Alexandra Kollontai, born on this day in 1872, was a Marxist feminist revolutionary who served as People’s Commissar for Social Welfare in the Soviet Union and, later in life, as a diplomat for the USSR abroad.
Alexandra was born into a wealthy family of Ukrainian, Russian, and Finnish background, acquiring a fluency in both Russian and Finnish early on. This experience would later assist her in her career as a Soviet diplomat.
In 1895, Kollontai read August Bebel’s “Woman and Socialism”, which was a major influence on her thinking. In 1896, she helped fundraise in support of a mass textile strike in St. Petersburg, retaining connections with the women textile workers of St. Petersburg for the rest of her career.
In the years leading up to 1917, Kollontai was active as a Marxist theoretician, educator, and anti-war activist (opposing World War I, specifically). During this time, she established contact with Vladimir Lenin and gave a lengthy speaking tour in the U.S., sharing a stage with Eugene V. Debs and giving 123 speeches in 4 languages.
Following the 1917 February Revolution, Kollontai returned to Russia. Later that year, she voted in favor of the decision to launch an armed uprising against the government, also participating in the revolt. At the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets, she was elected Commissar of Social Welfare in the new Soviet government.
The Encyclopedia of Women’s Autobiography describes her efforts within the Soviet government: “The changes that Kollontai tried to bring about were enormous, involving the complete destruction of the old system and the creation of a new one…Kollontai authorized decrees that committed the Soviet State to full funding of maternity care from conception through the first year of a child’s life - an unheard of measure for the beginning of the 20th century. She attempted to establish full legal, political, and sexual equality for women and to redress the entire marriage code.”
In 1920, Kollontai joined the left “Workers’ Opposition”, an opposition tendency in the Bolshevik Party opposed to what they saw as the increasing bureaucratization of the Soviet state. In March 1921, the Workers’ Opposition was banned along with all other factions at the 10th party congress in March 1921, but its members continued to be active as leaders of both the Bolshevik Party and the Soviets.
In 1922, Kollontai was one of the signers of the “Letter of the 22” to the Communist International, protesting the banning of factions in Russia.
Following this incident, Kollontai began to serve as a Soviet diplomat, becoming one of the first women to work in international diplomacy. As ambassador to Norway and Sweden, as a trade delegate to Mexico, as a delegate to the League of Nations, and as negotiator of the Finno-Soviet peace treaty of 1940, she served the USSR with what was generally regarded as great finesse. From 1946 until her death in 1952, she was an advisor to the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
"Class instinct…always shows itself to be more powerful than the noble enthusiasms of ‘above-class’ politics. So long as the bourgeois women and their [proletarian] ‘younger sisters’ are equal in their inequality, the former can, with complete sincerity, make great efforts to defend the general interests of women.
But once the barrier is down and the bourgeois women have received access to political activity, the recent defenders of the ‘rights of all women’ become enthusiastic defenders of the privileges of their class, content to leave the younger sisters with no rights at all. Thus, when the feminists talk to working women about the need for a common struggle to realise some ‘general women’s’ principle, women of the working class are naturally distrustful."
- Alexandra Kollontai
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Hanging in there, making progress on my hand recovery and reconnected with my closest friend which has been really good for me
dad stuff, alcoholism, venting sorry
He was in a nursing facility doing PT and OT and apparently improved and has been sober for the longest he’s been in probably 40 something years but they’re apparently discharging him home tomorrow and just having someone visit him for therapy at home so I’m really dreading that for my mom having to deal with him more and possibly myself
Like, we really thought he was having organ failure and on death’s doorstep when he went to the hospital and idk if he’s actually turned a page or not and I don’t really think I have it in me to reconcile at this point and really just don’t want anything to do with him tbh
I know addiction is a disease and people suffering from it aren’t totally in control of their actions sometimes but it’s been decades of dealing with terrible bullshit from him and even back when he had way more braincells and health, he was always a gross, rude, selfish shitty person with very little regard for the grief he put his family through all while he bullshitted all his friends and coworkers that he was such a nice and helpful guy doing a Jekyll and Hyde type thing where they probably wouldn’t believe me if they knew how bad he got and I’d prefer to just go no contact and wait until he really changes for good or (more likely) his true narcissistic addict ass shows again and he succumbs to his alcoholism
Like he’s always kinda treated me like shit since I was a kid like I was more of a set of obligations and chores for him to take care of instead of a person with my own thoughts and ambitions and personality and never really interpersonally ever engaged with me and always made everything about how what I did reflected on him and was always a control freak with a hair trigger temper that was always a shitty angry impulsive immature drunk even when he was a “functioning” addict
I’m not expecting anything from him but a headache and him dying fairly soon. Thought it would have been recently in the hospital, but I guess he found another way to disappoint me lol
Thanks
Yeah I’m gonna try minimizing contact as much as I can
Nothing good comes from engaging with him