Not without reason was Stalin, himself coming from a nation oppressed under the tsar, considered by the peoples of the world “the Father of Nations”, for it was he, armed with the Marxist method of scientific analysis and Lenin’s analysis of imperialism, that outlined the fundamental principles of the national question, paving the way for real national liberation. Toward this end, Stalin contributed an immense amount of writings to the treasury of Marxism on the national question, most of which (with the exception of a couple notable later works) are compiled in this volume.
In his work Marxism and the National Question which opens this volume and constitutes the seminal Marxist-Leninist work on the topic, Stalin, in the first place, gives the classic Leninist definition of a nation as “a historically evolved, stable community of language, territory, economic life, and psychological make-up manifested in a community of culture” (p. 8). Even today we find this definition extremely important when, for example, zionism and the American bourgeois press run wild with all sorts of concoctions to deny the existence of the Palestinian, Black Belt, and other nationalities. Stalin’s definition here smashes these legends and it is from this definition that the Leninist-Stalinist solution of the national question, i.e. the right of all nations to self-determination, follows.
The fundamental demand is for the right of nations to self-determination on this topic, and throughout this work a striking blow is dealt to the assertions — often presented in different ways but always the same in their essential content — of Kautsky, the Bundists, etc. which are widely repeated today by social-democrats, anarchists, and the like to the effect that self-determination is unnecessary (or even harmful!), and that all we need instead is “cultural unions”. Defending the principle of the Bolshevik Party for the right of nations to self-determination, Stalin proves that the proposals of Kautsky, the Bund, Austro-Marxists, etc. cannot but lead to a strengthening of the positions of imperialism and exacerbation of national contradictions within multi-national states like Austria-Hungary.
In his defence of national self-determination, Stalin gives to the Communists of imperialised nations like Ireland and Palestine a vital weapon. Proceeding from Lenin’s concrete analysis of imperialism, Stalin explains how the working people of imperialised nations suffer a double-slavery, slavery from the national bourgeoisie and the bourgeoisie of their imperialist masters. Naturally, final liberation from this yoke can come only in socialism, but, particularly in his talks with Communists from outside the Soviet Union contained here (and particularly with respect to China, contributions sadly ignored by the bourgeois-democrat Mao), Stalin demonstrates how the positions of the national bourgeoisie ought to be judged in relation to the bourgeoisie of the imperialist masters and how contradictions, as took hold in Egypt and Afghanistan in the past, may be utilised to weaken imperialism and strengthen the revolutionary movement in oppressed countries, while also showing that dogmatically tailing behind every national movement would be erroneous as later became the case in China. Irish revolutionaries will no doubt remember that it was the national bourgeoisie who always deserted the revolution to the side of British imperialism at the final moment, costing the Irish revolutionaries greatly in their history. Among oppressed nations, Stalin has given the key national liberation, writing “the main essence of the Bolshevik approach to the national question is that the Bolsheviks always examined the national question in inseparable connection with the revolutionary perspective” (p. 200), proving in the course of his writings that one cannot expect national liberation as a gift and that it must be actively seized through the course of revolutionary struggle and, owing to the inevitable capitulation of the national bourgeoisie to the imperialists, that this struggle today must be inseparably linked up with the struggle for socialism, even if the establishment of a socialist republic need not necessarily follow independence. In a word, Stalin has totally refuted the tired weapon of reformism and national liberalism often employed by imperialist powers to keep their subjects servile.
What’s more, having served for some time as People’s Commissar for Nationalities and being one of the foremost personalities in carrying out the Leninist cultural revolution in the Soviet Union, Stalin gives an invaluable contribution to understanding the role of national culture. Lenin rightly noted that under capitalism, the demand of national culture could not but strengthen the bourgeoisie and bourgeois nationalism, a poison that fuels class collaboration and social-chauvinism, paving the way for new predatory wars. However, taken into hand by the Communist Party under the dictatorship of the proletariat, has happened in the Soviet Union, national culture of a progressive character flourishes, it translates into socialist patriotism (quite different, as seen in this book, from the “socialist patriotism” often promoted by political degenerates like the ACP in America today) and becomes a weapon of resistance against capitalist intervention and means of enriching the lives of the working class. Pointing to the experience of nations that had been the most backward in the tsarist prisonhouse of nations like Turkestan, Uzbekistan, and Buryatia, Stalin demonstrates how under socialism, and only under socialism for national culture is taken into hand by the only living, growing class (the proletariat), a real renaissance of culture in the modern day is possible, a rebirth and genesis for nations that the bourgeoisie had already declared dead long ago.
We now live in the period of “the blackest reaction” of which Stalin forewarned in 1926. Today the world is once again made up entirely of oppressed and imperialist nations, retaining the vital importance of Stalin’s writings on the national and colonial question, writings which led to the victory of the Leninist solution of the national question in the Soviet Union. The division of the world into imperialist and imperialised nations makes the careful study of this book an absolute necessity for Communists of all countries. For Communists of imperialist countries, it demonstrates the importance of fighting for national liberation, of overcoming great-nation chauvinism, and forms a guide to linking the revolutionary struggle at home with the struggle for national liberation in the colonies, which Lenin time and again stressed the importance of. And for those of the imperialised countries, Stalin’s writings show the way to national liberation.
For nations like Ireland, where defeat has followed every revolutionary upsurge so far, where the bourgeoisie, frightened by Jacobinism, always deserted to the camp of the British invader, where we have lost our language and so much of our cultural identity, Stalin’s works truly constitute a lodestar. In them is found an explanation of our earlier defeats, righteous though the cause of Tone and Emmet were, and in place of outdated and now impotent methods of national struggle, Stalin gives us a new, sharp weapon — Bolshevism. The fictions of the bourgeoisie, supported by the Hitler-inspired ministers in the EU, are shattered. In the example of nationalities like the Uzbeks and Buryats we are shown that Gaeilge, the culture of the Irish people, are not dead, we are shown how they, along with the numerous languages and cultures of countless other nations, can be saved and reborn in socialism. And Stalin, the history of the Bolshevik Party of Lenin and Stalin, has shown us the way to socialism. The importance of Stalin’s writings on the national and colonial question for us cannot be stressed enough!