On Education

#PUBLICATION NOTE

This edition of On Education has been prepared and revised for digital publication by the Institute of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism under the Central Committee of the Communist Party in Switzerland on the basis of the edition published in the Collected Works of Lenin, Fourth English Edition, Volume 33, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1964.

#INTRODUCTION NOTE

This is an article dictated by Comrade Nikolaj Lenin in Gorki, Russia on the 1st and 2nd of January, 1923. It was first published in the Pravda, Volume 12, Number 2 (4th of January, 1923).


#Workers and oppressed people of the world, unite!

#ON EDUCATION

#PAGES FROM A DIARY

#Nikolaj Lenin
#1st and 2nd of January, 1923

#

The recent publication of the report on literacy among the population of Russia, based on the census of 1920 (Literacy in Russia, issued by the Central Statistical Board, Public Education Section, Moscow, 1922), is a very important event.

Below, I quote a table from this report on the state of literacy among the population of Russia in 1897 and 1920.

Literates per 1'000 Men (1897) Literates per 1'000 Men (1920) Literates per 1'000 Women (1897) Literates per 1'000 Women (1920) Literates per 1'000 People (1897) Literates per 1'000 People (1920)
European Russia 326 422 136 255 229 330
North Caucasus 241 357 56 215 150 281
Siberia (Western) 170 307 46 134 108 218
Overall Average 318 409 131 244 223 319

At a time when we hold forth on proletarian culture and the relation in which it stands to bourgeois culture, facts and figures reveal that we are in a very bad way even as far as bourgeois culture is concerned. As might have been expected, it appears that we are still a very long way from attaining universal literacy, and that, even compared with tsarist times (1897), our progress has been far too slow. This should serve as a stern warning and reproach to those who have been soaring in the empyrean heights of «proletarian culture». It shows what a vast amount of urgent spade-work we still have to do to reach the standard of an ordinary Western European developed country. It also shows what a vast amount of work we have to do today to achieve, on the basis of our proletarian gains, anything like a real cultural standard.

We must not confine ourselves to this incontrovertible, but too theoretical, proposition. The very next time we revise our quarterly budget, we must take this matter up in a practical way as well. In the first place, of course, we shall have to cut down the expenditure of government departments other than the People's Commissariat of Education, and the sums thus released should be assigned for the latter's needs. In a year like the present, when we are relatively well supplied, we must not be chary in increasing the bread ration for schoolteachers.

Generally speaking, it cannot be said that the work now being done in public education is too narrow. Quite a lot is being done to get the old teachers out of their rut, to attract them to the new problems, to awaken their interest in new methods of education, and in such problems as religion.

But we are not doing the main thing. We are not doing anything — or doing far from enough — to raise the schoolteachers to the level that is absolutely essential if we want any culture at all, proletarian or even bourgeois. We must bear in mind the semi-Asian ignorance from which we have not yet extricated ourselves, and from which we cannot extricate ourselves without strenuous effort — although we have every opportunity to do so, because nowhere are the masses of the people so interested in real culture as they are in our country; nowhere are the problems of this culture tackled so thoroughly and consistently as they are in our country; in no other country is State power in the hands of the working class which, in its masses, is fully aware of the deficiencies, I shall not say of its culture, but of its literacy; nowhere is the working class so ready to make, and nowhere is it actually making, such sacrifices to improve its position in this respect as in our country.

Too little, far too little, is still being done by us to adjust our State budget to satisfy, as a first measure, the requirements of elementary public education. Even in our People's Commissariat of Education, we all too often find disgracefully inflated staffs in some State publishing establishment, which is contrary to the concept that the State's first concern should not be publishing houses, but that there should be people to read, that the number of people able to read is greater, so that book publishing should have a wider political field in future Russia. Owing to the old (and bad) habit, we are still devoting much more time and effort to technical questions, such as the question of book publishing, than to the general political question of literacy among the people.

