|   Proletarians
         of all countries, unite!   
         
         
            
               | LET
                  US RETAKE MARIATEGUI AND RECONSTITUTE HIS
                  PARTY¹ | 
   Central Committee
Communist Party of Peru
 1975
 
         
         
            
               |   Red
                  BannerPublications
 |   translated
                  and reproduced by thePERU PEOPLE'S MOVEMENT
 | 
 [Prepared for the
         Internet by the Magazine Red Sun] 
         
         
   
LET US RETAKE MARIATEGUI AND RECONSTITUTE
         HIS PARTY      On the 80th anniversary of the
         birth of José Carlos Mariátegui and 47 years
         from its founding, the Communist Party pays homage to its
         great founder and guide by calling upon its militants, upon
         the working class and the people of our country to obey the
         call of our times and prepare ourselves to occupy our place
         in history, LET US RETAKE MARIATEGUI AND RECONSTITUTE HIS
         PARTY!
 
 I. THE CLASS STRUGGLE
         GENERATED MARIATEGUI'S THOUGHT.
 Mariátegui's Thought, the political
         expression of the Peruvian working class, was
         forged and developed amidst the class struggle and not
         outside it; thus, to understand it well, it must necessarily
         be linked to the struggles internationally and in our
         country.
 The global class
         struggle. Mariátegui lived at a time when
         imperialism, according to his words, was experiencing the
         "capitalism of the monopolies, of finance capital, of the
         imperialist wars to control markets and sources of raw
         materials." He lived, then, and fought, when
         capitalism was agonizing and the class struggle was
         empowering the proletariat to conquer power through
         revolutionary violence. From 1914 to 1918 the world was
         shaken by World War I, the "imperialist predatory war"
         which, supported by the treacherous old revisionism,
         launched the working classes and the peoples of some powers
         against those of others, so as to re-divide the world for
         the imperialist powers and their monopolist
         bourgeoisie. However as Lenin foresaw, the war
         hatched the revolution and in 1917 the Bolshevik Party,
         through armed insurrection, overthrew the power of tsarism
         in old Russia. With the October Revolution a new world era
         opened up, for the construction of socialism under the
         dictatorship of the proletariat led by the Communist Party.
         Fulfilling the scientific projections of Marx and Engels,
         the October Road set the general norms for the emancipation
         of the working class: the need for a Communist Party leading
         the revolution, the need for revolutionary violence to
         overthrow the old established order and the need to install
         the dictatorship of the proletariat to build socialism and
         march towards the classless society of the future. What Marx
         and Engels taught, in a word Marxism, materialized into an
         undeniable reality. The October Revolution impacted
         throughout the world. Europe was shaken to its foundations
         and the proletariat launched itself to conquer power; the
         struggles in Germany, Italy and Hungary are examples which
         Mariátegui himself popularized in his History of
         the World Crisis, but while the masses were ripe for
         revolution there was a lack of the necessary communist
         parties to lead them and instead fascism was generated. The
         October Revolution not only changed the face of Europe, the
         colonial anti-imperialist movement was inspired by it; the
         East was convulsed by the Chinese Revolution, "the most
         extensive and profound sign of the awakening of Asia", and
         our own America developed its anti-imperialist maturity. The
         working class generated its own communist parties and
         acquired political weight. Ideologically, the crisis of
         bourgeois thought became more critical while within the
         global working class movement, revisionist opportunism was
         swept away, revolutionary syndicalism was improved and
         Marxism progressed to a new stage, that of
         Marxism-Leninism. Mariátegui lived through
         this process directly as a working class fighter, he
         followed and analyzed the world class struggle to understand
         the revolution in our country. His accurate foresight is in
         the following words: "The class struggle fills the first
         plane of the world crisis"; "the most relevant events of the
         last quarter of a century surpassed all limits. Its stage
         has been the five continents"; "the dictatorship of the
         proletariat, by definition is not a dictatorship of a party
         but a dictatorship of the working class"; "Marxism-Leninism
         is the revolutionary method of the imperialist stage."
 
