Aron Vainshtein Explained

Aron Vainshtein
Native Name:Арон Исаакович Вайнштейн
Birth Date:23 November 1877
Birth Place:Vilna, Russian Empire
Death Place:Moscow, USSR
Other Names:Rakhmiel
Citizenship:Russian Empire, Soviet Belorussia
Occupation:politician

Aron Isaakovich Vainshtein, (23 November 1877 – 12 March 1938) known by the nom de guerre Rakhmiel, was a Jewish socialist activist and politician in Soviet Belorussia.[1]

In 1897, Vainshtein graduated from the Vilna Jewish Teaching Institute.[1] In 1898, Vainshtein, now based in Warsaw, joined the General Jewish Labour Bund.[2] He quickly emerged as the leading figure in the Warsaw Committee of the Bund.[3] During the early period of the Bund movement, Vainshtein's Warsaw faction opposed the line of calling for Jewish national rights of John Mill's Geneva-based leadership.[2] The fourth Bund congress in 1901 elected him to the Bund Central Committee.[1] In 1914 he was exiled to Siberia, where he remained until the 1917 February Revolution.[1]

The tenth Bund congress elected him as the Chairman of the Bund Central Committee.[1] Along with the rest of the Bund Central Committee, he shifted to Minsk.[1] He was elected as chairman of the Minsk City Duma.[4]

Inside the Bund, Vainshtein came to vacillate between centrist, rightist, and leftist positions.[1] On the question of World War I he placed himself in the centrist camp but he sided with the Bund right-wing in condemnation of the October Revolution.[1] As the Russian Civil War emerged and with the German Revolution of 1918–1919 he moved to the left.[1] As the Bund split at the April 1920 twelfth congress, Vainshtein and his sister-in-law Esther Frumkin led the pro-communist Kombund majority faction.[1]

During 1920 and 1921 Frumkin and Vaynsthteyn were the key leaders of the Kombund.[5] Vainshtein served as the Kombund representative in the Military Revolutionary Committee of Belorussia from August to December 1920.[1] In December 1920 he was named the acting chairman of the Belorussian Council of National Economy.[1] While heading this body, he was accused by the Yevsektsia (Jewish Section of the Communist Party) of implementing a petty bourgeois Bundist economic policy.

Unity talks between the Kombund and the Communist Party lasted for months; in the end the Communist International ordered the Bund to dissolve itself.[6] At an Extraordinary All-Russian Bundist Conference, held in Minsk on March 5, 1921 the delegates representing some 3,000 party members debated disbanding the Communist Bund.[7] [8] [9] At the conference Vainshtein spoke in favour of disbanding the Kombund and merging with the Communist Party.[10]

In 1921 he was inducted into the Yevsektsia Central Bureau, where he remained until 1924.[1] He served as Deputy Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of the Kirghiz Autonomous Socialist Soviet Republic from 1921 to 1922.[1] Between 1923 and 1930 he served on the board of the People's Commissariat of Finance of the USSR.[1] He was a board member of KOMZET, becoming its deputy chairman in 1928.[1] During the 1930s he headed the Moscow branch of OZET.[1]

Vainshtein was arrested in February 1938.[1] He reportedly committed suicide after ten days in detention.[1]

Notes and References

  1. YIVO Encyclopedia. Vainshtein, Aron Isaakovich
  2. Book: Joshua D. Zimmerman. Poles, Jews, and the Politics of Nationality: The Bund and the Polish Socialist Party in Late Tsarist Russia, 1892–1914. 26 January 2004. Univ of Wisconsin Press. 978-0-299-19463-5. 115–116.
  3. Book: Jonathan Frankel. Prophecy and Politics: Socialism, Nationalism, and the Russian Jews, 1862-1917. 8 November 1984. Cambridge University Press. 978-0-521-26919-3. 219.
  4. Book: Oleg Budnitskii. Russian Jews Between the Reds and the Whites, 1917-1920. 24 July 2012. University of Pennsylvania Press. 978-0-8122-0814-6. 56.
  5. Book: Andrew Sloin. The Jewish Revolution in Belorussia: Economy, Race, and Bolshevik Power. 13 February 2017. Indiana University Press. 978-0-253-02463-3. 39.
  6. Book: Bernard K. Johnpoll. The politics of futility: the General Jewish Workers Bund of Poland, 1917-1943. registration. 1967. Cornell University Press. 103.
  7. explanatory note to Web site: To Members of the Politbureau of the C.C., R.C.P.(B.). Lenin. Vladimir I.. April 19 – May 6, 1920 . Marxists Internet Archive. Lenin Internet Archive (2003). 2009-11-10., from documents archived at the Central Party Archives, Institute of Marxism-Leninism of the C.C., C.P.S.TJ.
  8. Book: Nora Levin. The Jews in the Soviet Union Since 1917: Paradox of Survival. December 1990. NYU Press. 978-0-8147-5051-3. 63.
  9. Book: Elissa Bemporad. Becoming Soviet Jews: The Bolshevik Experiment in Minsk. 29 April 2013. Indiana University Press. 978-0-253-00827-5. 55-56.
  10. Book: Baruch Gurevitz. National Communism in the Soviet Union, 1918-28. 15 September 1980. University of Pittsburgh Pre. 978-0-8229-7736-0. 35.