelevant to the quotes it is citing. We need something other than the Russian page. Where did these English-language quotes come from? Are they a translation done by the editor who put them in the wiki? I think if we can't source the English quotes, they have to go. I plan on replacing [14] with a citation needed tag on Wednesday, March 07.Bluevanagon 17:17, 5 March 2007 (UTC)
Speaking of translations, does anyone care to explain what this quote is supposed to mean??: "commissars are obligated to keep track of [former] officers' families and appoint them to positions of responsibility when it is possible the seize their families in case of treason."
I've read it out loud a few times and I can't make heads or tails of it, even if I change a few words around. I'm not sure if people are making up their own translations of quotes to put in the article or using google translate or whatever, but either way, this kind of junk has got to go. Does anybody object to me removing this "quote"? Otherwise, I'll take it out on Wednesday. Bluevanagon 22:04, 5 March 2007 (UTC)
Link to biographyshelf.com
This link is a victim in the current reverting. However, it's an article that is inferior to our own, and biographyshelf.com seems to be a blog-level source. I suggest we keep it out. --Duncan 15:14, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- agreed ابو علي 15:16, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- Okay, it does look pretty borderline. Go ahead. TheQuandry 16:05, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
Lenin Quote from 10th congress
consider this quote from the article:
At a meeting of his faction at the Tenth Party Congress in March 1921, Lenin said:[22]
I have been accused: "You are a son of a bitch for letting the discussion get out of hand". Well, try to stop Trotsky. How many divisions does one have to send against him? [...]
We will come to terms with Trotsky. [...]
Trotsky wants to resign. Over the past three years I have had lots of resignations in my pockets. And I have let some of them just lie there in store. But Trotsky is a temperamental man with military experience. He is in love with the organization, but as for politics, he hasn't got a clue.
It seems like the only source for this is the Richard Pipes book, in which case it is not notable enough for inclusion in the article.
thoughts on removal of the quote?
It is a quote by someone else, about Trotsky, with ratio of content to context almost as low as conceivably possible. Bluevanagon 19:14, 8 March 2007 (UTC)
It is quotes not "by someone else, FUI, and in fact they say quite a lot about relations between bolsheviks. Restored. `'mikka 21:43, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
This IS a quote not by Trotsky.
This is not an exhaustive article about relations between the bolsheviks.
There are many quotes that say "quite a lot" about relations between bolsheviks.]
We cannot include all of them.
This quote is has one source. To establish notability, you will need multiple reliable sources.
The quote has more dots and removed context than content.
Any real arguments for keeping it, that don't apply to tens of thousands of lenin quotes?
Most importantly, the way the quote is currently included in the article constitutes original research in the sense described here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Attribution#Unpublished_synthesis_of_published_material
Not only do you need multiple reliable sources to verify that the quote is authentic and notable, but also that the point being made with the quote in the article is accepted an notable. (And don't forget, this is an article about Trotsky. You should find this in some biographies of Trotsky). Bluevanagon 05:34, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
I'm removing the quote again. If you want it back, you should 1) establish authenticity by giving multiple reliable sources attributing the exact quote in question to Lenin 2) explain the point of the quote in the article (for example, "it says quite a lot about relations between Trotsky and other bolsheviks"). and 3) give multiple reliable sources to establish that the point you claim this quote makes in the article is widely accepted and notable. Bluevanagon 16:24, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
- the quote does seem dubious to say the least and should be removed ابو علي (Abu Ali) 10:36, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
Confusing
In Leon Trotsky#Assassination there is a sentence in parentheses about his granddaughter being a brain specialist. It doesn't appear to be at all relevant to the paragraph it is within. I suggest that it be removed. The Behnam 20:07, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
Longer Summary appropriate?
Since this article is so long, is it perhaps appropriate to have a longer summary at the beginning (3-4 paragraphs about his life and historical significance)? What do people think about this? Bluevanagon 18:58, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
- The lenght of the summary is irrelevant to the lenghth of the article. If you think that some fundamental, definitive statements about Trotski (comparable in importance to these already in the intro) are missing, you are welcome to add. Otherwise no need to bloat the text. `'mikka 21:47, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
- The reason it may be relevant, is that currently the article is far too long for someone to read through who just wants to find out basically who Trotsky was. See above for users complaining about this. Seems like it would help out to have a more comprehensive summary. I'm not pushing hard for this, but I don't see why you think this has no use! Bluevanagon 05:48, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
Declaration of Nov 7 1917 by the military-revolutionary committee
I wonder whether this artwork was worth adding to the section "1917":
http://net.lib.byu.edu/~rdh7/wwi/memoir/RusRev/images/rr20b.gif
It is a reporoduction in english of the declaration that the provisional government has been overthrown, in the name of the military-revolutionary committee.
Russian original at http://net.lib.byu.edu/~rdh7/wwi/memoir/RusRev/images/rr20a.gif
Or maybe as a citation if there's a problem with copyright (which I don't know anything about).
It backs up the reference to the Military-Revolutionary committee, and of course posters were a vital method of communications of the period.
Andysoh 13:35, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
new subsection
I have separated out the final two paragraphs under "Last Exile" , formerly part of "Assasination" to a new subsection, Heritage" DGG 04:56, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
AfD on List of Trotskyists
Please share your thoughts on the matter at this article's entry on the Articles for deletion page.
DGG 04:56, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
*"Permanent Revolution" A concept album by the popular ska band,Catch 22,
- "Permanent Revolution" A concept album by the popular ska band,Catch 22, tells the story of Trotsky's life.
It happend to be true, [4] so perhaps it could be kept in? Perhaps it was deleted on the assumption it was vandalism, but lets give credit to the band? Andysoh 23:02, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
Wayyy to Long!
I like longer articles but this one is way to long. We need to sumarize articles and remove extraneous details. Any information that is moved should be moved to other articles. Plus this talk page is a bit long too. Archive time. YaanchSpeak! 00:33, 22 March 2007 (UTC)
- I am getting 99kb article size warnings when I read the page, a lot of the political stuff and maneuverings can be split off or summarized. --Eqdoktor 04:09, 24 March 2007 (UTC)
- I don't really agree in this case. There are two split offs already, including "Trotskyism" which deals with the main political stuff. My thoughts are: Consider the central significance of the bipolar world from 1917 to 1990 (e.g cold war, arms race, communism and anti-communism) for the 20th century. Now Trotsky jointly led the Russian revolution with Lenin (so that, it is reported, some people thought "lenin-and-trotsky" was a single person). His critique of the Russian revolution's development under Stalin after Lenin's death is therefore highly significant, and so my thoughts are that this article has no excessive weight, and details the matter in short, generally accessible sections. Andysoh 18:39, 24 March 2007 (UTC)
- Frankly, I beg to differ. Most of the bulk of this article seems to be dry (very dry) descriptions of political maneuvering that can be summed up in one or two sentences (not massive sections as we have here). While I appreciate some detail is needed, this isn't a detailed bio of Trotsky nor is it a comprehensive political textbook on the Russian revolution / Russian communist party power struggles. Its is an encyclopedia entry on Trotsky. In fact, I suggest that most of the political maneuverings and Russian revolution details be moved into a seperate section (eg:"Power struggles within early communist Russian" ??). A bare bones biographical article of Trotsky would be more than adequate in my opinion, as going into such depth of detail runs the risk of WP:POV - as examplified by the "whitewashing" allegations below. Some attention to Wikipedia:Article size should improve the encyclopedic nature of the article. --Eqdoktor 04:27, 6 April 2007 (UTC)
Dreadful Trotskyite Propaganda
A glowing tribute. No mention of the Red Terror. No mention of Trotsky's murder of the two popes of the Russian Orthodox Church. One has to wonder if Trotsky merely used commmunism to destroy judaism's old enemy Christianity. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Paleocon (talk • contribs) 01:04, 29 March 2007 (UTC).
