The demonstration
called for by the Congress of Soviets the previous week takes place on Sunday
the 18th, but without the result expected by Mensheviks and Social
Revolutionaries.
The demonstrators
assembled with their banners in the Mars Field and followed generally the line
of march (April 7 – March 25, 1917) taken to mark the funerals of those killed
in the February Revolution. But there were fewer marchers in June than there
had been to commemorate the funerals. Trotsky says the workers and soldiers
marched, but (as this was a march sponsored by the Congress of Soviets) the
bourgeoisie and intelligentsia did not.
It soon became
clear to observers from the Congress that the great majority of the 400,000
marchers supported the Bolshevik program. Banners bearing Bolshevik slogans –
“Down with the Ten Minister-Capitalists!” “Down with the Offensive!” “All Power
to the Soviets!” – predominated.
Few banners or
placards displayed slogans favoring the official program of the Soviet or the
party programs of the Mensheviks or Social Revolutionaries. Fewer still
supported the Provisional Government. Jewish intellectuals and supporters of
Plekhanov, an early Russian Marxist but an enemy of Leninism, lowered such placards
when the rest of the crowd shouted them down; Cossacks resisted until their
banners were torn away and destroyed.
The meaning of
the demonstration was unmistakable: no support either for the offensive or for
the Coalition Government. Even the marchers themselves, whether Bolshevik or
not, could perceive the influence of the Bolshevik line. Mensheviks and Social
Revolutionaries from the provinces could only argue that Petrograd did not
speak for the whole country.
The June
Demonstration is still considered the turning point from the bourgeois February
Revolution to the proletarian October Revolution.
Meanwhile anarchists
took advantage of the distraction to break into a number of prisons and
liberate the tenants, most of them criminal, and not political, prisoners.
Trotsky suspects the authorities winked at the enterprise, which went off
without much interference from them. The Minister of Justice later ordered a
raid on the Vyborg Gardens (see the entry for June 20 – June 7, 1917) on the
pretext that the escapees and anarchists were hiding there. In the result, the
mansion was ruined. The Vyborg workers responded by closing some of the
factories.
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