 a) Class
         development and struggle in Peruvian society.
         Modern industry was developed in Peru from 1895 and
         completed in the decade of the 1920's, a decade demarcating
         the impetus of bureaucratic capitalism under Yankee
         domination. This industrialization took place in a
         semi-feudal society whose economy developed increasingly
         subjected to North American imperialism, which displaced
         English domination. That way bureaucratic capitalism implies
         development of our semi-colonial condition and underscores
         the entire development of Peruvian society. This
         understanding is vital to interpret the Peruvian class
         struggle in the 20th century.
 In the former context, the Peruvian proletariat grew not
         just in numbers; the development of mining, textiles and
         other branches of industry gave it a progressively more
         important place. In synthesis, it implied the appearance of
         a new class and a precise goal. Our proletariat fought from
         the onset for salary increases, to reduce the work day and
         for other better living conditions, and generated a workers'
         movement which under a trade unionist line created unions in
         struggle against anarcho-syndicalism until the creation of
         the General Confederation of Workers of Peru, a task
         precisely carried out under the leadership of
         Mariátegui. Even more, the struggle of the working
         class determined the founding of its Party, along with the
         acts and works of Mariátegui; in that way the
         Peruvian proletariat matured, conforming itself as an
         independent political party and having as its goal the
         "economic emancipation of the working class", initiating a
         new stage in the country, that of the democratic national
         revolution led by the proletariat through its Party.
 
 The peasantry, continuing its old struggles, also fought
         hard for "land to the tillers"; they defended their lands
         against usurpation by feudal landowners and monopolist
         enterprises and their struggle, continuing and persistent,
         faced the "armed response" by the Peruvian State and its
         repressive bodies. We witness their fighting spirit in the
         great actions of the first two decades of this century,
         particularly in Puno. The petty bourgeoisie, for instance
         employees and students, also fought against their enemies;
         this just struggle and organization of employees for
         demands, such as the university reform, are examples of the
         widespread struggle by the people.
 
 In the exploiters' camp the legal civil authorities, the
         expression of the "comprador bourgeoisie" at the service of
         Yankee imperialism, assumed power and became the axis of the
         economical process, displacing the "landowning aristocracy"
         which was more linked to England. Legalism implied
         remodeling Peruvian society and politics according to
         demo-liberal models, as can be seen in the constitutional
         ordering and legislation, e.g. the 1920 educational law and
         other measures. That way the Peruvian bourgeoisie which had
         emerged in the mid 19th century became a comprador
         bourgeoisie and axis of Peruvian social progress and leaders
         of the exploiting classes in the country.
 
 The former was reflected in the ideological field. On one
         hand the ruling bourgeoisie struck at the system of ideas of
         the ruling landowners, one of whose expressions was the
         Villaran-Deustua dispute in the educational field early in
         the century; criticism was always moderate and lukewarm,
         also as a propagation of the North American model. But while
         this happened in the exploiters' camp, in the midst of the
         people and mainly as a result of the working class, a system
         of democratic ideas was maturing which slowly set itself as
         an understanding of our society from the proletariat's
         viewpoint, precisely through the theory and practice of
         José Carlos Mariátegui, who reflected and
         systematized all these thirty odd years in Peruvian life and
         was able to do it through his direct and arduous
         participation in the class struggle.
 
 b) Mariátegui's Thought is the political
         expression of Peruvian class struggle. The life of
         Mariátegui has a clear and precise trajectory as a
         man of the new type, an "actor and thinker," of a life which
         matured rather than changed, as he himself said, from "a
         declared and energetic ambition: that of attending to the
         creation of Peruvian socialism." In his 35 years of
         existence, in 1918 "nauseated by Creole politics", he said,
         "I oriented myself resolutely towards socialism" fighting
         for the working class; and returning from Europe where,
         unlike many, he felt and became more Peruvian, working
         ceaselessly to propagate Marxism-Leninism, organizing the
         masses, especially workers and peasants, and crowned his
         work by founding the Communist Party.
 
 José Carlos Mariátegui was a fighter of the
         working class, a main actor of the Peruvian proletariat who
         in theory and in practice, with words and actions, grew and
         developed in the heat of the class struggle, mainly in our
         country; a proletarian militant who firmly adhered to
         Marxism and fused it with the concrete conditions of our
         revolutionary process, becoming the crowning point and
         synthesis of the Peruvian class struggle, in the political
         expression of our country's proletariat, who summarized more
         than 30 years of class struggle by our working class and our
         people.
 
 In short, Mariátegui is a product of the
         class struggle, mainly that waged by the proletariat of
         which he is the highest political expression.
 
 
 II. MARIATEGUI A "CONVINCED
         AND CONFESSED" MARXIST-LENINIST
 More than 30 years ago enemies tried to deny the
         Marxist-Leninist position of Mariátegui and that
         campaign has increased by the end of the 1960's and
         continues to be fueled openly or covertly today. To deny his
         Marxist condition is to deprive his work and actions of any
         basis, for the purpose of undermining the struggle of the
         proletariat, destroy its Party and fetter the revolution.
         Therefore the political question is important, to reaffirm
         and clarify, again, the Marxist-Leninist position of
         Mariátegui whom, let us recall, declared himself to
         be so "convinced and confessed."
 
