The Polish Review, Volume
42, No. 2, 1997
Gabriele
Simoncini. The Communist Party of Poland 1918-1929: A Study
in Political Ideology. Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen
Press, 1993. Pp. XI, 270. ISBN 0-7734-9414-6.
In summarizing the disagreements among Polish communist leaders in
the early 1920s about the desirability of collaboration with their
Ukrainian and Byelorussian counterparts, Gabriele Simoncini cites
leftist factional head Julian Lenski’s view: the issue was
ultimately “not relevant since the victory of the Revolution would
mean that all of Poland would become part of the Soviet Union.
These are but a few wxamples of the Polish Communist’s infinite
capacity for self-delusion” Simoncini concludes (p. 57).
This book is more of a
study of communist self-delusion than of communist political
ideology in the first decade of Polonia Reconstituta and, indeed, we
can speak of eight decades of communist self-delusion. The
last decade culminated with PZPR [Polska Zjednoczona Partia
Robotnicza - Polish United Workers’ Party] leaders singing the
“Internationale” at the January 1990 “congress of dissolution”
(the irony well captured in the documentary film Ostatki [Remnants]).
Thus Simoncini’s book addresses more than an isolated, episodic
aspect of Polish political history. By the same token, the
main criticism that can be leveled at the author is his failure to
generalize upon the principal finding of his meticulously undertaken
archival research and show the relevance of 1920s communist
self-delusion to postwar Polish history.
Simoncini began work on
Poland while studying at the University of Pisa. Under Joseph
Rothschild, he completed his doctorate in history at Columbia
University. He also spent four years at the University of
Warsaw on a research fellowship from the Italian Ministry of Foreign
Affairs. His lengthy bibliography, comprised almost
exclusively of primary sources - and twelve pages of secondary
sources, only three English-language - demonstrates how effectively
he used his time in Poland, especially once the archives of the
interwar Communist Party [Komunistyczna Partia Polski - KPP]
and postwar PZPR were opened up. From these Polish archives we
learn of the deliberations and decisions of the Comintern related to
the Polish Communist Party in the 1920s. There are now even
more materials available on this period in the Comintern archives
accessible in Moscow.
Simoncini’s aim was to
complete an “organic study” of the KPP. Accordingly,
“The analysis is overwhelmingly based on documents issued by the
Party, through the proceedings of its bodies, conferences, and
congresses, through the theoretical and organizational
pronouncements of its press, and through the writings of its leaders”
(p. 3). Nevertheless, it would have enhanced the
narrative if he had engaged existing studies. M. K.
Dziewanowski’s seminal The Communist Party of Poland (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1959 and 1976) is merely acknowledged in
his introduction. By contrast, certain Polish-language
histories of the KPP, published in People’s Poland, ought to have
been treated more skeptically rather than used as supplementary
material. We learn much that is new from Simoncini about the
three Ws (Wera Kostrzewa, Henyk Walecki, Adolf Warski), the May
error regarding Pilsudski’s coup, the factional fight between
majority and minority. But it is not as if a tabula rasa
existed. Furthermore, the author shies away from advancing
more general propositions: thus the conclusion merely summarizes and
restates findings from the empirical chapters.
Despite such shortcomings,
Simoncini’s book makes for stimulating reading. The author
underscores the courage of Wera Kostrzewa in holding her ground
against Stalin at the 1924 Comintern Congress. He documents
how KPP leaders were flattered by the attention they thought they
were receiving from Pilsudski (by way of one of his intermediaries)
as he prepared plans for his coup. KPP leaders could well
imagine the Pilsudski was Kerensky and his coup was a prelude to
revolution. Though he conceals his normative biases well,
Simoncini seems to sympathize with the more liberal approach of the
majority faction compared to the minority one. He is at his
best, however, when analyzing competing interpretations of KPP
leaders of arcane issues such as the role of the petty bourgeoisie
in a revolution, and the organizational relationship among Polish
communist groups in Byelorussia, Galicia, Silesia, Warsaw, Gdansk,
and Moscow.
The reader who follows
the KPP’s fortunes cannot help recalling the later follies of
Bierut and Gomulka, Gierek and Jaruszewicz, and Grabski and Rakowski,
in the 1944 - 1989 period. Many of these
rulers, especially.
Gomulka, were familiar
with the history of the KPP as Simoncini has reconstructed it, and
their political behavior was marked by that history. This book
offers many clues about why the postwar Polish communist regime
deluded itself for 45 years and, because of this, deserves to be
carefully studied.
Raymond
Taras
Tulane University
U.S.A.
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