- My reply at Paleocon's talk page +A.0u 23:09, 30 March 2007 (UTC)
- I agree, thats the problem with Wikipedia's "Encyclopedia by consensus" nature. The Trotsky Wiki article appears to be written by Trotsky scholars that glosses over the atrocities he committed like the above. --Eqdoktor 04:42, 6 April 2007 (UTC)
This article is indeed written by trotskites, since it completely ignores the Trotsky activity during exile. In particular, two aspects would be worth to be examined:
- his boycott of the popular fronts against nazism and fascism, either from outside or from inside (by infiltrating trotskites). Stalin supported the creation of these national alliances against Hitler and Mussolini, but Trotsky considered them a voluntary fraud by bourgoises and stalinists with the aim to avoid the revolution of the working class in Europe. He arrived to the point to invite Dutch trotskites to vote against a new law that outlawed nazi armed groups, because it was necessary to "destabilize the bougueoise government";
- the plots for overthrowing the soviet government during the forthcoming nazi attack against USSR, that caused its death sentence. The article correctly reports that Trotsky declared his innocence (maybe for saving his collaborators still active in the USSR), but it doesn't say that the opening of the Trotsky archives in Harvard revealed a huge amount of letters confirming that he was actively assisting in the organization of a coup.
I hope to find the time to integrate the article. 151.80.6.66 11:17, 5 May 2007 (UTC)
- I think the discussion about the Popular Front covers that well. Perhaps we need to emphasise that, but we should not repeat that page here. On plots, there is some confusion here. Trotsky was accused of terrorism and sabotage, and of alliance with imperialism. The Harvard papers have been open since 1980, and nothing really reflects that. Of course, the alticle explains that trotsky favoured political revolution, but this is a tactic for the defence of Soviet power against Stalin rather than a police for overthrowing soviet power. Let us know if you have references. --Duncan 23:26, 5 May 2007 (UTC)
- The active boycott of popular fronts is not cited here nor in the Popular Front article, and gives the impression that Trotsky was basically an harmless theorist during exile - while he was actually very active, both as a writer and as a political agitator and organizer against Stalin, and not only through to the 4th International. The Trotsky archive in Harvard contains several letters dated around 1932, that demonstrate his correspondence with the Stalin opposition through his two sons (Liova and Sergej) operating in Germany. The names of some of the soviet contacts have been erased or cut off by Trotsky in order to avoid them to be found by the NKVD, but the letters confirm that the left and right opposition were creating a block to overthrow Stalin with a coup (a thesis that was used against Trotsky, Bucharin, etc. during the 1936-38 trials). Terrorism and sabotage were actually used by the Stalin opposition (there are lots of reports, even by foreign engineers working in USSR during the 5-year plans), and Trotsky wrote several times that individual initiatives, even if not properly revolutionary (as Lenin teached), were indeed inevitable and even a necessity in the struggle against Stalin. This, and the fact that Trotsky's sons were able to live in the Nazi Germany without problems and keep contacts with the Stalin opposition (until they were killed or kidnapped in 1938, probably by the GPU) actually confirmed the accusations: sabotage, terrorism and alliance with imperialism. Trotsky denied everything, maybe because other collaborators were still working in USSR. Some people of the "fifth column" were indeed active during and after WWII, and one of them (a Red Army colonel) even fled to England after the war and wrote a book about the attempted coup against Stalin, that basically confirmed again all the Moscow Trials accusations (G. A. Tokaev, "Comrade X", 1948). All this, and more, and an huge bibliography, could be found in "Intellettuali e potere in URSS (1917-1991)" ("Intellectuals and power in USSR (1917-1991)") by Andrea Moscato (1995) (Italian), and "Another View of Stalin" by Ludo Martens (available online). —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 151.80.4.156 (talk) 09:09, 6 May 2007 (UTC).
- Interesting. We should fill this gap on the popular front: indeed, Trotsksys opposed them, as class-collaborationist, and did not just abstain from them. Ludo Martens, of course, is a Belgian Maoist. It's not new that Trotsky corresponded with oppositionists: the Trotskyists produced the Russian-language Bulletin of the Opposition for many years. However, it would be misleading to talk of 'the opposition', in the singular. There were many different opponents of Stalin. So, if there was some sabotage used by some oppositionists, that does not connect them to Trotsky. Also, remember that some were falsely convicted. Trotsky may have written that sabotage was inevitable, but that does not mean he favoured it: a good comparison here is with individual terrorism: marxists oppose that but also consider it inevitable. I don't know about the circumstances of Trotsky's sons. Living in Germany does not in itself confirm anything. Tens of millions of people lived there. Do you have any specific references to the Harvard letters, or are you relying on Ludo's book? --Duncan 16:19, 6 May 2007 (UTC)
- Ludo Martens reports that the Trotsky archives confirmed the Moscow Trials accusations, but he does not give much information: all the details I know are from the Moscato's book (that I don't own anymore, but I've got at least one article with relevant quotes from a 2003 conference about the issues of socialism building in USSR). Martens indeed reports a great number of verifiable citations about the Moscow Trials and from Tokaev's book. I agree that it would be misleading to talk about a single opposition against Stalin (even soviet articles of the time make distinctions between "left" and "right" opposition), but the fact that they were collaborating is definitely relevant. Also the fact that Trotsky, in 1940, wrote several times that "all the oppressed people of USSR" (without making distinctions between workers or kulaks...) should upsurge against Stalin during a possibile Nazi invasion "because the corrupted Stalin government will surely escape or surrender leaving the USSR in the hands of Hitler", and the fact that this agitation was being carried on by his collaborators in USSR when a Nazi invasion was actually approaching, clearly explains why he was considered co-responsible in a larger plot. Also the fact that his sons were operating for YEARS in Germany, AND keeping contacts with the Stalin oppositions, cannot be ignored, since the other "tens of millions of people" were not connected to the primary organizer of the attempts to overthrow Stalin on the eve of the 2nd World War. Also it should be considered that Hitler was clearly planning to march towards Moscow in his imperialist plans, and that Western powers were eager to send him against USSR (see the Munich Agreement). The active boycott of pupular fronts, lead by Trotsky, was clearly appreciated by Nazi Germany, and in fact it is considered by soviet (or pro-soviet) historians as a result of Trotsky's obsession for defeating his historic rival, without a clear perception of the possible outcomes. 151.80.3.236 17:57, 6 May 2007 (UTC)
Duncan is right: Whilst there is a gap to be filled, I think there is a tendency in the above unsigned correspondants to make 2 and 2 equal 5. What is found in the Harvard archive and what is concluded as fact by the unsigned correspondants above I think you will find are two very different things. I find it difficult to believe that the correspondant above is actually suggesting that the Moscow show trials were anything other that a grotesque attempt at justification for mass slaughter. I don't find this convincing. Andysoh 18:39, 6 May 2007 (UTC)
- Andysoh, you don't have to be convinced about Trotsky innocence or Moscow Trials fairness. The important thing is that the relevant facts about Trotsky's work from exile are quoted, i.e.: (1) the existence of such letters and contacts with the "left" and "right" oppositions against Stalin; (2) the fact that Trotsky's sons were working against Stalin from the Nazi Germany, up to 1938; (3) the fact that Trotsky actively boycotted (even with infiltrations) the European popular fronts, even if it caused Nazists and Fascists to gain power (see the example about his opposition to the Dutch law against Nazi armed groups); (4) the fact that several Trotsky writings, even in 1940, called the USSR population (without class distinctions) to upsurge against Stalin during the chaos of the forthcoming Nazi invasion (I can quote lots of his writings: Trotsky believed that the Nazi invasion of USSR would have helped the "revolution" against Stalin, just like the 1st World War "helped" the Bolsheviks against the czar and the provisional government). The readers will be able to take their own conclusions. 151.80.7.239 11:07, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
