|
|
|
PWI Editor's Note: S.G. Nechayev is a fascinating person, and
more should be said about his incredible life than can be said here. We
would like to point out that, while we disagree with many of his sentiments
and tactics, he remains a compelling figure. Although his completely cold-blooded
approach to social change can be repulsive, it is paradoxically the unbridled
passion with which he espouses it that burns in an impression. Never a
very successful revolutionary himself, he developed many of the secret
cell and conspiracy tactics that would be so useful to future insurgents.
His endless string of madcap schemes was brought to a close by his capture
and imprisonment for life. He was held as a special prisoner of the Tsar
in the dreaded Peter and Paul fortress in St. Petersburg, where he eventually
died. This pamphlet was intended to provide a basic set of guidelines
for the revolutionary conspirator, much as Machiavelli's The Prince had
done for tyrants.
The Revolutionary Catechism
By Sergey Genadievich Nechayev, 1869
The Duties of the
Revolutionary toward Himself
1. The revolutionary is a
doomed man. He has no personal interests, no business affairs, no emotions, no
attachments, no property and no name. Everything in him is wholly absorbed in
the single thought and the single passion for revolution.
2. The revolutionary knows
that in the very depths of his being, not only in words but also in deeds, he
has broken all the bounds which tie him to the social order and the civilized
world with all its laws, moralities and customs and with all its generally
accepted conventions. He is their implacable enemy, and if he continues to live
with them it is only in order to destroy them more speedily.
3. The revolutionary despises
all doctrines and refuses to accept the mundane sciences, leaving them for future
generations. He knows only one science: the science of destruction. For this
reason, but only for this reason, he will study mechanics, physics, chemistry,
and perhaps medicine. But all day and all night he studies the vital science of
human beings, their characteristics and circumstances, and all the phenomena of
the present social order. The object is perpetually the same: the surest and
quickest way of destroying the whole filthy order.
4. The revolutionary despises
public opinion. He despises and hates the existing social morality in all its
manifestations. For him, morality is everything which contributes to the
triumph of the revolution. Immoral and criminal is everything which stands in
the way.
5. The revolutionary is a
dedicated man, merciless toward the State and toward the educated classes; and
he can expect no mercy from them. Between him and them there exists, declared
or concealed, a relentless and irreconcilable war to the death. He must
accustom himself to torture.
6. Tyrannical toward himself,
he must be tyrannical toward others. All the gentle and enervating sentiments
of kinship, love, friendship, gratitude, and even honor must be suppressed in
him and give place to the cold and single minded passion for revolution. For
him there exists only one pleasure, one consolation, one reward, one
satisfaction –the success of the revolution. Night and day he must have
but one thought, one aim –merciless destruction. Striving coldbloodedly
and indefatigably toward this end, he must be prepared to destroy himself and
with his own hands to destroy everything that stands in the path of the
revolution.
7. The nature of the true
revolutionary excludes all sentimentality, romanticism, infatuation, and
exaltation. All private hatred and revenge must also be excluded. Revolutionary
passion, practiced at every moment of the day until it becomes a habit, is to
be employed with cold calculation. At all times and in all places the
revolutionary must obey , not his personal impulses, but only those which serve
the revolution.
The Relations of the
Revolutionary toward his Comrades
8. The revolutionary can have
no friendship or attachment except for those that have proved by their actions
that they, like him, are dedicated to revolution. The degree of friendship,
devotion, and obligation toward such a comrade is determined solely by the
degree of his usefulness to the cause of total revolutionary destruction.
9. It is superfluous to speak
of solidarity among revolutionaries. The whole strength of the revolutionary
work lies in this. Comrades who possess the same revolutionary passion and
understanding should, as much as possible, deliberate all important matters
together and come to unanimous conclusions. When the plan is finally decided
upon, then the revolutionary must rely solely on himself. In carrying out acts
of destruction each one should act alone, never running to another for advice
and assistance except when these are necessary for the furtherance of the plan.
10. All revolutionaries
should have under them second- or third-degree revolutionaries-i.e., comrades
who are not completely initiated. These should be regarded as part of the
common revolutionary capital placed at his disposal. This capital should, of
course, be spent as economically as possible in order to derive from it the
greatest profit. The real revolutionary should regard himself as capital
consecrated to the triumph of the revolution; however, he may not personally
and alone dispose of that capital without the unanimous consent of the fully
initiated comrades.
11. When a comrade is in
danger and the question arises whether he should be saved or not saved, the
decision must not be arrived at on the basis of sentiment, but solely in the
interests of the revolutionary cause. Therefore it is necessary to weigh
carefully the usefulness of the comrade against the expenditure of
revolutionary forces necessary to save him, and the decision must be made
accordingly.
The Relations of the
Revolutionary toward Society
12. The new member, having given
proof of his loyalty not by words but by deeds can be received into the society
only by the unanimous agreement of all members.
