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Peace, bread, and land.
Peace, land, and bread
Peace, Bread and Land
Lenin's 3 word promise was "Peace! Bread! Land!"
Vladimir Lenin, head of the Bolshevik Party promised this to the Russian people to get them to support his cause.
Lenin
Peace, Land, and Bread.
Two slogans were "Peace! Bread! Land!" and "All Power to the Soviets." Vladimir Lenin concocted these and never fulfilled either one. He did end Russia's part in World War 1, but his takeover of the government in the Bolshevik Revolution set off the Russian Civil War.
Lenin's promise to the people of Russia was "Peace! Land! Bread!" By 1917 the Russian people were ready for a change in government because Tsar Nicholas II's government simply no longer worked. "Peace, Land, Bread" meant three basic desires of the Russian people. Peace meant ending Russian involvement in World War I. Incompetence in the army led to huge losses in life. Land meant the abolition of private property and a redistribution of land. Bread meant an end to widespread shortages of basic foods. The Tsarist rule in Russia had already been ended in the February Revolution, but the problems that led to that revolution persisted even with the new government. In three words, Lenin captured the needs of the Russian people to the extent that they were willing to follow him in setting up another government. With that said, the new Provisional government had little time to change Russian society. Lenin changed it with a dictatorship of the Bolshevik Party. It was not a dictatorship of the working class.
Lenin restored order in Russia after the civil war by convincing the people that he could get them what they so desperately wanted. He claimed he could give them: " BREAD, PEACE, & LAND! " For the people bread meant food to help there famished belly's, peace meant no more war, and land meant money and a way to provide for a family!
Leon Trotsky.
Lenin's promise to the people of Russia was "Peace! Land! Bread!" "Peace, Land, Bread" meant three basic desires of the Russian people. Peace meant ending Russian involvement in World War I. Land meant the abolition of private property and a redistribution of land to the peasants who worked the land. Bread meant an end to widespread food shortages. The Tsarist rule in Russia had already been overthrown in the February Revolution of 1917, but the problems that had led to that revolution persisted even with the new government. In three words, Lenin captured the needs of the Russian people and convinced them that he and his Bolsheviks would satisfy their demands to the extent that many but not all were willing to support him in setting up another government. Lenin's promise to the people of Russia was "Peace! Land! Bread!" "Peace, Land, Bread" meant three basic desires of the Russian people. Peace meant ending Russian involvement in World War I. Land meant the abolition of private property and a redistribution of land to the peasants who worked the land. Bread meant an end to widespread food shortages. The Tsarist rule in Russia had already been overthrown in the February Revolution of 1917, but the problems that had led to that revolution persisted even with the new government. In three words, Lenin captured the needs of the Russian people and convinced them that he and his Bolsheviks would satisfy their demands to the extent that many but not all were willing to support him in setting up another government. Lenin's promise to the Russian people was summed up in his slogan "Peace! Bread! Land!" This meant an end to Russia's involvement in World War I, an end to food shortages and an end to the unequal distribution and ownership of land.