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Mikhail Tomsky

 
Russian History Encyclopedia: Mikhail Pavlovich Tomsky

(1880 - 1936), Russian union activist.

Tomsky was a leading Old Bolshevik and trade union activist who committed suicide before he could be tried during Josef Stalin's purges. Tomsky was born Mikhail Efremov into a working-class environment. He began to work in a factory in adolescence and eventually became a printer. He joined the Social Democrats in 1904 and soon turned to union organizing. Between 1906 and 1909 his activities led to a series of arrests that was interspersed with party work whenever he was free. During this period he adopted the pseudonym Tomsky. In 1911 he began a five-year term of hard labor that was followed by exile to Siberia. After the collapse of the monarchy, Tomsky returned to Petrograd and his union work. In 1919 he was elected to the Central Committee and chosen to head the Central Trade Union Council. Three years later he became a member of the Politburo. He was one of the eight pallbearers at Vladimir Lenin's funeral in 1924. The next year he sided against Leon Trotsky and his followers in the party struggles that followed Lenin's death. In 1928 he joined with Nikolai Bukharin and Alexei Rykov to protest the pace and methods of collectivization. After this opposition group was defeated, Tomsky was expelled from the Politburo and removed from his position as trade union leader. In 1931 he was appointed head of the State Publishing House. Tomsky shot himself after learning that he had been implicated in one of Stalin's show trials. At Bukharin's trial two years later fabricated evidence named Tomsky as the link between members of the Right Opposition and an oppositional group in the Red Army.

Bibliography

Sorenson, Jay B. (1969). The Life and Death of Soviet Trade Unionism, 1917 - 1928. New York: Atherton Press.

Wynn, Charters. (1996). From the Factory to the Kremlin: Mikhail Tomsky and the Russian Worker. Washington, DC: National Council for Soviet and East European Research.

—ALISON ROWLEY

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Mikhail Tomsky

Mikhail Pavlovich Tomsky (born Mikhail Pavlovich Yefremov – sometimes transliterated as Efremov; October 31, 1880 – August 22, 1936) was a factory worker, trade unionist and Bolshevik leader. He was the Soviet leader of the All Russian Central Council of Trade Unions.

Tomsky attempted to form a trade union at his factory in St. Petersburg resulting in his dismissal[citation needed]. His labour activities radicalized him politically and led him to become a socialist and join the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party in 1904 and eventually join the Bolshevik faction of the party.

Born in Kolpino near St. Petersburg, Tomsky moved to Estonia (then part of the Russian Empire) and was involved in the 1905 Revolution. He helped form the Revel Soviet of Workers' Deputies and the Revel Union of Metal Workers. Tomsky was arrested and deported to Siberia.

He escaped and returned to St. Petersburg where he became president of the Union of Engravers and Chromolithographers.

Tomsky was arrested in 1908 and then exiled to France, but returned to Russia in 1909 where he was again arrested for his political activities and sentenced to five years of hard labour. He was freed by the Provisional Government after the February Revolution in 1917 and moved to Moscow where he participated in the October Revolution.

In 1920, he became General Secretary of the Red International of Labour Unions. He was elected into the Central Committee in March 1919, to its Orgburo in 1921 and to the Central Committee of the Communist Party in April 1922. He became a full member of the Central Committee's Politburo on December 19, 1927.

Tomsky (center front) and the All Russian Central Council of Trade Unions members

Tomsky was an ally of Nikolai Bukharin and Alexei Rykov, who led the moderate (or right) wing of the Communist Party in the 1920s. Together, they were allied with Joseph Stalin's faction and helped him purge the Left Opposition--led by Leon Trotsky, Lev Kamenev, and Grigory Zinoviev--from the party during the struggle that followed Lenin's death in 1924.

In 1928 Stalin moved against his former allies, defeating Bukharin, Rykov and Tomsky at the April 1929 Plenary Meeting of the Central Committee and forcing Tomsky to resign from his position as leader of the trade union movement in May 1929. Tomsky was put in charge of the Soviet chemical industry, a position which he occupied until 1930. He was not re-elected to the Politburo after the 16th Communist Party Congress in July 1930, but remained a full member of the Central Committee until the next Congress in January 1934, when he was demoted to candidate (non-voting) member.

Tomsky headed the State Publishing House from May 1932 until August 1936, when he was accused of terrorist connections during the First Moscow Trial of Zinoviev and Kamenev. He committed suicide by gunshot rather than face arrest by the NKVD in his dacha in Bolshevo near Moscow.[1] He was posthumously accused of high treason and other crimes during the third (March 1938) show trial of Bukharin, Rykov and others. The Soviet government cleared Tomsky of all charges during perestroika in 1988.

Notes

  1. ^ "http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/RUStomsky.htm". http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/RUStomsky.htm. Retrieved 22 April 2009. 

Tomsky commited suicide in 1935. As his fellow companions and other ex leaders of the party started to banish he was too scared.

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