 How to respond to those impugning him? There is only one
         road, and it is known: to see the position of
         Mariátegui in Marxist philosophy, political economy
         and scientific socialism; that is, to remember his theses
         about the three parts of Marxism because, by seeing clearly
         his position on these basic questions, the Marxist basis of
         the founder of the Communist Party will be understood.
 
 a) Mariátegui and Marxist philosophy.
         He starts out with each society generating its own
         philosophy; in his words: "each civilization has its own
         intuition of the world, its own philosophy, its own mental
         attitude which constitutes its essence, its soul ... ideas
         originate in reality and later on influence it, modifying
         it." Thus, philosophy is a social product, it cannot
         be understood outside the material base generating it, but
         it also reacts upon that base. He conceives that
         the philosophical process confronts materialism or idealism
         and highlights the materialist basis of Marx and, that way,
         the materialist basis sustaining Marxism. But that is not
         all, to Mariátegui, as with the classics, philosophy
         has a class character, it is an instrument of the class
         struggle to conquer power or to defend what has been
         conquered. Even more, he conceives that philosophy follows
         the direction of the class generating it; that way bourgeois
         philosophy by necessity follows the road and development of
         the bourgeoisie. And, as result, to him philosophy is
         product of social practice.
 
 He considers Marxist philosophy to be the product of a long
         development, the culmination of classical German philosophy,
         mainly Hegel's; he accurately points out: "but this
         affiliation does not imply any servitude by Marxism to Hegel
         or his philosophy which, according to the well known
         sentence, Marx set right-side up ... Marx's materialist
         conception is born, dialectically, as the antithesis of
         Hegel's idealist conception." But even reiterating many
         times the dialectical character of Marxist philosophy, it
         impinges upon the essential of dialectics as the unity and
         struggle of opposites without falling into mechanistic
         pitfalls, clearly establishing, for example, the
         relationship between base and superstructure, that whether
         one or the other will be the main aspect depends of the
         concrete conditions. The astute use of dialectics is,
         precisely, one of the hallmarks of the theory and practice
         of Mariátegui.
 
 Particularly important is his position regarding historical
         materialism which, by the scientific development it implies,
         he holds to be "a method of historical interpretation of
         today's society"; and his proposition conceiving the base,
         the support of all society, as a set of social relations of
         production, with the superstructure as integrated by
         institutions and organizations in a legal and statutory
         order, a superstructure culminating in a system of ideas, is
         key. There we see the accurate description of base and
         superstructure which is the same as Engels'. He considers
         man not as an unvarying nature but as the product of social
         relations and therefore historically generated in social
         practice, especially molded by the class struggle, as he
         establishes by referring to the working class. He also
         establishes an indivisible unity between determinism and
         free will, a capacity to act as a trail blazer fulfilling
         the necessary laws of history; therefrom his expressive
         words: "history wants for each one to fulfill, with maximum
         action, his own role. So there is no victory except for
         those capable of earning it with their own resources, in
         inexorable combat."
 
 Finally, speaking of human beings, whom he considers as the
         most valuable thing on Earth and the main thing in every
         economic process, and when grouped in multitudes, in masses,
         are the great force of history; and that the masses
         reflected in the working class, are mobilized towards a
         goal, towards a modern myth, in his own words: "The
         proletariat has a myth: social revolution. Towards that myth
         it moves with a warm and active faith."
 
 Aren't these basic proposals, perhaps, theses proposed by
         the classics of Marxism? And aren't these the foundation of
         Mariátegui's philosophical position? And isn't this
         dialectical materialism, isn't this Marxist philosophy? In
         conclusion, Mariátegui sustained himself in Marxist
         philosophy, to which he arrived through his direct
         participation in the class struggle and we find his
         philosophical theses, as with all great Marxists, when we
         judge and resolve the complex problems of the class
         struggle. Whomever wants to see it as abstract
         meditation or academic work will not find philosophy in
         Mariátegui, but it will be found by whomever seeks it
         as a weapon in the class struggle used to discover the laws
         of our revolution and politics guiding our
         people.
 
 b) Mariátegui and political economy.
         He begins by relating economy and politics, aiming to
         establish the economic basis, teaching: "it is not possible
         to understand Peruvian reality without seeking and looking
         at the economic facts," "the economic fact entails, equally,
         the key to all other phases of the history of the Republic"
         and "economics does not explain, probably, the totality of a
         phenomenon and its consequences. But it explains its roots."
         He conceives economics, the social relations of
         exploitation, as root of the political processes; but he
         sees the economy of a country within the international
         economic system, not as an isolated thing. From that
         viewpoint, he analyzes economics in its political function
         to find the laws governing the class struggle in a country;
         a task especially carried out in our country by analyzing
         the direction historically followed by our economy, the
         agrarian production relations, industrialization and other
         economic terms, all with one goal: to establish the general
         laws of the Peruvian revolution.
 
