- Irakli Tsereteli
Irakli (Kaki) Tsereteli ( _ka. ირაკლი წერეთელი; _ru. Ира́клий Гео́ргиевич Церете́ли) (
20 November 1881 –20 May 1959 ) was a Georgianpolitician , one of the leaders of theRussian Social-Democratic Labour Party and the GeorgianMensheviks .Irakli Tsereteli was born in
Kutaisi (western Georgia, then part of theRussian Empire ) in the family of a radical writer Giorgi Tsereteli, of the noble family ofTsereteli . He studied law atMoscow University where he became involved in student protests. After taking part in a student demonstration in 1902 he briefly exiled toSiberia . On his release from prison Tsereteli joined the Social Democratic Labour Party (SDLP) and at the party's 1903 congress inLondon sided withJulius Martov againstLenin . By becoming a Menshevik, opposed to Lenin'sBolsheviks . Tsereteli became editor of the pro-Menshevik publication "'Kvali" ("Track" in Georgian), but decided to move toGermany to escape increasing harassment from the authorities. He returned to Russia during the 1905 Revolution and was elected to the secondDuma , emerging as a leading Menshevik. On the dissolution of the Duma, Tsereteli was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment and then exiled in 1913 toIrkutsk ; there he became the leader of a circle of moderate Internationalists (mostly Mensheviks but including also SRs and former Bolsheviks) called the “Siberian Zimmerwaldists.”McCauley, Martin (1997), "Who’s Who in Russia since 1900", p. 211.Routledge , ISBN 0415138981.]Tsereteli was able to return to
Petrograd after the 1917February Revolution and headed thePetrograd Soviet in late March. He proposed a program of “Revolutionary Defensism”; i.e., a program which prescribed an energetic pursuit of international agreement to endWorld War I and an equally energetic defense againstGermany so long as the war continued. He joined the Provisional Government as Minister of Post and Telegraphs (May-August 1917), and of the Interior (July-August 1917). After theOctober Revolution , the Bolsheviks ordered Tsereteli's arrest. He returned to Georgia, which in May 1918 declared its independence as theDemocratic Republic of Georgia . There he was not a major player, but obtained a seat in the Constituent Assembly and represented his country at the Paris Peace Conference. After the Soviet takeover of Georgia early in 1921, Tsereteli remained in opposition, but emigrated in 1923 toParis .Tsereteli remained an avowed internationalist and did not go through an evolution to nationalism, like many of his fellow Georgian Mensheviks did. Thus, he was an opponent both to the liberal nationalist
Zurab Avalishvili and the social democratNoe Zhordania . All of them extensively wrote abroad on the Georgian politics. [Roobol, W. H. (1976), "Tsereteli - A Democrat in the Russian Revolution: A Political Biography", pp. 228-231. Springer, ISBN 9024719151.] Tsereteli accepted the principle of the fight for Georgia’s independence, but rejected the view of Zhordania and other Georgian émigrés that the Bolshevik domination was effectively identical to Russian domination. Furthermore, he insisted on close cooperation between the Russian and Georgian socialists against the Bolsheviks, but did not agree with any cooperation with the Georgian nationalists. This led to Tsereteli’s isolation among the émigré Georgians and he largely withdrew from political activity. [Ibid, p. 240-241.] In the 1940s, he moved to theUnited States where continued to write on a history of the revolution and died inNew York City in 1959.References
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