History of the Communist Movement in India - Volume I

History of the Communist Movement in India - Volume I

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Author: Harkishan Singh Surjeet
Jyoti Basu/E K Nayanar
Publisher: LeftWord
Year: 2005
Language: English
Pages: 248
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8187496495

Description

The present volume tells the story of the early years of the communist movement in India.

The communist movement in India was a product of the radical impetus coming out of the national liberation struggle. Though the Communist Party of India was first organized in Tashkent by émigré Indian revolutionaries, the seeds of class politics and the ideology of scientific socialism sprouted in the soil of the subcontinent once the message of the October Revolution reached its shores.

>From the outset, the colonial state unleashed repression on the communists. The conspiracy cases in Peshawar, Lahore and Kanpur were meant not to crush an organized movement, but to suppress the very possibility of communism taking root in India.

The communist movement, with its strong ideological moorings, influenced virtually all other streams. This contributed to the rise of radical trends even inside the Congress in the post-First World War period. The militant anti-imperialist stand of the communists attracted various revolutionary fighters. Among them were the Gadar fighters of Punjab, the colleagues of Bhagat Singh, the revolutionaries of Bengal, the militant working class fighters of Bombay and Madras presidencies and radical anti-imperialist Congressmen from different parts of the country.

Communists played the principal role in transforming the demand for independence from the vaguely-enunciated idea of Swaraj to a pro-people concept of freedom not just from the colonial regime, but also from social and economic exploitation and sectarian strife. Despite its organizational limitations, the CPI, guided by the Communist International (Comintern), forced attention on the class exploitation of workers and peasants.

However, the sectarian stand of the communists restricted the Party’s growth. The Comintern’s stand, particularly after the Sixth Congress in 1928, isolated the Party from the main current of the anti-colonial movement.

The Meerut conspiracy case trial provided a common platform for all the communist groups to sit together and to initiate the process of self-introspection. The Party took a new turn politically and organizationally, and this prepared the ground for the massive people’s movements led by the communists in the coming years.

Backed by meticulous research, this volume will be invaluable to researchers and lay readers alike.

REVIEW

We have no doubt that ultimately the proletarian revolution will take place in India. We are equally convinced that in a colonial country, such as India is, the revolution that will precede the proletarian revolution, will be of the nature of the bourgeois democratic revolution. This is the revolution for which we were working, and we are convinced that the programme which was put before the country, the programme of the united anti-imperialist front of all those classes capable of carrying through the revolution was the only correct programme for attaining it.
-General Statement of the accused in the Meerut Conspiracy Case

Contents

PREFACE

Introduction

Formation of the Communist Party

Spread of Communist Activities

Kanpur Communist Conference

Workers’s and Peasants’ Parties

Sixth Congress of the Comintern

New Upsurge

The Meerut Trial

Towards an All-India Centre

Summing Up

Notes

Biographical Notes

Index