 Imperialism merited special attention according to
         Mariátegui; but aside from its economic character he
         emphasized its reactionary political character, pointing out
         that once "the stage of monopolies and imperialism arrives,
         the entire liberal ideology corresponding to the free
         competition stage is no longer valid." This great thesis is
         identical to that proposed by Lenin. Concerning imperialism,
         he also emphasized the sharpening of the economic crises:
         "All this leads us to believe that during this stage of
         monopoly, trustification and finance capital, crises will
         show up with greater violence"; crises he considered as
         inherent to the system and not attributable to transient
         problems, just as today it would be an increase in the price
         of oil which at most acts as a triggering factor. He
         similarly conceived the inter-imperialist clash for the
         expansion of markets, saying; "The great capitalist states
         have entered, fatally and inevitably, into the phase of
         imperialism. The struggle for markets and raw materials does
         not allow them any Christian fraternization. Inexorably, it
         impels them to expansion"; and underscoring even more the
         contention among powers: "besides the acting empires we
         have, therefore, embryonic empires. Side by side with the
         old empires, the young imperialisms oppose world peace.
         These show more aggressive and odious language than the
         former ones." Extraordinary words whose importance is
         greater if we consider the current contention between the
         superpowers, imperialist and social-imperialist, and their
         ostensible policy of disarmament and detensioning in the
         light of these other ones: "Limiting naval weaponry,
         discussed at Geneva, may seem to more than one pacifist as a
         step towards disarmament. But historical experience shows us
         in an unforgettable manner how after many such steps the
         world would still be closer than ever to war." These theses
         about imperialism are, besides brilliant, very timely.
 
 But economic matters do not end here. He also analyzed the
         economy of the underdeveloped nations; he astutely analyzed
         the semi-feudal and semi-colonial condition of the Latin
         America countries, especially ours. He showed how
         industrialization in the backwards nations is tied to and
         develops as a function of the imperialist powers, in the
         case of Peru Yankee imperialism. He saw clearly how
         imperialism does not allow the backwards nations to develop
         a national economy nor independent industrialization; how on
         top of their semi-feudal base monopoly capitalism is
         installed, linked to the feudal landowners and generating a
         "mercantile bourgeoisie," a bourgeoisie controlled by
         imperialism for which it is the intermediate plunderer of
         national resources and the exploiters of the people. And he
         set forth the following thesis, which we must not forget,
         about the Latin American republics: "The economic condition
         of these republics is, without a doubt, semi-colonial; and
         to the same degree that capitalism grows, and consequently
         imperialist penetration, this aspect of their economy must
         grow even more acute." Have these theses been fulfilled?
         Even the most superfluous look at America factually
         corroborates the semi-colonial domination exerted by Yankee
         imperialism. For the rest, Mariátegui's theses on
         capitalism in the backward nations must be understood in
         relation with those of Mao Tse-tung, about bureaucratic
         capitalism and appreciate them taking into account the
         specific conditions of Latin America.
 
 In treating the economy of the backward nations, he also
         emphasized the imperialist plans following World War I to
         unload their problems upon them, promoting the development
         of their backward economies to suit the economic and
         political needs of the imperialist powers. The question
         arises, aren't we seeing something similar today after World
         War II? Let's keep in mind, however, that those plans
         crashed and will crash against the national movement, since
         as Mariátegui observed, they "try to reorganize and
         expand the economic exploitation of the colonial countries,
         of the incompletely evolved countries, of the primitive
         countries of Africa, Asia, America, Oceania and Europe
         itself... So that the less civilized part of humanity toil
         for the more civilized part... But their plan to
         scientifically reorganize the exploitation of the colonial
         countries, to transform them into compliant providers of raw
         materials and abiding consumers of manufactured products,
         stumbles against an historical difficulty. These colonial
         countries are agitated to conquer their national
         independence." Words which the years and reality confirm,
         today more than ever.
 