- Please do provide quotes, but don't forget that if you take the quotes out of their context they have no value. I am unconvinced because I am familiar enough with the general context to draw the conclusion that what you are inferring is likely to be a misinterpretation of the real situation. Duncan has already answered the substance of your points. The Left Opposition faced the concentration camps and yet still found an echo in the Soviet Union, especially since it was clear to many that it was the soviet bureaucracy which was weakening the Soviet Union, and in 1937, for instance, the priviledges of this caste faced serious opposition, irrespective of the left opposition, to which the show trials and mass purges were its systematic response. This massively weakened the Soviet Union just as it was facing the nazi threat, and the payment came in 20 million lives lost on the soviet side. Perhaps you should glance at '1937, Stalin's year of terror' by Rogovin (Mehring books, 1998). Hope this helps. Andysoh 11:57, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
- Even Hitler and the capitalist governments of the time believed that the USSR was weakening itself with purges and trials. But they definitely changed their minds during and after the war. You claim to be "familiar with the general context", but you seem to forget the fact that USSR was the ONLY country in which a "fifth column" supporting Nazis was not able to organize, and the only country that did not capitulate and cooperate with Nazi invaders like France, Holland, Poland and all the other European coutries being invaded by Hitler did. USSR was the only country in which the whole working masses fought against the invasors. 20 million dead are an unimaginable massacre, but remember that the USSR alone destroyed 80% of the Nazi army. And just imagine how many more deads there could have been if the soviet population, instead of staying unite with the Red Army and declare "war on each street" against the Nazis, decided to revolt against the government during the invasion, like Trotsky proposed. If you want some quotes, just have a look here: http://www.plp.org/books/Stalin/node123.html (I've verified the quotes, and they're not out of context - I happened to be a Trotsky sympatizer before studying other sources, and I read most of the writings being quoted). Sure there have been excesses when repressing saboteurs and terrorists, due to mistakes, zealotry, personal revenges and even willful massacres by "left" and "right" infiltrates trying to spread rage against the government. The latter were found and shot, and Stalin himself denounced these errors and tried to moderate the excesses (see http://www.plp.org/books/Stalin/node121.html). 151.80.12.12 13:50, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
- I am familiar enough to know that all countries had what you call a "fifth column" operating, that the accusation that the Trostkyists supported the Nazis was exactly the accusation each of the ruling elites levelled against the working class resistance against the ruling elite's war aims, and that in all countries the ruling elite had their own interests in mind in the war, not that of the "nation" or the working masses, and in all counries, the ruling elite imprisoned the Trotskyist opposition to their war aims, although Stalin and the Nazi's were far more brutal, of course. You forget, in addition, the previous USSR pact with Hitler, which demoobilised the Soviet forces and left them exposed. If Stalin had not purged his army in 1937, there would have been a more experienced army leadership, and there would have been many fewer dead. If the workers and the oppressed had taken power, instead of a nationalist approach, they would have made an internationalist appeal to the German troops, and would easily have demoralised and defeated them, and again cut the losses significantly.
- By all means lets continue this discussion, but we should use your user page. I suspect we will not find agreement, and this is not the place for a discussion of the subject, as someone is bound to point out soon.Andysoh 16:18, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
- Even Hitler and the capitalist governments of the time believed that the USSR was weakening itself with purges and trials. But they definitely changed their minds during and after the war. You claim to be "familiar with the general context", but you seem to forget the fact that USSR was the ONLY country in which a "fifth column" supporting Nazis was not able to organize, and the only country that did not capitulate and cooperate with Nazi invaders like France, Holland, Poland and all the other European coutries being invaded by Hitler did. USSR was the only country in which the whole working masses fought against the invasors. 20 million dead are an unimaginable massacre, but remember that the USSR alone destroyed 80% of the Nazi army. And just imagine how many more deads there could have been if the soviet population, instead of staying unite with the Red Army and declare "war on each street" against the Nazis, decided to revolt against the government during the invasion, like Trotsky proposed. If you want some quotes, just have a look here: http://www.plp.org/books/Stalin/node123.html (I've verified the quotes, and they're not out of context - I happened to be a Trotsky sympatizer before studying other sources, and I read most of the writings being quoted). Sure there have been excesses when repressing saboteurs and terrorists, due to mistakes, zealotry, personal revenges and even willful massacres by "left" and "right" infiltrates trying to spread rage against the government. The latter were found and shot, and Stalin himself denounced these errors and tried to moderate the excesses (see http://www.plp.org/books/Stalin/node121.html). 151.80.12.12 13:50, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
- I agree that we won't be able to find an agreement, because I am citing facts, while you are relying on easily falsifiable lies ("Stalin demobilized the troops after the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact"!!!) and optimistic dreams and "if..."s without material basis ("If Stalin had not purged his army...", "If the workers ond the oppressed had taken power..."). I agree there's no point in discussing this way, just read Ludo Martens' "Another View of Stalin" (http://www.plp.org/books/Stalin/book.html) and follow its massive bibliography, you'll find the answers i could cut'n'paste here.
- And regarding facts, all I asked in the beginning was to add some FACTS (that nobody was able to disprove) regarding the Trotsky's activity during exile, letting readers draw their own conclusions. 151.80.12.12 17:14, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
- Dear User:151.80.12.12, I am afraid characterising your own views as "facts" and others as "easily falsifiable lies" (but without providing the falsification) is not going to convince many people round here. ابو علي (Abu Ali) 17:26, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
- I've provided a link to an on-line book, that responds to the alleged lie in a dedicated chapter (that could be easily spotted on the table of contents), with a massive bibliography. Is it enough, or should I cut'n'paste the chapter here? Does it make difference? 151.80.12.12 17:55, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
- Dear User:151.80.12.12, I am afraid characterising your own views as "facts" and others as "easily falsifiable lies" (but without providing the falsification) is not going to convince many people round here. ابو علي (Abu Ali) 17:26, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
- Marten's book is a polemical work by an activist opponent of Trotsky. His work clearly reflects a point of view, and it not a reliable reference. --Duncan 17:36, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
- Every book has got a point of view, even the ones written by Trotskyte/burgueoise historians (but they appear to be taken as "neutral" by Trotksites/bourgueoises, I wonder why...). I absolutely agree that Ludo Martens' book uses a polemical tone (that I would have avoided), but it indeed cites an huge amount of sources, and most of them are of Trotskyte/bourgueoise origin. I just wanted to cite THESE SOURCES, and not excerpts written by Ludo Martens himself, in order to document Trotsky's activity during exile. I hope I have been clear. 151.80.12.12 17:48, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
- There is a hierarchy of reliability of courses here on Wikipedia. Some sources can be relied upon, such as refereered academic research, and some cannot - such as self-published tertiary sources like blogs. Martens' books seems to have some problems, if, for example, it has led you to believe that Trotsky's sons ran the Trotskyist movement from Nazi Germany. Leon Sedov was in Germany between 1931 and 1933, when he went to France. That is referenced, for example, in Writings of Leon Trotsky 1939-1940, second edition, pp 442. (Sergei Sedov was in prison in the USSR through the period). Your sources should be compared with others.
