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Special pages :
Letter to Georgy Chicherin, September 5, 1921
Source: Lenin Collected Works, Progress Publishers, 1976, Moscow, Volume 45, pages 289b-290a.
5/IX.
Comrade Chicherin:
I attach no importance to Berzinâs opinion about the decline of the British labour movement.[1] Berzin knows little and is always âpessimisticâ.
I am very much worried about the search of his luggage. I think we should make a strict application of the âeye for an eyeâ rule to British representatives. Pedantically: treat them just as badly and a little worse. Is this being done?
Then, concerning the âHooveritesâ,[2] their every step should be watched (by the Peopleâs Commissariat for Foreign Affairs through the press and perhaps some âtiesâ); while the worst of them (someone called Lowrie?) âtracked downâ and caught, so as to land them in a scandal.
This calls for relentless, persistent warfare.
Do all our representatives abroad know that everything should he done to support workersâ collections (in aid of the starving) directly to us? Send a dispatch (circular) with this demand: their every report must state in code: âworkersâ collections in Britain (France, Sweden, etc.) for fortnight so much.â
Collections only straight to our address.
We must have prompt, accurate and regular information about this.
The âfor Nansenâ and âagainst Nansenâ campaign[3] clearly shows (the extracts from the Daily Chronicle which you have sent me are extremely interesting) that we must reply to Noulens with a strictly sharp rejection: an outright rejection. Then and only then shall we gain by winning over the âpro-Nansenâ elements and put an end to the game of the anti-Nansenites.
With communist greetings,
Lenin
- â This opinion was expressed by J. A. Berzin in a note, which he sent from Britain, apparently to G. V. Chicherin.
- â A reference to officials of the American Relief Administration (ARA) which was headed by Herbert Hoover. Leninâs proposal that a number of restrictive measures should be taken in respect of them was due to the fact that the staff of this organisation, consisting mainly of U.S. army officers, engaged in espionage and gave support to counter-revolutionary elements in Russia (see this volume, Documents 310, 331 and 370).
- â Nansenâs activity in collecting donations from public organisations and private persons to render aid to the starving in Russia aroused dissatisfaction in the reactionary circles of some capitalist countries. The Soviet people appreciated his efforts, and on December 25, 1921, the Ninth All-Russia Congress of Soviets carried a vote expressing deep gratitude, to him.
The Daily Chronicle, a newspaper of the British imperialist, bourgeoisie, published in London from 1855 to 1930.