 Finally, on political economy, let's recall his thesis on
         cooperativism: "In the degree to which the advancement of
         syndicalism enters a country, so too enters the progress of
         cooperativism" and "the cooperative, within a system of free
         competition, and even with certain state support, is not
         opposed to, but on the contrary, quite useful to capitalist
         enterprises." Let's ask then, can cooperativism develop, as
         it is pretended, simultaneously with an anti-union offensive
         and even more so when a corporativist unionism is being
         promoted? In the age of imperialism, can cooperativism
         serve, within a regime like ours, as anything else but a
         complement to bureaucratic capitalism? In light of the ideas
         transcribed the answer obviously is: No! And let's bear in
         mind that cooperativism can be of service to the working
         class and the people only when the proletariat has power in
         their hands. To finish this point, let's remember his
         teaching that imperialism develops the increasing state
         intervention in the economic process and that, representing
         and defending the bourgeoisie, it sees itself compelled even
         to carry out "nationalizations"; so the question is to see
         who has benefitted from the nationalizations, and that is
         decided by which class controls power. In light of this, who
         has benefitted from the nationalizations of the current
         government?
 
 b) Mariátegui and scientific
         socialism. He starts by distinguishing between old
         social-democratic reformism and militant socialism, pointing
         out that the difference is that the former "wants to achieve
         socialism by collaborating politically with the bourgeoisie"
         while the latter ones, Marxists, "want to achieve socialism
         by wholly confiscating political power for the proletariat."
         The matter delimited, he firmly takes the position of the
         Communist International, of the followers of Lenin, in whom
         he recognizes a great leader of the international communist
         movement, declaring himself Marxist-Leninist.
 
 Another point of scientific socialism important to
         Mariátegui is the crisis of bourgeois democracy whose
         symptoms could be perceived before World War I and whose
         causes he sees in "the parallel growth and concentration of
         capitalism and the proletariat"; in that way the development
         of monopoly, characteristic of imperialism, and the
         questioning of the bourgeois order by the proletariat are
         what causes the bourgeois democratic crisis. Deepening the
         problem he emphasizes that under the bourgeois regime
         industry developed immensely with the power of machinery,
         with "great industrial enterprises" having arisen, and since
         the political and social forms are determined by the base
         sustaining them he concludes: "The expansion of these new
         productive forces does not allow the subsistence of the old
         political patterns. It has transformed the structure of
         nations and demands the transformation of the structure of
         the regime. Bourgeois democracy has ceased to correspond to
         the organization of economic forces tremendously transformed
         and enlarged. That is why democracy is in crisis.
         The typical institution of democracy is the
         parliament. The crisis of democracy is a crisis of
         parliament."
 
 Here we have a thesis intimately linked to Lenin's on the
         reactionary character of imperialism, on which
         Mariátegui bases his understanding of fascism as
         political reaction, as an international phenomenon not only
         Italian nor exclusively in imperialist countries but
         feasible also in backward nations like Spain, fascism which
         typically blames "all the misfortunes of the fatherland on
         politics and parliamentarism"; fascism as an expression that
         "the ruling class does not feel itself sufficiently defended
         by its institutions. Universal suffrage and parliament are
         obstacles in its way," how "reaction which in all countries
         is organized to the tune of a demagogic and subversive beat.
         (Bavarian fascists call themselves 'national socialists.'
         During its tumultuous training, fascism made abundant use of
         an anti-capitalist prose ...)"; as "a nationalist and
         reactionary mysticism" which "has taught the way of
         dictatorship and violence" with its taking of power and
         repression, the use of the blackjack and castor oil but
         which despite its duration, "it appears inevitably destined
         to exacerbate the contemporary crisis, to undermine the
         basis of bourgeois society."
 
 To Mariátegui, as he taught in "The Biology of
         Fascism" of his work The Contemporary Scene,
         fascism is a political process which "for many years did not
         want to call itself or function as a party," whose social
         composition is heterogeneous and in which "the national flag
         covers up all the contraband and equivocations in doctrine
         and program ... They want to monopolize patriotism." But
         within this "the contradictions undermining fascist unity"
         always develop, contradictions which first faced "two
         antithetic souls and two antithetic mentalities. One
         extremist or arch-reactionary fraction proposing the
         integral insertion of the fascist revolution in the Statute
         of the Kingdom of Italy. The neoliberal State had, in its
         view, to be replaced by the fascist State. While a
         revisionist fraction instead called for a more or less
         extensive political rectification"; a contradiction which,
         resolving itself favorably towards the first tendency, did
         not therefore cease to exist but continued to develop under
         new forms: one tendency proposing to sweep away "all
         opponents of the fascist regime in a Saint Bartholomew's
         Night," while others "more intellectual, but no less
         apocalyptical ... invited fascism to definitively liquidate
         the parliamentary regime," meanwhile "the theoreticians of
         integral fascism sketch the technique of the fascist State
         which it conceives almost as a vertical trust of workers'
         unions or corporations." Thus, fascism is masterfully
         presented, essentially analyzed even in its
         contradictions.
 