- it is important to note that Serge was NOT part of the oppostion. This is a FACT. He was totally non-political and worked as an engineer in Moscow. Wasn't even a member of the Party before the purges. Secondly, Leon Sedov, also murdured by the Stalinists in Paris (the actual murderer lived in the US and confessed to this in an interview in The Bulletin in the 1970s, was in Germany *Fighting the Nazis*...and fighting the KDP's betrayal of the German working class by their opposition to: a united front against fascism! Who was betraying whom? Lastly, on the Popular Front, Trotsky *correctly* opposed the Popular Fronts because they were *incapable* of mobilizing the class against the fascists AND the capitalists. See France, See Spain. Most of the opposition to Duncan's well researched article on Trotsky is by Stalinist opponenets of Trotsky who can't seem to get over the fact that Lenin's heir still has a huge, and growing following around the world while their tendencies are even more fractures and irrelevant than ever before.216.203.27.99DavidMIA —Preceding signed but undated comment was added at 23:41, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
- If you are citing Marten's paragraph that cites a certain document, then that is not the same as the document itself. For example, Martens could have said that Trotsky co-operated with sabateurs, when in fact he corresponded with someone later framed up for sabotage or who favoured the over-throwal of Trotsky. That's why we need references. If there are particular items in the Harvard papers, then we can review them. However, has Martens done that? I am not aware of his being able to read Russian, so perhaps he is reliying on other sources himself? --Duncan 07:20, 8 May 2007 (UTC)
- I have been looking for this book by Andrea Moscato that you refer to. A such of this title was written by Antonio Moscato. This person is a sponsor of the Livio Maitan study centre and a contributor to International Viewpoint. If his book had seriously said that the charges in the Moscow trials were correct, then this would be a really famous book, and event. Since you can't get his first name right, I'm skeptical. --Duncan 07:45, 8 May 2007 (UTC)
- What is important to this discussion is that there is no proof, at all, of Trotsky's "collaboration" with the enemy lies. None. It's important to note that neither in the closed Moscow files now open, or, more importantly, in the GERMAN archives, there are virtually no references to Trotsky at all as anything other than a "Jew Bolshevik". Their are far more references to the arrest and murder of German, Beligium and French Trotskyists after Nazi's came to power than there is any substantiation to Trotsky's role as somehow other than strickly anti-Fascist and internationalist.216.203.27.99 23:53, 7 October 2007 (UTC)DavidMIA
Nationality
Hi, my addition of the nationality of Trotsky was deleted from the lead. The current lead stated that Trotsky was Ukrainian-born and that is true. However most other biographies state the nationality of the person in the lead hence I believe it is useful to do the same thing here. I'm not trying to stress anything I am merely saying that he was born in Ukraine from Jewish parents. I don't think there's anything wrong with that. It's not bad or good it's just a fact. 61.68.183.41 12:42, 30 March 2007 (UTC)
- (original diff of 61.68.183.41's edit) First of all, do you have a citation of reliable sources to confirm your addition? Maybe the lack of a citation was the reason for the deletion. This important to differentiate between honest edits and deliberate factual inaccuracies. +A.0u 23:17, 30 March 2007 (UTC)
- Well if you have a look at the article that's what it says, and yes my addition is not hard to verify from other hardcopy and internet sources. I'm not really fussed about it though, but I thought it would be a useful to addition to have, as simply stating 'Ukrainian-born' in the lead can be misleading so I thought I'd clear it up by stating Trotsky's nationality. I would appreciate further feedback to the addition.
- 61.68.183.41 09:17, 31 March 2007 (UTC)
- Perhaps I am mistaken, but you do not seem to be adding a comment about nationality, but about religion. As we have discussed many times on this talk mage, it is misleading to describe an atheist like Trotsky as a Jew. Stop reintroducing that work until you win agreement here. --Duncan 12:11, 31 March 2007 (UTC)
- You indeed are mistaken, I have added the nationality to the lead. It is of no dispute that Trotsky was of Jewish decent and I thought that stating that he is merely 'Ukrainian-born' is inaccurate and possibly confusing for the reader. In regards to your claim, yes I thought it would be nice to have a citation that does state that his family didn't have religious convictions, however I was asking for a reference and not changing the content.
- From what I've understood you've said the term Jew only applies to a religious Jew who adheres to the Jewish faith. That is not accurate, it is similar to stating that all Russians must be Orthodox to be called Russian. 61.68.183.41 04:50, 1 April 2007 (UTC)
- I don't think his family really come into it: he was an atheist, and there are many references to that, including in his testament. Your comparison with being Russian does not prove your case: Not all Russians are Orthodox, and not all children of theists are theists. --Duncan 08:46, 3 April 2007 (UTC)
- Guys if there are no more comments I will have to assume consensus by silence. 59.101.164.151 07:48, 3 April 2007 (UTC)
Trotsky was "of Jewish descent". This is confirmed in both My Life and The Profit Armed. While Duncan has done an admirable job here,it important that this small aspect of Trotsky's life be noted because it was true. His family were basically Russified Jews, not Ukranian. He did have some basic Jewish education and in the context of Ukraine in this period, being of Jewish descent meant political consequences later in life. It effected some of his actions in the Red Army...a "Jew" commanding an army of 5 million Russian and Ukrainian peasants and workers was significant, pointed to by the counter-revolution and made Trotsky accutely aware of his background. Just my view.216.203.27.99 23:48, 7 October 2007 (UTC)DavidMIA
Assassinated on Stalin's orders?
curiously no mention is made of the proofs purporting the claim that the killer of Trotsky was a soviet agent. are we supposed to accept statements as facts without citation to references (not merely some book or some article claiming so, but a proof, such as any recorded result of an investigation into Trotsky's death or a confession by his killer) at least? or is a popular claim, proof? Unsigned comment.
- Books are references. What more would you like? I don't think it's practical to accept that we cannot prove it without a letter from Stalin or the assassin himself.--Duncan 14:07, 30 April 2007 (UTC)
some Mexican students I met stated Frida Kahlo was their putative great Aunt. They stated Diego Rivera and Trostsky were vying for the affection of a woman. Trostsky won the affection of the tart and an enraged Rivera was the one who introduced Trotsky's assassin to their innner circle.
Too Long?