13. The revolutionary enters
the world of the state, of the privileged classes, of the so-called
civilization, and he lives in this world only for the purpose of bringing about
its speedy and total destruction. He is not a revolutionary if he has any
sympathy for this world. He should not hesitate to destroy and position, and
place, or any man in this world. He must hate everyone and everything in it
with an equal hatred. All the worse for him if he has any relationships with
parents, friends, or lovers; he is no longer a revolutionary if he is swayed by
these relationships.(The italics
are in the original.)
14. Aiming at implacable
revolution, the revolutionary may and frequently must live within society while
pretending to be completely different from what he really is, for he must
penetrate everywhere, into all the higher and middle classes, into the houses
of commerce, the churches and the palaces of the aristocracy, and into the
worlds of the bureaucracy and literature and military, and also into the Third
Division and the Winter Palace of the Tsar.
15. This filthy social order
can be split up into several categories. The first category comprises those who
must be condemned to death without delay. Comrades should compile a list of
those to be condemned according to the relative gravity of their crimes; and
the executions should be carried out according to the prepared order.
16. When a list of those who
are condemned is made and the order of execution is prepared, no private sense
of outrage should be considered, nor is it necessary to pay attention to the
hatred provoked by these people among the comrades or the people. Hatred and
the sense of outrage may even be useful in so far as they incite the masses to
revolt. It is necessary to be guided only by the relative usefulness of these
executions for the sake of the revolution. Above all, those who are especially
inimical to the revolutionary organization must be destroyed; their violent and
sudden deaths will produce the utmost in panic in the government, depriving it
of its will to action by removing the cleverest and most energetic supporters.
17. The second group comprises
those that will be spared for the time being in order that, by a series of
monstrous acts, the may drive the people into inevitable revolt.
18. The third category
consists of a great many brutes in high positions distinguished neither by
their cleverness nor their energy, while enjoying riches, influence, power and
high positions by virtue of their rank. These must be exploited in every
possible way; they must be implicated and embroiled in our affairs, their dirty
secrets must be ferreted out, and they must be transformed into slaves. Their
power, influence and connections, their wealth and their energy will form an
inexhaustible treasure and a precious help in all of our undertakings.
19. The fourth category comprises
ambitious office-holders and liberals of various shades of opinion. The revolutionary must pretend to
collaborate with them, blindly following them, while at the same time, prying
out their secrets until they are completely in his power. They must be so compromised that there
is no way out for them, and then they can be used to create disorder in the
State.
20.
The fifth category consists of those doctrinaires, conspirators, and
revolutionists who cut a great figure on paper or in their cliques. They must be constantly driven on to
make compromising declarations: as a result, the majority of them will be
destroyed, while a minority will become genuine revolutionaries.
21. The sixth category is especially
important: women. They can be
divided into three main groups.
First, those frivolous, thoughtless, and vapid women, whom we shall use
as we use the third and fourth category of men. Second, women who are ardent, capable, and devoted, but whom
do not belong to us because they have not yet achieved a passionless and
austere revolutionary understanding; these must be used like the men of the
fifth category. Finally, there are
the women who are completely on our side -- i.e., those who are wholly
dedicated and who have accepted our program in its entirety. We should regard these women as the
most valuable or our treasures; without their help, we would never succeed.
The
Attitude of the Society toward the People
22.
The Society has no aim other than the complete liberation and happiness of the
masses -- i.e., of the people who live by manual labor. Convinced that their emancipation and
the achievement of this happiness can only come about as a result of an
all-destroying popular revolt, the Society will use all its resources and energy
toward increasing and intensifying the evils and miseries of the people until
at last their patience is exhausted and they are driven to a general uprising.
23.
By a revolution, the Society does not mean an orderly revolt according to the
classic western model -- a revolt which always stops short of attacking the
rights of property and the traditional social systems of so-called civilization
and morality. Until now, such a
revolution has always limited itself to the overthrow of one political form in
order to replace it by another, thereby attempting to bring about a so-called
revolutionary state. The only form
of revolution beneficial to the people is one which destroys the entire State
to the roots and exterminated all the state traditions, institutions, and
classes in Russia.
24.
With this end in view, the Society therefore refuses to impose any new
organization from above. Any
future organization will doubtless work its way through the movement and life
of the people; but this is a matter for future generations to decide. Our task is terrible, total, universal,
and merciless destruction.
25.
Therefore, in drawing closer to the people, we must above all make common cause
with those elements of the masses which, since the foundation of the state of
Muscovy, have never ceased to protest, not only in words but in deeds, against
everything directly or indirectly connected with the state: against the
nobility, the bureaucracy, the clergy, the traders, and the parasitic
kulaks. We must unite with the
adventurous tribes of brigands, who are the only genuine revolutionaries in
Russia.
26. To weld the people into one single
unconquerable and all-destructive force - this is our aim, our conspiracy, and
our task.
|