 Furthermore, in his analysis of fascism Mariátegui
         advances to typify the "characteristic attitude of a
         reformist, of a democrat, however one tormented by a series
         of 'doubts about democracy' and of unsettled feelings
         respect to reform" shown by English writer H.G. Wells
         regarding Mussolini's regime: "Fascism appears to him a
         cataclysm, more than a consequence and result of the
         bankruptcy of bourgeois democracy and the defeat of the
         proletarian revolution in Italy. A confirmed evolutionist,
         Wells cannot conceive of fascism as a phenomenon possible
         within the logic of history. He must understand it as an
         exceptional phenomenon." To reformism, as we can see,
         fascism is not the consequence of the crisis of bourgeois
         democracy but "an exception," "a cataclysm," which is how
         some see it today in our country, only and exclusively as
         terror on the march, not seeing it is "a phenomenon possible
         within the logic of history" caused by: The development of
         the monopolies into imperialism and the questioning of the
         bourgeoisie by the proletariat. Let that thesis help us to
         reject the reformist concepts being propagated about fascism
         and to have a correct and necessary understanding of history
         and the current situation in our country.
 
 Other problems of scientific socialism set forth by
         Mariátegui are the violent revolution, the role of
         the proletariat and of the Party. On these he maintained:
         "The revolution is the painful gestation, the bloody birth
         of the present," "that power is conquered through violence"
         and "it is conserved only through dictatorship," thus
         pointing out the role of revolutionary violence; which "the
         proletariat does not enter history politically except as a
         social class; at the instant it discovers its mission of
         erecting, with the elements procured by human effort, moral
         or immoral, fair or unfair, a superior social order," which
         points out the role of the working class. Judging the
         political weakness of Spain: "in Russia there existed,
         besides the profound agitation of the people, a
         revolutionary Party, led by a ingenious man of action, of
         clear vision and goals. That is what today is lacking in
         Spain ... The Communist Party, too young, still does not
         constitute more than a force of agitation and propaganda,"
         thus highlighting the need of the Party of the
         proletariat.
 
 The theses on Marxist philosophy, political economics and
         scientific socialism as shown, are they Marxist positions?
         Can anyone say these do not substantially correspond to
         Marxist proposals? Can anyone prove that such positions are
         not the ones upheld by the classics of Marxism-Leninism?
         Evidently Mariátegui's theses are firmly and
         definitely based on the concept of the proletariat and this
         in no way can be distorted or denied. What is the basis of
         those pretending to deny the Marxist position of
         Mariátegui? Simply and plainly a simplistic analysis
         which lacks any reality, and, above all, lacks a solid class
         position, alienated from our reality and the application of
         Marxism.
 
 The position of the founder of the Communist Party with
         respect to Marxist philosophy, to political economy and to
         scientific socialism reveals, a correct and just way of
         thinking from a working class position. They are based on
         Marxism-Leninism, showing the maturing of
         Mariátegui's thought in his theoretical and practical
         participation in the class struggle, and that he arrived at
         that understanding, while, struggling against old
         revisionism and its European representatives and similar
         elements in our country.
 
 
 III. MARIÁTEGUI
         ESTABLISHED THE GENERAL POLITICAL LINE OF THE PERUVIAN
         REVOLUTION.
 What does it mean to say that Mariátegui established
         the general political line of the Peruvian revolution? In
         fact, he set forth the general laws of the class struggle in
         the country, and established the road of revolution in our
         country. That statement implies its validity and necessarily
         entails the Retaking Mariátegui's Road to carry
         forward the revolutionary transformation of our society
         under the leadership of the working class, through the
         organized vanguard, the only class capable of fulfilling
         such a leading role.
 