Compared to what and with what alternative? More than one biographic article on Trotsky is less consistent with site norms than a longish one. If biographic article series were a norm it would make sense to break into before 1917, 1917-Exile, and Exile-Death. Lycurgus 11:28, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
- In my opinion the article is way too short, if anything. An argument on this page from a year and a half ago in favor of splitting it up compared the article's size to that of the Stalin article, but now the Stalin article is much larger than this one, so the comparative argument shouldn't be used. Questioning81 15:42, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
- Stalin being larger would be a counterargument (for a split) wouldn't it? Maybe much larger if this were the Encyclopedia of Socialism, which BTW isn't a bad idea in case marxists.org reads this. Also is there a mention here of the biographies of Geoffrey Swain and Ian Thatcher which the ICFI went out of it's way to launch a lecture circuit to refute? Lycurgus 15:51, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
Thatcher's is listed in References. Your assertion that the ICFI went out of it's way to defend against revisionist history aimed against the founder of the FI is disturbing, as the lecture notes:
- Having sarcastically posed the question of Trotsky’s relevance, Thatcher should tell us why he has written a 240-page book to proclaim his irrelevance. Why did he establish, with his former colleague from the University of Glasgow, James D. White, the short-lived Journal of Trotsky Studies, whose publication represented Thatcher’s first major anti-Trotsky project? Why has Swain written his 236-page biography?
So clearly it is not the FI that has went out of it's way. Questioning81 16:49, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
- The target sizes in the wikipedia article size (WP:SIZE need to be revised in my opinion.
- When I raised a question on WP:SIZE, I was told that the guides are now not at all strict, very informal sort of thing, and not to be too concerned. I personally think the Too long sign is unfair and should be removed from this article.
- Two arguments on WP:SIZE in particular are problematic in my opinion. 1. that "readers may tire" of longer articles - a study would probably show that readers go directly to the section or even subsection they want for the infomation they require, and in this way, (together with the automated contents box as a help to navigate) size is simply no problem. 2. That long article pose problems for some browsers. This is something that is always improving, and mainly concerns really old browsers, which struggle to cope with a great many modern web pages. Andysoh 18:05, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
Assassination
I am wondering too why is it a fact that Trotsky was killed by Stalinist agent. And what is an stalinist agent? should it be Soviet Agent, perhaps? Anyway if it is not just rumors or worst, propaganda, I think we should find some reliable source. Yangula 16:52, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Indeed, agent of the NKVD would be a more precise formula. --Duncan 19:24, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Meracdor was convicted in a Mexican court and as part of his trial, he admitted to working with the NKVD.216.203.27.99 23:43, 7 October 2007 (UTC)DavidMIA
This is an archive of past discussions about Leon Trotsky. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 |
Leiba or Lev?
Once again we have an article that speaks with forked tongue. Was his original birth name Lev (as per the lede) or Leiba (as per lower down in the story)? -- Jack of Oz ... speak! ... 07:21, 18 February 2010 (UTC)
- The original name is Leiba. Lev is a "translation" of his name into Russian and most commonly used. Those names are often considered to be interchangable. If in doubt - use Leiba.--80.232.251.18 (talk) 17:00, 6 April 2010 (UTC)
Trotsky, Zionism and revert war
I gave three reliable sources showing that in his last years Trotsky supported Zionism: [5][6] [7]
But user User:RolandR for a reason reverted my edit. After entering his page I saw he is clearly a biased anti-Zionist. Is it ok that reliable references are deleted because some Anti-Zionist doesn't like that? What about NPOV?
- Trotsky always explicitly opposed Zionism; he never wavered in this. Two of the sources you cite actually repeat this, and do not support your interpretation. The third is a totally unreliable blog whose purpose is "defending Israel, defending Jews against antisemitism, support for Serbs, unity of Serbs and Jews". Your edit is completely untrue, it lacks any reliable sources (which would not be available since the suggestion is totally false), and is impermissible. RolandR (talk) 09:48, 22 June 2010 (UTC)
- The Russian regime under the USSR was anti Zionist and anti Semitic.[8] The reason for this appears to be to drive the Jews to Israel although many died in Russia.207.119.116.76 (talk) 15:19, 11 October 2011 (UTC)
Bibliography
I can't believe someone hasnt taken the time to create a proper bibliography for trotsky. these are all external links to marxist websites. he did write books that were published using paper, and are in libraries around the world. Wikipedians of the world, unite! you have nothing to lose but your bracketed external links!Mercurywoodrose (talk) 04:59, 25 June 2010 (UTC)
- The links are, overwhlemingly, to works by Trotsky. It's more useful to link to the book or article online than to the ISBN of the book. If we can thing, as you have done, that is great. But it's not a problem to link to Trotsky's works online. --Duncan (talk) 00:42, 28 June 2010 (UTC)
- Well, i think its more scholarly to show the original context of his works publications. I agree that linking to actual texts, if they are not copyright violations, is fine, but that would be better in an external link section. From this article section, one wouldnt know if the pieces linked to were, say, pamphlets, or essays that got published in newspapers or magazines not purely marxist, or books published by either general publishers or marxist publishing companies, or collections published posthumously by university presses or communist government publishers, etc etc etc. all these distinctions would help show Trotsky's actual notability both within the history of communism and outside it, including its critics. as it is, the section being all external links makes it look promotional, just the sort of thing a curious reader would think that a committed marxist of some stripe might do, to disguise the notability and promote their hero, thus leading a curious reader to suspect that there are actual cabals making sure certain subjects are not covered impartially. We really dont want WP to become like that, and even the appearance of impropriety is to be avoided. i make no assumptions about the motives behind all the external links, it just reads wrong to me. but i wont make changes without some consensus.Mercurywoodrose (talk) 03:54, 16 July 2010 (UTC)
Real Trotzky birth information
Rodina is a Russian historical illustrated journal established by the Administration of the President of Russian Federation. This particular article came from volume 2 for 2002, so hardly news.
Lev Anninsky is a well known literary critic and writer in Russia with his own Wikipedia article http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%90%D0%BD%D0%BD%D0%B8%D0%BD%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B8%D0%B9,_%D0%9B%D0%B5%D0%B2_%D0%90%D0%BB%D0%B5%D0%BA%D1%81%D0%B0%D0%BD%D0%B4%D1%80%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B8%D1%87
Maybe you can get a Russian speaker to fix the translation since I just don't have the time, sorry —Preceding unsigned comment added by 120.18.10.134 (talk) 23:53, 16 August 2010 (UTC)
- This is unreferenced. I don't think we can use it. I have put a machine translation below. --Duncan (talk) 23:25, 16 August 2010 (UTC)
Lev Anninsky
Columnist, "Homeland"
Relatives?
This fall, I participated in a televised A. Gordon, where the air was discussed "the Jewish question". On this occasion, my old friend and colleague, writer Vladimir Kozarovetsky sent the following letter:
"Leo, I saw a program on NTV A. Gordon's transfer to the" Jewish question "with your participation - and amused. You're ten times (once. - JI.A.) repeated during your conversation, that Trotsky did not want to be Jew, referring to the phrase uttered by a Jewish delegation that when she came to seek protection from the Bolsheviks: "Tell those who sent you that I am not a Jew." Meanwhile, this phrase should be understood not in a figurative and literal sense: Trotsky really was not a Jew, was the name surname Bronstein adoptive, parents of his father.
