The Cheka became the GPU, then the OGPU and then the NKVD under Stalin.
Under Vladimier Lenin, Russia began collectivization. This process continued, and did accelerate under Josef Stalin, who followed Lenin. But, Stalin did not cause the acceleration, the communist philosophy that Russia followed called for collectivization.
The Communist Party
Stalin is the successor to Lenin, therefore, Lenin had no job under Stalin. The answer above is false...Stalin was actually commissar of foreign trade.
Lenin was a great political leader working for the greater good of the workers of Russia, and Stalin was an autocratic dictator who exploited Russia's workers for his own good. The relationship between them was that Stalin worked under Lenin, and when Lenin died, and Stalin seized power over Russia, even though Lenin had specifically stated that Trotsky should succeed him, Stalin tried to associate himself with the well loved Lenin in order to create an image of himself that differed from his true anti-Marxist intentions.
Stalin was the Commissar of State Control and then the Commissar of Nationalities under Lenin.
He wasn't under house arrest.
Lenin's SuccessorJoseph Stalin succeeded Lenin. However, immediately after Lenin died, a troika of Stalin, Grigori Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev succeeded him until Stalin took over complete control in 1929. Stalin was also very mean and killed a lot of people the people who disagreed with him.
Then the person would still be under house arrest.
Yes, Joseph Stalin succeeded Vladimir Lenin as the leader of the Soviet Union after Lenin's death in 1924. Stalin gradually consolidated power, overcoming rivals within the Communist Party, including Leon Trotsky. By the late 1920s, he had established himself as the unchallenged leader, implementing policies that transformed the Soviet economy and society. Lenin's legacy was both continued and altered under Stalin's rule, leading to significant changes in the direction of Soviet governance.
Gelb Struve has written: 'Russian literature under Lenin and Stalin, 1917-1953'
They believed in Lenin more, though Stalin was his successor. They believed in Stalin because Stalin promised the proletariats equality.Equality was important to them because under the rule of Tsar, they were living under poverty. So equality was the better alternativeEven though Stalin promised them equality, he broke his promise by creating a class disparity, by only benefiting the communist party.The proletariat did not believe in Stalin, because Stalin never promised them anything. Lenin had to make promises in order to get the Russian people to back him and his Bolsheviks against the Provisional Government. Stalin was just in the right place at the right time and with sufficient ruthlessness to move into a position of power after Lenin died whether the people liked it or not.