What do we have to learn from the Russian Revolution?
Wednesday, August 11th, 2010 at
8:25 pm
I'm making an exhibit on the Russian Revolution and I was wondering what was the whole purpose of the revolution? what started it? how did it end? what is something we can learn from the revolution?
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Russian Revolution`s( first in february and second in October) was a exit from hopeless situation.I was in Moscow museum of modern Socity(Museum of Revolution) – very intresting place.
In that time more then 80% of all citizen was a peasants and their live was not easy.
Low level of agriculrury technick makes them no time to educate themselve, also many of them pay a lot of money to the land owners.
The terrorist organizathion" Narodnaya Volay" (will of the people) kill Alexander and in their liflets was writed "if the Ruler do not want to help people, then people chenge him."
So, they realy has not way to change goverment.
And when WW1 starts and millions of villagers come to front, it was nobody to work at the filds. There was not tractors in Russia, as it was in England, so starvation began.
I am not Bolshevik fan, and february revolution, arrest of Nikolay II was make without they. So, all sociaty was anty Royal – and nobody wants to help ex Tcar. Iven Russian gentry want not this kind of goverment.
So, it was a chain links – murder of his father, Alexander II, first Russian revolution in 1905(during Russian-Japan war), and 1917.
Also help from Germany to the anti goverment Group (Bolshevicks) was enougth big(see more about Parvus.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Revolution_(1917)
Way too deep to get into here, read up on it. It was inevitable and won’t happen again.
Bolshevik revolution was the bloody start to a bloody government. If you can learn anything from it, it’s that a peaceful revolution makes a peaceful country, but a violent one makes a violent country.
It was one of the saddest and horrific humanitarian catastrophes in the history of men. There is no way to describe in simple terms what was the purpose of it. But, fundamentally, it was an attempt to materialize a human delusion by force. The idea of human sufficiency (without God) in order to build an ideal human society without exploitation had been entertained for centuries, if not millenniums. This idea was developed into a practical application and used as the bait to draw a multinational empire into a collapse in order "to build a new society", which theoretically would be more just and generally better.
As we know, the result of that attempt was a sea of innocent blood spilled for the the sake of an idea, total turmoil and emergence of a totalitarian regime.
What we can learn is: humans do not need to attempt building another "Tower of Babylon". Man without God can do nothing good.
The single most important, momentous, and eventful revolution in human history.
The second was the Iranian Revolution in 1979.
Third is probably the Hungarian Revolution in 1956.
If you too kind ruller and dont kill revolution roots it will murder all the people of this country.