http://english.pravda.ru/russia/politics/30-10-2013/126029-russian_communist-0/

Many Russians still share warm memories of Communist organizations
30.10.2013 
On October 29, 1918 the Russian Communist Youth League was established. Eight 
years later, it was transformed into the All-Union Leninist Young Communist 
League, also called Komsomol.

The organization became history with the collapse of the Soviet Union, but 
people still remember it two decades later. Many successful people in Russia, 
by and large, came out of the Komsomol organization, including oligarchs, 
politicians and people of creative professions.

What remains of the Komsomol today? More than just memories that for the most 
part are good, despite the ideological component. Organizational experience is 
the Komsomol legacy.

Earlier, even at the final stages of perestroika that destroyed the past, it 
was said that unions were the school of management, while the Komsomol was the 
school of patriotic education. There is no clear cut way to describe the 
Komsomol. On the one hand, it was the school of officials and oligarchs, but on 
other hand it was a hearth and home for people who love their homeland.  

When came the perestroika followed by "market reforms," the Komsomol gathered, 
grouped, and acknowledged its historic role as completed. In one instance the 
achievements of previous generations of the Komsomol members who worked for the 
good of the entire country, for the benefit of future generations and believed 
that they would live under communism, were privatized. The Komsomol went 
through the destruction with dignity. Yet, it has not survived the perestroika 
diluted by dull stagnation. Yesterday's fiery leaders were the first ones to 
rush to organize "Komsomol" cafes, banks, cooperatives, and video salons funded 
by Komsomol capital.

It was not the Komsomol that has left; it was we who have leaped away from it 
when the changes came. Over these leaps we forgot all the good aspects of the 
Komsomol. And when, by the laws of physics, after each leap we landed painfully 
on the bumps of the "new Russia," and began to understand the laws of morality. 
The spiritual "safety cushion" that the Komsomol once provided has disappeared.

The majority of government representatives and authorities are former members 
of the Komsomol. You are not likely to find anyone among oligarchs who at the 
time was not in the possession of a Komsomol membership card. The longer the 
current "big names" worked in the Komsomol, the more successful career they 
built.

However, this generation is already followed by the next one that only heard 
about the All-Union Lenin Communist Youth League (and some of its 
representatives do not even know about it).

The organization started in 1917 with the establishment of the union of 
socialist workers, peasants and students. But they were divided, and on October 
29, 1918, the Russian Communist Youth League (Komsomol) was established. In 
1924, the Komsomol was named after Lenin, and in March of 1926 it was renamed 
the All-Union Leninist Young Communist organization.
According to statistics, in 1977 the League included over 36 million citizens 
of the Soviet Union at the age of 14-28. It was the largest mass youth 
organization in the world, and this record still holds.

This is only dry historical information, chronological and factual 
characteristics of the once mighty organization. To give an emotional, 
business, and personal assessment of the Komsomol for its birthday, Pravda.Ru 
asked some famous Russians to speak about it. The opinions varied greatly.

A People's Artist of Russia Rimma Markova:

"After the collapse of the Soviet Union young people, the future of the 
country, were not really engaged. There were very few drug addicts in the 
Soviet Union. This is because everyone was busy starting from kindergarten. 
Kids were little Octobrists, then Komsomol, and so on. It's horrible, but all 
of this was destroyed. Now we have so many drug addicts, so many abandoned 
children. People do not live well. As soon as Mom and Dad start working, kids 
run away from their families and have nowhere to go."

Vice -President of the Russian Academy of Sciences Sergei Aldoshin:

"It is difficult to provide an unambiguous answer to this question. There were 
good moments and there were purely formal ones, as it often happens in our 
lives.

Yet, positive aspects have prevailed. This organization facilitated the 
development of patriotism, gave impetus to a normal, healthy career growth, 
that is, it helped young people to find a foothold in life.

Although many of the activities were just a formality, sometimes in our lives 
we cannot say whether something is good or bad. The truth is always somewhere 
in the middle. My memories of the Komsomol organization are those of romantic 
youth, my school and university years. I actually did not remember that October 
29 is the birthday of the Komsomol organization. Thank you for reminding me!"

