The Russian Schools
under the Yoke of the Bolshevics.*)
By E. Kovalevsky,
Chairman of Committees and Introducing Speaker in matters of public Instruction
in the 3rd and 4th Duma.
CONTENTS: Pre-revolutionary times; The School in present-day Russia; Abolition
of Local Self-Government; Condition of the teachers; The ruined schools; The
increase of illiteracy; The decrease of schools and pupils; The education — a Monopoly
of the State; Programs and methods of the Bolshevist schools — Dalton plan,
Complex method; The results of these Systems; Education .in Bolshevist schools —
“What we need is hatred”; Awakening of sex mstincts: Struggle against religion;
Communistic propaganda and party organisations in the schools; Children are obliged
to spy.
Pre-revolutionary Times.
I no other sphere have more high-flown and exhaustive promises been
made by the Bolshevics than in the realm of education. Figures have
been most shamelessly faked; things have been twisted so as to give them
the desired appearance in order to bluff credulous foreigners, little versed
in this question. At the same time there is nothing in the activity of the
Bolshevics which has brought as much harm to the Russian people as their
school policy and system of public education. Perhaps this will be the most
difficult and painful problem which future Russia will have to solve.
We have also every reason to insist that this question concerns Western
Europe very intimately. The policy of the Bolshevics tends to establish in
all countries organizations for implanting among pupils of all ages ideas
that are to pave the way for the triumph of Communism. This is no
secret for anyone; and yet no one struggles against it; no one even seems
conscious how grave the danger is. It is high time to try and clear up two
false and very harmful conceptions. Unfortunately they are upheld not
only by foreigners who are quite indifferent to Russian history and culture;
but also by some Russian emigrants. The first mistake is the jdea that
before the Revolution nothing, or very little had been done for the people’s
education in Russia; the second is that the Bolshevics have, in a certain
*) Much has been written regarding this question. I have generally made use
of the data found in Bolshevist sources, such as the official programs (translated into
French), circular letters, decrees, anthologies of political instruction, text books,
pedagogical books and journals, etc. However, there also exist some very valuable
articles among the Russian publications edited abroad, such as “The Russian School
Abroad”, and the articles published by the Russian Pedagogical Bureau in Prague
‘Articles of Prof. I. Hessen, of A. Boeme, and of others).
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