Leon Trotsky was a direct descendant of Pushkin's illegitimate line, he knew why his older brother and sister named Alexander and Olga (it's researched and wrote about it recently deceased Alexander Pushkin scholar Latsis). Child love Pushkin and polka Angelica Dembinski was sent to the family Rayevskys; N.N.Raevsky Jr. (Pushkin about it in a letter to his brother Leo September 8, 1820: "You know our close bond and important services, for me forever unforgettable") Fournier asked the Frenchman to take the child in their southern estate of Poltava, where the regimental priest performed the ceremony and issued birth certificate. The boy was given his mother's name and presumably named in honor of his godfather, LV Dubbelt, Leontiev. In the future, "Fournier took care of education, and so the child is a good idea to learn French" (A. Lacis).
Leonti Dembinski gout, by the end of life Rajewski began his secretary and read the dying French books. The widow of General had two cousins: one of the cousins have Dembinski held a novel, and about 1846 she gave birth to a child, which as been taken to deal with illegitimate children of nobles, gave a reliable, non-drinker - Jewish - the family.
The house Davyd Leontyevich Bronstein, on the farm Yanivka, where he and his family arrived from Gramoklei (from the south province of Poltava) spoke neither Hebrew nor Yiddish, religious practices do not comply, on Saturdays.
Younger son Davyd Leontyevich named Leo. In Lev Davidovich Bronstein, like Pushkin, have found no cause fainting, and like Pushkin, Trotsky was a nervous tic in the left corner of the mouth (Pushkin never bit his nails, as some people think, and covered his tic, holding a corner of the mouth with a pencil , then the pen, then simply closing his hand) were other coincidences hereditary traits: gout, myopia, gastro-intestinal troubles - but the first two, with boundless love for the word, - to solve.
Carelessness C. Tessa and B. Modzalevsky, voiced this information to someone from their friends after Paris Trotsky's autobiography "My Life", and led them to destruction: Hesse in 1937, the death hit by a car on a central square in Leningrad ( The car chase after him like a fly "), and Modzalevsky" fell "from the train from Moscow to Leningrad. It is possible, thought Latsis, the death of a TomaSevskij in 1945 (an excellent swimmer, he "drowned") is not accidental and that he too was a victim of excessive awareness of the poet's life, whose biography was canonized, and always carefully guarded (and guarded until now) from unwanted interpretations and associations - which indirectly sposobstvuesh and you.
Vl. Kozarovetsky
P.S. To the above does not show you the idle fancy: I - Head of Commission on the literary legacy of Latsis. VK "
I think readers do not even advanced to the depth and subtlety of Pushkin scholars, it will be interesting to get acquainted with the hypothesis about the relationship of the great poet and a great revolutionary - without regard to what breed: Negro, Jewish, Polish or Russian - flowed in their veins. National identity - it's still not so much the voice of blood, as the voice of consciousness, it is a choice, decision, a conscious act. If Trotsky declared that he was not a Jew, so he was not a Jew, and the best way to reconcile. This is all the more reasonable, that Jewish identity is in the minds of many people some kind of mystical glow and is extremely sharp emotions.
Writer Yuri Nagibin, for example, all my life hoping that he was a Jew, but in his old age found that he was Russian, and was disappointed. Here, I think, you can issue a sigh of relief: now there is no need to answer to Trotsky as a Jew, for all that he had done as a revolutionary. From what we can congratulate Jews, Russian, and all those interested in the details of national history.
- I have added the hypothesis and its criticism to the article. Latsis was a reasonably notable pushkinist and his opinion desrves a couple of sentences Alex Bakharev (talk) 13:30, 18 August 2010 (UTC)
Villification -- China?
Was Trotsky villified in the PRC? Did this villifcation continue after the Sino-Soviet split? BillMasen (talk) 14:05, 2 October 2010 (UTC)
Biography
Hi, I thought a bit strage that the heading bio information didn't include place of birth and place of death. Furthermore, I was surprised to find out that the article attributes his death to illnes, when it is widley know that he was murdered in mexico city. Both facts (place of birth and death and the assasination) can be corroborated in the spanish translation (amongst many others.. but to save some time...) I am o tchanging anything, I just wanted to point out the conflit between the information in english and spanish versions. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 129.102.65.87 (talk) 01:32, 11 March 2011 (UTC)
- The article has a section on the assasination here. --Duncan (talk) 14:48, 12 March 2011 (UTC)
Bronshtein vs Bronstein
The article uses both but does not explain why and why that's okay. 94.222.152.232 (talk) 18:51, 3 October 2011 (UTC)
- Thanks - yes, we should be consistent. I've changed 'Bronstein' to 'Bronshtein' in the article, as that was used by us more often. Transliteration of names in Cyrillic languages is often problematic, and I've seen it spelt either way in many places. AndyTheGrump (talk) 19:12, 3 October 2011 (UTC)
Trotsky as Freemason
There are Freemason sites listing the works of Trotsky. His membership is without dispute. FM will delight in the Communist revolutionary among their membership.207.119.116.76 (talk) 15:23, 11 October 2011 (UTC)
Verify it, get sources and post it on here. --75.159.2.59 (talk) 06:23, 13 December 2011 (UTC)
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Red Terror and War Communism
Why so little mention about Red Terror and War Communism. More needs be mentioned about Trotsky's role and the effects of the policies on the people. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 89.168.116.57 (talk) 16:53, 22 April 2012 (UTC)
- AGREE - Historians estimate the deaths in which Trotsky had a hand in the millions. The whitewashing of socialist icons on Wikipedia is a disgrace. 82.143.250.163 (talk) 15:09, 12 July 2012 (UTC)
- Which sources would you use for including this information?·ʍaunus·snunɐw· 16:05, 12 July 2012 (UTC)
- DISAGREE What is really disgrace is the anticommunist fascist-style myths in the "free media". --Javalenok (talk) 07:35, 16 August 2012 (UTC)
Early Conflict with Stalin
From the portion involving the Russian Civil war, "The reorganization caused yet another conflict between Trotsky and Stalin in late " This is the first time any interaction between Stalin and Trotsky is mentioned. Considering the later impact between these two personalities clashing, there should probably be a greater emphasis on earlier interactions between the two. 66.60.183.188 (talk) 19:53, 24 May 2012 (UTC)
Length
This is an excellent detailed biography, if a bit of a whitewash, but it's about 10 times too long for an encyclopaedia entry. I'd squish everything until 1917 into about four paragraphs, no separate headings, and the same for the exile bit.Sartoresartus (talk) 11:29, 20 August 2012 (UTC)
- I don't believe there is such a thing as "too long for an encyclopedia entry" when the encyclopedia is not on paper. The article is on the upper side of the WP:SIZE recommendations, but such drastic condensation as you suggest seems unwarranted. ·ʍaunus·snunɐw· 15:11, 20 August 2012 (UTC)
- Well it is if you expect to spend a reasonable -- as opposed to an excessive -- amount of time looking something up, which is where for all the hard work of the editors this falls down.Sartoresartus (talk) 13:41, 24 August 2012 (UTC)
Mass murderer / genocide perpetrator
How come - such a huge article and not a single word of Trotsky being a person responsible for slaughtering of millions of people in Soviet Russia and later USSR, far worse than Hitler, one of the bloodiest tyrants in history, by the way? Something is not quite right here, so to speak, euphimistically. Not ever a "controversies" section? What is happening here? Can anybody explain? Why don't we remove the genocidal verses in Hitler's article then? What's wrong with you people? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 46.171.197.14 (talk) 14:15, 24 November 2012 (UTC)
- What's wrong with us? We base articles on credible sources, not the rantings of random ignorant people, that is what is wrong with us... AndyTheGrump (talk) 14:43, 24 November 2012 (UTC)
- It looks like, somehow, IP is confusing Trotsky with Stalin (who was, indeed, a tyrant comparable with Hitler). IP, AndyTheGrump may be a grump, but he is right. Please do some homework on this. Hamamelis (talk) 16:05, 24 November 2012 (UTC)
- As a historian, I don't feel like I have any homework to do regarding this matter. Have you done yours? When Stalin came about he was acctually worshipped ( i.e. even before a forced cult of him appeared) by the Russian people for cleansing the party of mass murderers responsible for so called Red Terror (ca 1917-24), like Trotsky-Bronstein, Genrikh Yagoda-Hershel Yehuda, Grigoriy Zinovev-Gershen Aaronovich Radomyslski, Lev Kamenev-Layba Rosenfeld, Vasiliy Bluecher et consortes.--46.171.197.14 (talk) 16:57, 25 November 2012 (UTC)
- Is there any particular reason that you find it necessary to give the former names of all of these people? RolandR (talk) 17:39, 25 November 2012 (UTC)
- The OP is clearly no historian. This article is based on reliable sources, not ignorance. There is no need to discuss this further. AndyTheGrump (talk) 17:55, 25 November 2012 (UTC)
- Is there any particular reason that you find it necessary to give the former names of all of these people? RolandR (talk) 17:39, 25 November 2012 (UTC)
Rehabilitation
I don't have editing capability, but the article says in the introductory paragraph that Trotsky was rehabilitated in 2001. As far as I know, that never happened.
