Skip to main content

From underground activist to international organiser: Yelena Stasova’s legacy

By Harsh Thakor* 
Yelena Dmitriyevna Stasova (1873–1966) was a Russian revolutionary, Bolshevik Party administrator, and international activist in the early Soviet Union. Born on October 16, 1873, in Saint Petersburg to a family of progressive intellectuals—her father was a prominent lawyer and liberal reformer—Stasova received a classical education. 
She rejected her family's liberal views and joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) at its second congress in 1898, initially as part of the Union of Struggle for the Liberation of the Working Class. By 1903, following the party's split, she aligned fully with Lenin's Bolshevik faction, recognizing the need for a centralized vanguard organization to lead the proletariat.
In the pre-revolutionary period, Stasova operated in the underground network. From 1904 onward, she served as a secretary to the Iskra group and later as Lenin's personal secretary during his European exile (1904–1917). She managed clandestine operations, including smuggling banned publications across borders, establishing safe houses in cities like Geneva and London, and coordinating couriers who transported revolutionary materials into Russia. Arrested multiple times under Tsarism—exiled to Ufa in 1909 and later to Siberia—she endured imprisonment and surveillance, resuming work upon release. Her efforts helped sustain Bolshevik infrastructure amid pervasive repression from the Okhrana secret police.
Stasova played a direct role in the 1917 revolutions. She returned to Petrograd in March 1917 and joined the Bolshevik Party's Petrograd Committee, organizing workers' councils (soviets) and mobilizing support for the seizure of power. During the October Revolution, she coordinated logistics for armed units and propaganda distribution.
Post-revolution, amid the 1918–1921 Civil War and foreign interventions, Stasova became Secretary of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks) from March 1919 to April 1920. In this position, she managed daily operations, including cadre assignments, internal communications, and supply chains under War Communism's rationing system. This period involved countering White Army advances, peasant uprisings, and blockades by Allied powers, preserving party cohesion during existential threats.
From 1921 to 1927, Stasova held roles such as Secretary of the Communist International's (Comintern) Russian delegation and editor of party publications. Her most prominent international work came as General Secretary, then Chairman, of the Executive Committee of International Red Aid (MOPR) from 1927 to 1938. Founded in 1922, MOPR grew under her leadership into a global network with millions of members in over 80 countries. It funded legal defenses, prisoner amnesties, family stipends, and medical aid; organized campaigns exposing repression, such as the 1927 Sacco-Vanzetti executions in the U.S., Scottsboro Boys case, and anti-fascist trials in Italy and Germany; and supported exiles from colonies and labor movements in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. By 1932, MOPR had raised equivalent to millions in today's currency for these efforts.
In her later career, Stasova edited works for Progress Publishers, contributed to historical archives, and taught at the International Lenin School in Moscow (1926–1938), training communists from China, India, and Europe. She survived Stalin's purges, though associates were affected, and received honors including three Orders of Lenin (1935, 1943, 1948) and Hero of Labor status. Until her death on December 31, 1966, she wrote memoirs like "Pages of Reminiscences" (1960), documenting early Bolshevik history, and advocated linking women's emancipation to proletarian revolution, as seen in her support for Zhenotdel (Women's Department) initiatives in the 1920s.
Stasova's career spanned the RSDLP founding, 1917 Revolution, Soviet state-building, and Cold War-era solidarity, highlighting the roles of administrative cadres in revolutionary movements.
---
*Freelance journalist 

Comments

TRENDING

Sardar made up his mind on Pakistan in Dec 1946 "before" Mountbatten's Partition Plan

By Hari Desai* One has to be extra cautious while dealing with the history of towering personalities of the Indian freedom struggle, especially that of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel (October 31, 1875 - December 15, 1950). Present-day politicians prefer to "pronounce” on his life and quote him according to their convenience like a blind person describing an elephant.

Insider plot to kill Deendayal Upadhyay? What RSS pracharak Balraj Madhok said

By Shamsul Islam*  Balraj Madhok's died on May 2, 2016 ending an era of old guards of Hindutva politics. A senior RSS pracharak till his death was paid handsome tributes by the RSS leaders including PM Modi, himself a senior pracharak, for being a "stalwart leader of Jan Sangh. Balraj Madhok ji's ideological commitment was strong and clarity of thought immense. He was selflessly devoted to the nation and society. I had the good fortune of interacting with Balraj Madhok ji on many occasions". The RSS also issued a formal condolence message signed by the Supremo Mohan Bhagwat on behalf of all swayamsevaks, referring to his contribution of commitment to nation and society. He was a leading RSS pracharak on whom his organization relied for initiating prominent Hindutva projects. But today nobody in the RSS-BJP top hierarchy remembers/talks about Madhok as he was an insider chronicler of the immense degeneration which was spreading as an epidemic in the high echelons of th...

If Maoist violence is illegitimate, how is Hindutva, state violence justified? Can right-wing wash off its sins?

By Swami Agnivesh* and Sandeep Pandey** There was major police action against Sudha Bhardwaj, Gautam Navlakha, Varvara Rao, Vernon Gonsalves and Arun Ferreira on 28 August, 2018. Before this police arrested Professor Shoma Sen, Adocate Sudhir Gadling, Sudhir Dhawle, Mahesh Raut and Rona Wilson on 6 June. Even before this Dr. Binayak Sen, Soni Sori, Ajay TG, Professor GN Saibaba and Prashant Rahi have been arrested and all these activists have been accused of having links with Maoists.