Dr. Alexander Rabinowitch, one of the most analytical and definitive Western historians of the Russian Revolution, passed away on June 14 at the age of 91. Although not a Marxist, his meticulous archival work and rigorous historical method embodied many of the core principles of Marxist historiography. His three major works—"Prelude to Revolution" , "The Bolsheviks Come to Power", and "The Bolsheviks in Power"—are widely regarded as the most authoritative accounts of the Revolution as it unfolded in Petrograd.
Rabinowitch was born into a Russian émigré family shaped by stories of exile after 1917. His parents, members of the Russian intelligentsia, fled first to Germany, then Massachusetts, and finally Illinois. As a child, he spent summers among towering figures of the émigré community, including Aleksandr Kerensky, Vladimir Nabokov, and Mikhail Karpovich. Within this milieu, the dominant belief was that 1917 had been a coup and that the Soviet project was an abomination. Entering graduate school under Leopold Haimson and Jack Thompson, he initially expected to write a dissertation reinforcing this narrative. Instead, his dissertation, Prelude to Revolution, challenged it so sharply that it was condemned in the Soviet Union for undermining the myth of Party unity.
Rabinowitch’s career was defined by analytical openness and scholarly rigor. His research for The Bolsheviks in Power spanned more than twenty years. Initially frustrated by limited archival access, he never expected to see Soviet archives open. Yet in 1989 a Russian edition of The Bolsheviks Come to Power appeared, and by 1991 he was granted access to government and Party archives in Moscow and Leningrad, followed by the former KGB archives in 1993. This unprecedented access allowed him to reconstruct the Revolution with unmatched depth.
His central contribution was to demonstrate that the Bolshevik Party in 1917 was not a rigid, top‑down authoritarian machine. Instead, he showed it to be democratic, decentralized, open to mass participation, and deeply responsive to workers and soldiers. He revealed how the Party’s flexibility and its ties to Petrograd’s working class enabled it to ride the revolutionary wave. Lenin’s slogans—especially “Peace, Land, Bread!”—had genuine mass support, and by October 1917 the Bolsheviks had become the leading force in factories, garrisons, and the front.
His most celebrated book, "The Bolsheviks Come to Power", remains the definitive account of the dramatic months between July and October 1917. Rabinowitch dismantled two dominant myths: the liberal claim that October was a coup by a small band of fanatics, and the Stalinist claim that Bolshevik victory was inevitable and unified under Lenin’s flawless leadership. Instead, he portrayed a party full of debate, disagreement, and improvisation—yet more unified and effective than its rivals. He emphasized that the Revolution’s success was never guaranteed. After the July Days, repression was severe: Lenin went into hiding, hundreds of Bolsheviks were jailed, and the right wing prepared to crush the movement. The Kornilov coup attempt, however, allowed the Bolsheviks to re‑enter the political stage as defenders of the Revolution.
Rabinowitch showed how Lenin’s interventions, combined with the Party’s democratic internal life, shaped the revolutionary process. Even at the final hour, Lenin had to fight within the Party to secure support for insurrection. His research revealed that Lenin was neither omnipotent nor omnipresent. During the Kornilov crisis, he was too far away to influence events directly. Yet his strategic clarity and the Party’s responsiveness to mass sentiment proved decisive. One of Rabinowitch’s most striking conclusions was that the Revolution succeeded not because of rigid discipline, but because of the Party’s democratic, tolerant, and decentralized structure—qualities later erased under Soviet authoritarianism.
Stalinist historians rejected Rabinowitch’s work because it undermined foundational myths: that Lenin led a monolithic, infallible Party; that October was a flawless, orderly transition; and that dissent and debate were alien to Bolshevism. Rabinowitch demonstrated the opposite: early Soviet authoritarianism emerged from chaotic circumstances, not from Lenin’s intentions.
As he approached writing his final major work, Rabinowitch’s habit of questioning his own assumptions proved decisive. He initially believed the Bolsheviks would have tightened internal discipline after the July Days. Instead, he found that the Party remained flexible and democratic at its core. This flexibility prevented premature insurrection in September and enabled the Military Revolutionary Committee to win over the armed forces. It was this responsiveness that made the October Revolution possible—flexibility that would soon evaporate as the early Soviet state became increasingly centralized and autocratic.
Dr. Alexander Rabinowitch’s scholarship remains indispensable for anyone seeking to understand the only successful workers’ revolution in history. His work continues to resonate because it was written by someone outside the revolutionary tradition who nonetheless approached the subject with honesty, rigor, and intellectual courage. His greatest insight—that the Bolsheviks succeeded because they were democratic, flexible, and deeply rooted in the masses—remains a powerful lesson for historians and activists alike.
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*Freelance journalist

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