'Narodnaya Volya' (''ÐÐ°Ñ€Ð¾Ð´Ð½Ð°Ñ Ð’Ð¾Ð»Ñ'' in
Russian, known as ''People’s Will'' in
English) was a Russian
revolutionary organization in the early
1880s. It was formed in August
1879, after ''Land and Liberty'' (
Zemlya i volya) had split in two: ''Narodnaya Volya'' and ''Cherniy Peredel'' (
Black repartition). (The word 'volya' means both 'will' and 'liberty' in Russian.)
Its founders were professional revolutionaries — supporters of political struggle against
autocracy. They created a centralized, well disguised, and most significant organization in a time of diverse liberation movements in
Russia. Narodnaya Volya was led by its Executive Committee:
Alexander Mikhailov,
Aleksandr Kvyatkovsky,
Andrei Zhelyabov,
Sophia Perovskaya,
Vera Figner,
Nikolai Morozov,
Mikhail Frolenko,
Lev Tikhomirov,
Alexander Barannikov,
Anna Yakimova,
Maria Oshanina and others.
The Executive Committee was in charge of a network of local and special groups (comprised of workers, students, and members of the military). In
1879–
1883, Narodnaya Volya had
affiliates in almost 50 cities, especially in
Ukraine and the
Volga region. Though the number of its members never exceeded 500, Narodnaya Volya had a few thousand followers.
The Program of Narodnaya Volya
Narodnaya Volya’s Program contained the following demands:
convocation of the
Constituent Assembly (for designing a
Constitution); introduction of
universal suffrage; permanent people’s
representation,
freedom of speech,
press, and
assembly; communal
self-government; exchange of the permanent army with a people’s volunteer corps; transfer of land to the people; gradual placement of the factories under the control of the workers; and granting oppressed peoples of the Russian Empire the right to
self-determination.
Narodnaya Volya's Program was a mix of
democratic and
socialist reforms. Narodnaya Volya differed from its parent organization, the
narodnik Zemlya i volya, in that its members had come to believe that a social revolution would be impossible in the absence of a political revolution; the peasantry could not take possession of the land as long as the government remained autocratic. Given Zemlya i Volya's failures in its propaganda efforts among the peasants in the movements "to the people" in the early 1870s, Narodnaya Volya turned its energies against the central government. However, unlike Marxists, they continued to believe that Russia could achieve
socialism through a
peasant revolution, bypassing the stage of
capitalism.
The members of Narodnaya Volya were not in complete agreement about the relationship between the social and political revolutions; some believed in the possibility of achieving both simultaneously, relying on the socialist instincts of the Russian peasantry, as demonstrated in the traditional peasant commune. Other members believed that a political revolution would have to take place first and, after the autocracy had been overthown and democratic
liberties established, revolutionaries would prepare people for the socialist revolution. The
Liberal faction of Narodnaya Volya (which had no real influence) proposed to limit their demands to getting a Constitution from the
tsarist government.
Narodnaya Volya spread its
propaganda through all of the population. Its newspapers, "Narodnaya Volya" and “The Worker’s Gazetteâ€, attempted to popularize the idea of a political struggle with the autocracy. Their struggle to topple autocracy was crowned by the slogan “Now or never!†Narodnaya Volya did not succeed in enlisting the peasantry in its work, which would later lead
Soviet historians to charge it with ''
Blanquism''; these historians would argue that Narodnaya Volya understood political struggle only in terms of
conspiracy and, therefore, looked more like a
sect.
Resort to terrorism
As time went by,
terrorism was gaining more and more importance, as well. A special place in the history of Narodnaya Volya belongs to its “Terrorist factionâ€, whose members — including
Aleksandr Ulyanov (
Vladimir Lenin's brother) — are also known as
Pervomartovtsi. Narodnaya Volya prepared 7
assassination attempts on the life of
Alexander II of Russia (until they finally killed him), and later on
Alexander III of Russia. Its terror frightened the government and persuaded it to make a few concessions. However, the
regime soon realized that the masses would not rise up in support of the revolutionaries, which gave the regime all the more reason to
counterattack. In
1879–
1883, there were more than 70
trials of N.v.’s members with about 2,000 people brought to trial (''see''
Trial of the Fourteen). Narodnaya Volya lost almost its entire membership to imprisonment and exile, and was rendered lifeless.
Aftermath
After the assassination of Alexander II, Narodnaya Volya was going through a period of ideological and organizational crisis. The most significant attempts at reviving Narodnaya Volya are associated with the names of
Gherman Lopatin (
1884),
Pyotr Yakubovich (
1883–
1884),
Boris Orzhikh,
Vladimir Bogoraz,
L.Sternberg (
1885), and
S.Ginzburg (
1889). Organizations similar to Narodnaya Volya in the
1890s (in
St.Petersburg and abroad) pretty much abandoned many of the revolutionary ideas of Narodnaya Volya.
Narodnaya Volya’s activity became one of the most important elements of the revolutionary situation in the late
1879–
1880. However, ineffective
tactics of political conspiracy, and preference of
terrorism over other means of struggle failed. At the turn of the century, however, as increasing numbers of former members of Narodaya Volya were released from prison and exile, these veteran revolutionaries helped to form the
Socialist Revolutionary Party, which revived many of the goals and methods of the former
narodniki, including peasant revolution and terror.
Modern usage of the name
In December 2001, a small nationalist party led by a veteran Russian nationalist politician
Sergey Baburin was created under the name
Party of National Revival "Narodnaya Volya". Later Narodnaya Volya joined
Rodina coalition what performed surprisingly well in the 2003
State Duma elections. Narodnaya Volya is seen by many as the most nationalist element in mostly leftist
Rodina and a number of its members in the past were associated with Russian
far right movements. When Rodina merged into the new party
Fair Russia, Narodnaya Volya left the Rodina coalition instead.
See also
★ Modern
Belarusian newspaper ''
Narodnaja Volya''.
References
★ Berlin, Isaiah, "The Populists' Moral Condemnation of Russia Political and Social Systems," in ''Problems of European Civilization: Imperial Russia after 1861'', Arthur E. Adams, ed. D. C. Heath and Company, 1965.
★ Maynard, Sir John, ''Russia in Flux: Before the October Revolution'', Collier Books, 1962.
★ Yarmolinsky, Avrahm,
''Road to Revolution: A Century of Russian Radicalism'', 1956. Chapter 12. The People's Will.
External links
★
Official website of modern Russian political party named "Narodnaya Volya"
★
Memorial plaque in Odessa, Ukraine for members of Narodnaya Volya