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Re: Red Spain - and India



Responding to Rahul's charming offer:

>>I would gladly discuss this phenomenon, historically in general
>>and with regard to the prewar years specifically, with anyone
>>who had even half an independent thought based on
>>a quarter of an iota of knowledge.

Doug H wrote:

>Actually I know next to nothing about India, something that
>embarrasses me and which I'd like to correct. Any advice on
>what to read?

You'll find an excellent historical primer in the Progress Publishers
anthology Marx and Engels 'On Colonialism', containing a lot on India and
China and some interesting things about Ireland. About India there are a
lot of articles covering the Mutiny of 1857.

To get a feeling for the seething vitality of the situation in the
subcontinent, Salman Rushdie's novels are excellent - Midnight's Children,
Shame (most particularly), and The Moor's Last Sigh.

An interesting book you might not have at your fingertips (I wonder how
much of an 'iota of knowledge' it represents for our arrogant Olympian
Rahul?) is

Capital Accumulation and Workers' Struggle
in Indian industrialisation
The Case of Tata Iron and Steel Company 1910-1970

by Satya Brata Datta, Almqvist & Wiksell International,
Stockholm 1986



Others will be able to recommend other stuff.

In connection with theses put forward to the Second Congress of Communist
International in 1920 by the Indian revolutionary Manabendra Roy, Lenin
makes the following remarks in his Report of the Commission on the National
and the Colonial Questions July 26 (Sel Works III, p 459-460, Progress Pub
1967):

The question was posed as follows: are we to consider as
correct the assertion that the capitalist stage of economic
development is inevitable for backward nations now on the
road to emancipation and among whom a certain advance
towards progress is to be seen since the war? We replied in
the negative. If the victorious revolutionary proletariat
conducts systematic propaganda among them, and the Soviet
governments come to their aid with all the means at their
disposal - in that event it will be mistaken to assume that
the backward peoples must inevitably go through the
capitalist stage of development. Not only should we create
independent contingents of fighters and party organizations
in the colonies and the backward countries, not only at once
launch propaganda for the organization of peasants' Soviets
and strive to adapt them to the pre-capitalist conditions,
but the Communist International should advance the
proposition with the appropriate theoretical grounding, that
with the aid of the proletariat of the advanced countries,
backward countries can go over to the Soviet system and,
through certain stages of development, to communism, without
having to pass through the capitalist stage.

The necessary means for this cannot be indicated in advance.
These will be prompted by practical experience. It has,
however, been definitely established that the idea of the
Soviets is understood by the mass of the working people in
even the most remote nations, that the Soviets should be
adapted to the conditions of a pre-capitalist social system,
and that the Communist parties should immediately begin work
in this direction in all parts of the world.

I would also like to emphasize the importance of
revolutionary work by the Communist parties, not only in
their own, but also in the colonial countries, and
particularly among the troops employed by the exploiting
nations to keep the colonial peoples in subjection.


Cheers,

Hugh




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