- Removed that claim. RT's Russiapedia entry specifically says that he was never rehabilitated, and the 2001 date is bizarre. --Nixin06 (talk) 17:34, 16 April 2013 (UTC)
How Leon Trotsky was the founder of Red Army
Leon Trotsky[2] (Russian: Лев Троцкий, pronounced [ˈlʲef ˈtrot͡skʲɪj] ( listen); born Lev Davidovich Bronshtein;[2] 7 November [O.S. 26 October] 1879 – 21 August 1940) was a Russian Marxist revolutionary and theorist, Soviet politician, and the founder and first leader of the Red Army.
How Leon Trotsky was the founder of Red Army?.It should be Leon Trotsky was one of the founder of Red Army.so it means Lenin,Stalin,Molotov and Other Commanders was sitting simply — Preceding unsigned comment added by Raja.m82 (talk • contribs) 07:40, 29 January 2013 (UTC)
Judas Trotsky
So Lenin prefered Stalin over Trotsky. http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1911/jan/02.htm Monticores (talk) 08:40, 23 February 2013 (UTC)
- That appears to be the purpose of citing those letters. The contributor did not cite, for example, http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1919/feb/14b.htm, in which Lenin writes, There are no differences between us, and as regards the middle peasants there are no differences either between Trotsky and myself, or in general in the Communist Party, of which we are both members., or http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1922/dec/testamnt/congress.htm, in which he makes the assessment, Comrade Trotsky, on the other hand, as his struggle against the C.C. on the question of the People's Commissariat of Communications has already proved, is distinguished not only by outstanding ability. He is personally perhaps the most capable man in the present C.C., but he has displayed excessive self-assurance and shown excessive preoccupation with the purely administrative side of the work. --Nixin06 (talk) 10:19, 15 April 2013 (UTC)
Saint George Depiction
There is a typo under the caption. In the sentence ″This also has allusion to Russian religion, as the depiction of Saint George slaying the dragon was a wery popular theme in Russian iconography," the word "wery" should be "very." — Preceding unsigned comment added by Newguynick (talk • contribs) 23:54, 7 April 2013 (UTC)
Is Robert Service a reliable source on Trotsky?
I think this review of the controversy with Patenaude should at least be considered. --Nixin06 (talk) 09:24, 4 June 2013 (UTC)
- Great call, I am complete agreement. I came here to make the same complaint myself. Service's biography is garbage and, as Patenaude says in his review, the number of errors mean "Service's book is completely unreliable [even] as a reference." His book needs to be expunged from the article. LudicrousTripe (talk) 18:14, 17 July 2013 (UTC)
1940/1940
See Gaik Ovakimian. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 149.241.17.133 (talk) 09:45, 20 June 2013 (UTC)
Family
I read elsewhere on Wikipedia that at the same time as Trotsky's assassination, several other family members were killed but there is no mention of that on his bio. So, were there other, associated assassination of his relatives around the same time or do those other Wiki pages need to be corrected? 69.125.134.86 (talk) 20:50, 6 July 2013 (UTC)
- No, only he was murdered by Ramon Mercader in August. No one else died at the time of the assassination, but his family was devastated in the years preceding it. LudicrousTripe (talk) 17:40, 20 July 2013 (UTC)
Old Style/New style dates
I notice a reference to Feb. 10 1918 in the section "After the Russian Revolution". Soviet Russia adopted the Gregorian calendar on Jan. 31, 1918, so that the next day was Feb. 14, 1918. I am wondering in general, if the article wouldn't be well served by a brief note at the beginning explaining what dates mean. For a more significant example, the article states that the Bolsheviks gave the land to the peasants on Oct. 25 1917 ("Permanent Revolution") but gives the date of the "uprising" as Nov. 7-8 (World War I).--Richardson mcphillips (talk) 19:53, 30 July 2013 (UTC)
Contradiction
- "Trotsky was never formally rehabilitated by the Soviet government, despite the Glasnost-era rehabilitation of most other Old Bolsheviks killed during the Great Purges...."
- "Trotsky was rehabilitated in 16 June 2001 on the basis of the decision of the General Prosecutor's Office (Certificates of Rehabilitation № 13/2182-90, № 13-2200-99 in Archives Research Center "Memorial")."
One of these statements is not true. Was Trotsky rehabilitated or not? 69.125.134.86 (talk) 20:50, 6 July 2013 (UTC)
- Not according to Patenaude:
At times the errors are jaw‐dropping. Service believes that Bertram Wolfe was one of Trotsky's "acolytes" living with him in Mexico (pp. 441, 473), that André Breton was a "surrealist painter" whose "pictures exhibited sympathy with the plight of the working people" (p. 453), and that Mikhail Gorbachev rehabilitated Trotsky in 1988, when in fact Trotsky was never posthumously rehabilitated by the Soviet government.
- I don't care what the Soviet government does on the rehabilitation front. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.123.215.180 (talk) 16:48, 8 November 2013 (UTC)
- Sorry, re-read what you wrote, and there is no contradiction: "Trotsky was never formally rehabilitated by the Soviet government" cf "Trotsky was rehabilitated in 16 June 2001". There was assuredly no Soviet government in 2001! LudicrousTripe (talk) 18:22, 17 July 2013 (UTC)
Wikipedia portrayal of Trotsky and Lenin
As a graduate from a major university in Political Science and as a student of history, the portrayal of Trotsky and Lenin in Wikipedia is inexcusable. Trotsky was a complete butcher as was Lenin to a far greater extent than Hitler. The entire Bolshevik movement was full of butchers bent on ethnic and political purges (mass murder). It is incomprehensible that these men have received favorable treatment in your online publication. Your treatment of these two is in no way historically accurate. Aaronok1 (talk) 12:26, 29 August 2013 (UTC)
Aaronok1: I suggest you go back to school and study more. Perhaps you will see things in a more accurate light. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 207.237.80.150 (talk) 18:34, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
Date mismatch
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How could the government fail to rehabilitate someone in the 1950s when the person died in 1940? Granted, any attempt to change the political beliefs of a dead person would result in failure--but I think that goes without saying.