If we take the Central Vocational Education Board, we are sure that there, too, we shall find far too much that is superfluous and inflated by departmental interests, much that is ill-adjusted to the requirements of broad public education. Far from everything that we find in the Central Vocational Education Board can be justified by the legitimate desire first of all to improve and give a practical slant to the education of our young factory workers. If we examine the staff of the Central Vocational Education Board carefully, we shall find very much that is inflated and is in that respect fictitious and should be done away with. There is still very much in the proletarian and peasant State that can and must be economized for the purpose of promoting literacy among the people; this can be done by closing institutions which are playthings of a semi-aristocratic type, or institutions we can still do without and will be able to do without, and shall have to do without, for a long time to come, considering the state of literacy among the people as revealed by the statistics.

Our schoolteachers should be raised to a standard they have never achieved, and cannot achieve, in bourgeois society. This is a truism and requires no proof. We must strive for this state of affairs by working steadily, methodically, and persistently to raise the teachers to a higher cultural level, to train them thoroughly for their really high calling, and — mainly, mainly, and mainly — to improve their position materially.

We must systematically step up our efforts to organize the schoolteachers, so as to transform them from the bulwark of the bourgeois system that they still are in all capitalist countries without exception, into the bulwark of the council system, in order, through their agency, to divert the peasantry from alliance with the bourgeoisie and to bring them into alliance with the proletariat.

I want briefly to emphasize the special importance in this respect of regular visits to the villages; such visits, it is true, are already being practised and should be regularly promoted. We should not stint money — which we all too often waste on the machinery of State that is almost entirely a product of the past historical epoch — on measures like these visits to the villages.

For the speech I was to have delivered at the Congress of Councils in December 1922, I collected data on the patronage undertaken by urban workers over villagers. Part of these data was obtained for me by Comrade Hodorovskij, and since I have been unable to deal with this problem and give it publicity through the Congress, I submit the matter to the comrades for discussion now.

Here, we have a fundamental political question — the relations between the cities and the countryside — which is of decisive importance for the whole of our revolution. While the bourgeois State methodically concentrates all its efforts on doping the urban workers, adapting all the literature published at State expense and at the expense of the tsarist and bourgeois political parties for this purpose, we can and must utilize our political power to make the urban workers effective vehicles of Communist ideas among the rural proletariat.

I said «Communist», but I hasten to make a reservation for fear of causing a misunderstanding, or of being taken too literally. Under no circumstances must this be understood to mean that we should immediately propagate purely and strictly Communist ideas in the countryside. As long as our countryside lacks the material basis for communism, it will be, I should say, harmful, in fact, I should say, fatal, for Communism to do so.

That is a fact. We must start by establishing contacts between the cities and the countryside without the preconceived aim of implanting Communism in the rural districts. It is an aim which cannot be achieved at the present time. It is inopportune, and to set an aim like that at the present time would be harmful, instead of useful, to the cause.

But it is our duty to establish contacts between the urban workers and the rural working people, to establish between them a form of comradeship which can easily be created. This is one of the fundamental tasks of the working class which holds power. To achieve this, we must form a number of associations (Party, trade-union, and private) of factory workers, which would devote themselves regularly to assisting the villages in their cultural development.

Is it possible to «attach» all the urban groups to all the village groups, so that every working-class group may take advantage regularly of every opportunity, of every occasion to serve the cultural needs of the village group it is «attached» to? Or will it be possible to find other forms of contact? I here confine myself solely to formulating the question in order to draw the comrades' attention to it, to point out the available experience of Western Siberia (to which Comrade Hodorovskij drew my attention) and to present this gigantic, historic cultural task in all its magnitude.

We are doing almost nothing for the rural districts outside our official budget or outside official channels. True, in our country, the nature of the cultural relations between town and village is automatically and inevitably changing. Under capitalism, the town introduced political, economic, moral, physical, and so on, corruption into the countryside. In our case, towns are automatically beginning to introduce the very opposite of this into the countryside. But, I repeat, all this is going on automatically, spontaneously, and can be improved (and later increased a hundredfold) by doing it consciously, methodically, and systematically.

We shall begin to advance (and shall then surely advance a hundred times more quickly) only after we have studied the question, after we have formed all sorts of workers' organizations — doing everything to prevent them from becoming bureaucratic — to take up the matter, discuss it, and get things done.

#N. Lenin
#2nd of January, 1923