
A vivid snapshot of the early post‑revolutionary era, this work captures a 1920 lecture that wrestles with the chaotic flow of rumors surrounding Russia’s Bolshevik transformation. The speaker stresses the danger of half‑truths and sensational headlines, urging listeners to demand solid statistics, firsthand accounts, and the very documents the new regime itself publishes. By contrasting wildly exaggerated newspaper claims with the few reliable reports that have managed to surface, the narrative exposes how misinformation can cloud even the most earnest political analysis.
Beyond debunking myths, the author outlines a disciplined approach to gathering evidence—drawing on official Bolshevik statements, contemporary Finnish observations, and cautious cross‑checking of sources. The early sections also introduce the core ideas of Bolshevism, laying out Lenin’s vision of state and revolution in clear, measured language. Listeners will come away with a nuanced picture of a tumultuous moment, equipped with the tools to separate fact from fiction in a time when the world was still trying to understand the “great mystery” of Soviet Russia.
Language
fi
Duration
~1 hours (106K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2017-08-14
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1887–1937
A Finnish writer and commentator from the early 20th century, remembered for books that tackled politics, society, and the upheavals of his time. His work often aimed to explain big public questions in a direct, readable way for ordinary readers.
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