Nikita
Khrushchev, who gained world fame as the Soviet leader who
broke with Stalin's rigid interpretation of communism, was
born in a province of Ukraine on April 17, 1894. Unlike
Stalin and other Soviet leaders, Khrushchev, the son of
a miner, rose up from the ranks of the working class. His
job as a pipe fitter (which he began at fifteen) exempted
him from service in World War
I. Yet, eager to change Russia, he joined the workers'
struggle before the 1917 Revolution erupted and by 1918,
he had joined the Russian Communist party (the Bolsheviks),
and served as a political worker for the Red Army in the
civil war. The following year he joined the Red Army and
fought against Polish troops. His service won him admission
to the new Soviet schools where he quickly rose through
the party ranks, becoming secretary of the school's Communist
Party Committee. By 1925, he worked for the party full-time
and became known for his hands-on understanding of mine
and factory conditions. His reputation as an effective and
enthusiastic party organizer propelled his rapid rise within
the party: recipient of the Order of Lenin and first secretary
of the city of Moscow in 1935, and a member of the Politburo
in 1939.
Khrushchev managed a number of experimental agricultural
campaigns, such as the Virgin Lands Project, which attempted
to cultivate lands in the harsher climate regions like Kazakhstan
and Siberia. His failure to collectivize Ukranian farms
led Stalin to demote him in 1947, but Stalin called him
back to Moscow two years later to lead the Moscow City Party.
Determined not to be displaced again, Khrushchev consolidated
his power, often clashing with Stalin's designated heir,
Georgy Malenkov. Khrushchev's control of local party leaders
secured his challenge and ultimate defeat of Malenkov. In
1955, he controlled the Soviet Union.
As he traveled outside Russia, Khrushchev gained world
fame as the Communist leader who denounced Stalin's repressive
tactics and for his brash, diplomatic style. He led the
political and intellectual thaw of the 1950s Cold
War, which resulted in the "rehabilitation" of thousands
of political prisoners whom Stalin had imprisoned in
Siberian
labor camps. He reduced the power of the secret police
by replacing the NKVD with the KGB and outlawed torture.
Yet
his reform had clear limits. Khrushchev cracked down on
many religious groups and destroyed or closed down numerous
churches.
Khrushchev met with Eleanor Roosevelt in 1957 in Yalta,
where ER went to interview him for The New York World-Telegram.
Their meeting became more debate than exchange as they discussed
differences in arms proliferation, the fate of Soviet Jewry,
and violation of the Yalta agreements. But they left each
other with their spirits intact. When the premier asked
if he could tell the reporters they had a "friendly discussion,"
ER, smiled, and replied yes, but be sure to say "that we
differ." To which Khrushchev laughingly countered, "at least,
we didn't shoot each other." (1)
When Khrushchev came to the U.S. in 1959, he visited ER
in Hyde Park where they discussed disarmament of the two
nations. ER and Khrushchev found little common ground. Ultimately
they agreed to disagree on everything except that both nations
ultimately wanted peace.
After the Bay of Pigs fiasco in 1964, Khrushchev was upstaged
by a coup, and "asked" to resign by his fellow Communist
party leaders. He died of a heart attack September 11, 1971.
Notes:
- Joseph P. Lash, Eleanor: The
Years Alone. (New York: W. W. Norton & Company,
1972), 217.
Sources:
"Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeyevich." New Encyclopædia
Britannica.Vol. 6 Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc., 1997,
843-845.
Lash, Joseph P., Eleanor: The Years Alone.
New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1972, 269-272.
Roosevelt, Eleanor, On My Own. New York: Harper
and Brothers, 1958, 229-230.
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