 Let's analyze this substantial problem, whether openly or
         covertly; the destiny of our country depends on the position
         we take in this regard.
 
 a) The character of Peruvian Society. Let's
         start from the words of the founder of the Communist
         Party:
 
 "Capitalism develops within a semi-feudal country like ours;
         at times in which, having reached the monopoly and
         imperialist stage, the entire liberal ideology corresponding
         to the free competition stage has ceased to be valid.
         Imperialism does not tolerate an economic program of
         nationalization and industrialization in any of those
         semi-colonial nations it exploits as markets for its
         commodities and capital, and as sources of raw materials. It
         forces them into specialization, to monoculture (in Peru
         petroleum, copper, sugar, cotton), suffering a permanent
         crisis of manufactured products, a crisis derived from this
         rigid determination of national production, by factors of
         the capitalist world market."
 
 In these words which belong to point III of the Party
         Program, the semi-feudal and semi-colonial character of our
         society is established. The first one, semi-feudalism,
         "surely must not be sought in the subsistence of
         institutions and political or judicial forms of the feudal
         order. Formally Peru is a republican and democratic
         bourgeois State. Feudalism or semi-feudalism
         survives in the structure of our agrarian economy,"
         said Mariátegui. We see it today, despite the years
         elapsed, because it persists and new forms of semi-feudal
         roots are developed, forms of unpaid labor, family
         obligations and deferred salaries, personal privileges,
         maintenance and fusion of old latifundia and the
         preponderance of gamonalismo, under cover of new
         conditions and high sounding words. Semi-feudalism, harshly
         attacked in years past has developed into a self-evident
         truth, since the class struggle itself, with the rural
         explosion we have seen so many times, the agrarian reforms
         and the counter-revolutionary action we have seen since the
         1960's, show the semi-feudal base of Peruvian society.
 
 With respect to semi-colonialism, Mariátegui
         maintained that a country can be politically independent
         while its economy continues to be dominated by imperialism;
         Furthermore, he firmly maintained that South American
         countries like ours are "politically independent,
         economically colonized." And that situation continues to
         develop; our economy suffers growing and diversified
         imperialist and social-imperialist penetration, direct and
         indirect. The semi-colonial situation has been questioned in
         recent years, by affirming without proof that Peru has
         become a colony, since that is what is affirmed when one
         typifies the country as a "neocolony"; and that affirmation
         reaches an extreme when it is proposed that we are a
         "neocolony," but ruled by "a bourgeois reformist
         government."
 
 The quoted paragraph proposed that capitalism develops in
         Peru, but it is a capitalism subjected to the control mainly
         of North American imperialism, not a capitalism that allows
         a national economy and independent industrialization; but
         quite the opposite, a capitalism subservient to the
         imperialist metropolis which does not tolerate a true
         national economy serving our nation, nor independent
         industrialization. Thus, Mariátegui does not deny
         capitalist development in the country, but specifies our
         type of capitalism; capitalism in a semi-feudal country
         living in the age of monopolies and political reaction, a
         capitalism that while it develops it increases our
         semi-colonial condition; a capitalism engendering a
         comprador bourgeoisie linked to U.S. imperialism. In
         summary, a bureaucratic capitalism from the viewpoint of Mao
         Tse-tung.
 
 That is the valid and current understanding
         Mariátegui had about the character of Peruvian
         society. Later studies and research only confirmed and
         specified the accurate theses sustained by our founder.
 
 b) The two stages of the Peruvian
         revolution. Starting from the country's
         semi-colonial and semi-feudal condition, Mariátegui
         analyzed the revolutionary forces concluding that there are
         two basic classes: the proletariat and the peasantry.
         Although the latter is the main force, being the majority,
         and supports the weight of semi-feudalism, the former, the
         working class, is the leading class; further on, he noted
         that only with the appearance of the proletariat can
         the peasantry fulfill its role: "Socialist doctrine
         is the only one capable of giving a modern, constructive
         sense to the indigenous cause, which, placed in the true
         social and economic arena, and elevated to the level of a
         realistic and creative policy, counts for the fulfillment of
         this enterprise with the will and discipline of a class now
         making its appearance in our historical political process:
         The proletariat."
 Joining the peasantry and the
         proletariat is the petty-bourgeoisie, which "always played a
         very minor and disoriented role in Peru," put under pressure
         by foreign capitalism "it appears destined to assume, as its
         organization and orientation prospers, a revolutionary
         nationalist attitude." These are the driving classes of the
         revolution, who under certain conditions and circumstances
         can be joined by the national bourgeoisie, which
         Mariátegui calls the "left bourgeoisie." Those are
         the four classes who united aim at the targets of the
         revolution: Semi-feudalism and imperialism. In two well known paragraphs of the
         Communist Party Program, written by the founder himself, the
         stages of the Peruvian revolution are defined and its
         character specified:
 "The emancipation of the economy of the country is only
         possible through the action of the proletarian masses, in
         solidarity with the world's anti-imperialist struggle. Only
         the action of the proletariat can first stimulate and later
         on carry out the tasks of the bourgeois-democratic
         revolution which the bourgeois regime itself is incapable of
         fulfilling."
 
