LENIN ON ORGANIZATION
possible and hardly desirable, in view of our poverty
of propagandists. Propaganda should be carried
on by the Committee as a whole and must be
strictly centralized, and my idea of the matter is
therefore as follows: the Committee charges certain
of its members to organize a propagandist group
(which will act as a branch department of the Com-
mittee or be one of the Committee institutions).
This group, making conspiratorial use of the serv-
ices of the district groups, will conduct propaganda
throughout the whole town, and in every locality
«within the competence” of the Committee. 1f
necessary, this group may set up a sub-group, and,
so to speak, transfer certain of its functions, but
only with the sanction of the Committee, and the
Committee shall always and unconditionaly possess
the right of detailing its delegate to each group,
sub-group, or circle which has any contact at all
with the movement. . .
By the way, while on the subject of propagandists,
I should like to say a few words in criticism of the
usual practice of overloading this profession with
people of little capacity for it and thus lowering
the level of propaganda. Almost every student
without any selection is regarded as a propagandist,
and the whole of our youth demand that they
should “be given circles.” This tendency must be
fought, because it is doing a lot of harm. As a
matter of fact, capable propagandists well-grounded
and trained in theory are very rare (to become such
a propagandist requires a fair amount of training
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