A People's Artist of the USSR Elina Bystritskaya:

"It is my nature that I cannot agree with anything or anyone. I have my own 
opinion. I joined the Komsomol in the army, during the war. I do not understand 
how one could think something bad of it, at the time no one thought of it. 
There were good songs about the Komsomol. My mom was a member at some point.

I think that organizations are a must in certain age, in order for people to 
know why they work and what they want. I think the Komsomol provided good 
knowledge in that sense, and helped to start life. Otherwise, we would not have 
built so many things."

A candidate of historical sciences, professor of the history of modern times 
Russian State Humanitarian University IAI Lyubov Mozhayeva:


"This is a global issue. The Komsomol was originally created as an amateur 
organization. It was created from the bottom, but with the support from the 
top, first of all, to make this organization a combat reserve and the assistant 
of the Bolshevik Party.

It seems to me that the mobilizing role of the Komsomol has been associated not 
only with the party; it was associated with all the values of our life, the 
Soviet life. There were a lot of good things in it.

Now we have a problem with value orientations. What are the goals now, on what 
basis should we be building youth organizations? We had perestroika; we had the 
early post- perestroika times when there was an attempt to somehow build a 
youth policy. Now we cannot build such a strong bottom-up youth organization.

We can argue whether it was good or bad, but as we can see, neither youth nor 
the society can live without ideology. Otherwise, there are fluctuations, up to 
radical use of energy, different ideologies or other ideas. But at the same 
time, I want to say that the Komsomol as an organization had travelled the 
entire tragic path through the entire Soviet period with the country. It is a 
system, as any organization works as a system.

I have a positive view of the Komsomol. You can often hear the word "formalism" 
used in relation to the Komsomol. I do not have such an experience. When I was 
to join the Komsomol, I was after a surgery, on crutches. My entire class went 
to the Komsomol committee, and the committee sent Commissioners of the District 
Committee to my house. This was in 1965, and I was accepted without any 
formalities.

But the minuses of the Komsomol were the minuses of the entire system of that 
time."

President of JSC "New Commonwealth" Konstantin Babkin:

"I was a member of the Komsomol in the late 1980s, on the decline of the Soviet 
regime. Indeed, there was a certain feeling of bureaucratization and alienation 
from the needs of young people. There was some kind of ideological litter.

But today, looking from a distance on the historic role of the Komsomol, I 
believe that the organization was important, necessary, and we could use 
something like this now. There is a lack of systematic work with youth sports 
organizations, a uniting youth structure. I think it is necessary. I generally 
have positive feelings about the Komsomol and its role in my life.

Of course, young people now are not striving to be astronauts and explorers. 
Now young people usually dream of becoming officials and measure success with 
money. Although, this was also imposed on them. This primitive materialism that 
is dominant now is the pursuit of the usual material things and nothing else. 
People are already bored of it and are longing for changes. Therefore the 
concept of the Komsomol will now be in demand, or may soon be.

Chairman of the Board of Directors of "Dymov" company Vadim Dymov:

"I think that the Komsomol played a very important role at the time, and was 
completely adequate for that time. It was playing the role of a junior division 
of the CPSU, so to speak. It prepared young people, somewhere it was even 
brainwashing so people would have fewer doubts in the future and spend more 
time working for the benefit of the Soviet state and the Soviet people.

In this organization there were no individuals. People were only a part of the 
organization. And this was a weakness in my opinion.

Has it achieved its goal? Yes, it has. At the right time people could be 
mobilized and really inspired. In moments the country needed it (war, 
construction, and so on), the Komsomol fulfilled its task.


Now, in my opinion, it is no longer relevant because now the country is facing 
other problems.  

I see the future without the Komsomol despite the fact that I was a member. 
Generally I have nothing bad to say about it.

But the Young Communist League as part of this entire socialist ideology, 
Soviet ideology, the system, has failed. Why do we think about the past and 
trying to catch hold of something if we understand that it will never happen 
again? We must find new meaning for the future, we must look for new models, we 
have to inspire people for tasks the country is facing.

If Russia has declared itself as a world leader in the economy, we still need 
young economists, young entrepreneurs, that's what we need. We need people with 
an open mind, people who can take personal responsibility instead of acting 
within organizations such as the Communist Party or the Komsomol. The world has 
changed."

Andrei Mikhailov

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