Change from: "He was one of the few Soviet political figures who were not rehabilitated by the government under Nikita Khrushchev in the 1950s." Change to: "He was one of the few Soviet political figures who were not rehabilitated by the government."
66.195.191.130 (talk) 17:45, 19 November 2013 (UTC)
- "Rehabilitation" does not refer to an attempt to alter a person's political beliefs. It refers to the process by which several Bolshevik leaders, murdered and written out of the history books in the Stalin period, were posthumously pardoned and their legacy reintegrated into official accounts. The written text is perfectly true; although other leaders were rehabilitated, Trotsky was not. RolandR (talk) 21:40, 19 November 2013 (UTC)
In the section that tells about his stay in the USA there is no mention of his acting career. I saw footage of a movie made around 1916 with him in it. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 207.237.80.150 (talk) 18:40, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
Norway
Trotsky was in Norway at the time of the 1936 Show trial. When one of his supporters told him about it, he said, "Conspiracy? I can understand that. But the Gestapo?" — Preceding unsigned comment added by RNMarshman (talk • contribs) 11:08, 18 December 2013 (UTC)
Picture that is not of Trotsky
There is an image added by User:DIREKTOR, that is not actually Trotsky. We had a previous big discussion about this when he tried to insert it as the lead image on Jews and Communism.--Pharos (talk) 05:06, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- It is, in fact - Lev Trotsky. Note: Trotsky did not wear his trademark goatee or glasses at the time, but only a mustache. Further, the poster is signed by Trotsky and carries a message by him. To quote the source:
"In 1920, [Dmitry] Moor designed a striking poster, "Bud' na strazhe!" (Be on Guard!) that featured a drawing of Trotsky holding a bayonet and standing, larger than life, on Russian territory, with minuscule enemies around him."
- That's about as quality a reference as one could possibly expect. -- Director (talk) 05:19, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- Actually, Trotsky wore his beard and glasses continuously since 1915, and low-res photos do not contradict this (see the Wikimedia Commons version!) There is a rather more detailed and hence credible interpretation of this poster from a quite reliable source here:
- Tate Modern publication Red Star Over Russia (pg. 98), on the "Russian Revolutionary Posters" collection:
"'Be on Guard!' by Dmitrii Moor, with text by Trotsky, published at the time of the Russo-Polish War. A soldier of the Red Cavalry stamps on the Polish landlords while capitalists from Finland, Estonia, Latvia and Romania hover around hoping to become a potential threat."
- The evidence is rather against this being Trotsky.--Pharos (talk) 05:44, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- Your position is based on the fallacious concept that a few additional words of description make a source more "credible". Quite the contrary: the length matters not at all, and this project regards secondary scholarly publications as the most reliable. A longer description in no case makes the source more reliable or credible. The idea that we should favor a link from a gallery over a scholar specializing in the period frankly makes me cringe.
- And no, I can't see any glasses or goatee on either image. Lets not pretend the link is so "low-res" it made his eyeglasses disappear. -- Director (talk) 06:22, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- Reputable art galleries consult with art historians about their artwork because they want to be as historically accurate as possible. So what we have here is two reliable secondary sources who happen to disagree. USchick (talk) 17:46, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- I am not prepared to grant that the gallery link "must be better sourced than it is". That said, I'm not really saying the gallery is "unreliable" - but that the scholarly source is more reliable. Its a university-published, scholarly, secondary source, dealing with the specific subject at hand, by a university professor specializing in the period. It doesn't get any better. Wikipedia policy tells us to go by what it says, unless a source of comparable quality is posted (the gallery link is simply not such by a long shot), only then can we actually debate the issue. Up to that point, no amount of words posted on this talkpage will change the situation.
- And USchick, I'd really like to avoid one of those inane exchanges here. -- Director (talk) 18:04, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- Nevertheless, there are two reliable sources at odds with each other. USchick (talk) 18:21, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- WP:ICANTHEARYOU. One is more reliable than the other. -- Director (talk) 19:34, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- There are two reliable sources here. I don't think we are in a position to determine that one is more reliable than the other; this is surely a matter for the reliable sources noticeboard. RolandR (talk) 19:48, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- I'm not necessarily against taking this to RSN, but I feel WP:SOURCE is pretty explicit on this: "
If available, academic and peer-reviewed publications are usually the most reliable sources, such as in history, medicine, and science.
" -- Director (talk) 19:58, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- I'm not necessarily against taking this to RSN, but I feel WP:SOURCE is pretty explicit on this: "
- There are two reliable sources here. I don't think we are in a position to determine that one is more reliable than the other; this is surely a matter for the reliable sources noticeboard. RolandR (talk) 19:48, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- WP:ICANTHEARYOU. One is more reliable than the other. -- Director (talk) 19:34, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- Nevertheless, there are two reliable sources at odds with each other. USchick (talk) 18:21, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- And USchick, I'd really like to avoid one of those inane exchanges here. -- Director (talk) 18:04, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- Certainly this could use more investigation; it's a fairly obscure image, though. My main concern, though, was in using the image to illustrate this article, when half of the RSes say it isn't Trotsky.--Pharos (talk) 19:13, 28 April 2014 (UTC)
- That's not what you were saying above, Pharos. Your position was simply that the poster isn't Trotsky. As for whether it should be included here, that's a pretty subjective issue. -- Director (talk) 04:53, 1 May 2014 (UTC)
- Yes, I certainly think it's very likely not to be Trotsky, but I would also acknowledge that it's a fairly obscure image, and we can't be absolutely sure as it hasn't really been studied in depth. I wouldn't particularly advocate putting this image in articles under either interpretation.--Pharos (talk) 18:38, 1 May 2014 (UTC)
- There are plenty of images available that are undoubtedly Trotsky. Why do we need to include one that may well not be him? AndyTheGrump (talk) 19:09, 1 May 2014 (UTC)
- I thought it was a good illustration of his pivotal role in the wars of the period. The man wasn't just an intellectual, but also a very competent military leader. Still, as I said, its an entirely subjective issue whether to include that particular image. -- Director (talk) 02:27, 2 May 2014 (UTC)
- There are plenty of images available that are undoubtedly Trotsky. Why do we need to include one that may well not be him? AndyTheGrump (talk) 19:09, 1 May 2014 (UTC)
- Yes, I certainly think it's very likely not to be Trotsky, but I would also acknowledge that it's a fairly obscure image, and we can't be absolutely sure as it hasn't really been studied in depth. I wouldn't particularly advocate putting this image in articles under either interpretation.--Pharos (talk) 18:38, 1 May 2014 (UTC)
- That's not what you were saying above, Pharos. Your position was simply that the poster isn't Trotsky. As for whether it should be included here, that's a pretty subjective issue. -- Director (talk) 04:53, 1 May 2014 (UTC)
- Certainly this could use more investigation; it's a fairly obscure image, though. My main concern, though, was in using the image to illustrate this article, when half of the RSes say it isn't Trotsky.--Pharos (talk) 19:13, 28 April 2014 (UTC)