 "The bourgeois-democratic stage accomplished, the revolution
         becomes, in its objectives and doctrine, a proletarian
         revolution. The party of the proletariat, qualified by the
         struggle to exercise power and develop its own program,
         fulfills in this stage the tasks of organizing and defending
         the socialist order."
 
 Here we see the problem of the Peruvian revolution and its
         stages masterfully condensed: The
         national-democratic or bourgeois-democratic of the new
         kind in the wording of Mao Tse-tung, and the
         proletarian revolution. Two stages, the first one
         which we are living in since 1928, but which still
         has not been fulfilled or concluded, and the
         future, proletarian stage; two uninterrupted stages of the
         same revolutionary process. Under no circumstances should
         their character and contents be confused. This great thesis
         by Mariátegui became, after broad debates and
         struggles, a fundamental truth of Marxist understanding of
         the laws of our revolution.
 
 But if this is fundamental, then it is even more so that the
         working class and only the working class through its party
         is capable of leading the national-democratic revolution.
         That only by preparing and organizing within the
         national-democratic revolution can it develop the second,
         proletarian stage. Consequently, if the national-democratic
         revolution is not led by the working class, in no way can it
         be completed, much less build socialism. This is the
         paramount question today, since counter-revolution and
         social corporativism deny this great truth and assert that
         in our country the armed forces of the old State is
         fulfilling the first stage of the revolution and even, they
         claim, laying the foundations for socialism. This key
         question differentiates revolutionaries from
         counter-revolutionaries: The first ones, with Marxism and
         Mariátegui, maintain that the proletariat and only
         the proletariat "can first stimulate and later on fulfill
         the tasks of the bourgeois-democratic revolution which the
         bourgeois regime is incapable to develop and fulfill." That
         is our position. We must uphold and fight the
         counter-revolutionary theses, aiming our spear against
         social-corporativist revisionism that preaches against the
         thesis of Mariátegui and is the detachment of
         social-imperialism in our country, whose efforts serve only
         its collusion and collision with the Yankee superpower for
         world domination.
 
 c) The anti-feudal struggle. The land
         program is basic to our country and, in synthesis, it is the
         question of feudalism with its two elements: Latifundia and
         servitude; that is why, as Mariátegui said, the
         agrarian problem in Peru is the destruction of feudalism,
         whose relations taint our society from top to bottom, from
         the base to the superstructure. The motor of rural struggles
         has been and is the land question, and that the three
         agrarian laws of the 1960's did not destroy its base is
         clearly shown by today's struggles by the peasantry.
 
 In analyzing the land question, the founder of the Party
         highlighted the struggle confronting community and
         latifundia; he showed its economic and social superiority,
         pointing out that the community had given the peasant
         majorities strength to resist the thievery by feudal
         landowners throughout the centuries, and that it entails the
         living yeast which will help socialist development in the
         future. Reviewing the agrarian labor regime he highlighted
         the existence of feudal relations of exploitation hidden
         behind seemingly capitalist forms. These questions do not
         belong to the past, but to a present which we must search
         well to discover its blurred semi-feudal essence hidden
         behind the apparent and purported "destruction of feudalism"
         of the so-called agrarian reform.
 
 Considering the struggles of the Peruvian and of Latin
         American peasantry generally, Mariátegui brought
         forward the slogan of the peasants: "Land for those who till
         it, expropriate them without compensation" and that their
         mobilization demands the "arming of workers and peasants to
         conquer and defend their gains." In that way, feudalism must
         be destroyed by confiscating the lands and only the armed
         workers and peasants will be able to accomplish this, since
         there is no other way to break up feudalism, destroy
         latifundia and abolish serfdom. We must not forget that
         Peruvian laws have been ruling agrarian relations and
         abolishing serfdom for over l50 years, but in reality they
         have maintained the underlying feudalism.
 
 Consequently, the anti-feudal struggle is the motive of the
         class struggle in the countryside and the basis of our
         national-democratic revolution itself.
 c) The anti-imperialist
         struggle. Peru, like the rest of the Latin American
         countries, is a nation in a formative stage. "It is being
         built over the inert indigenous strata, and the alluvial
         sediments of western civilization." In that way, "the
         problem of the Indians is the problem of four million
         Peruvians. It is the problem of three fourths of the
         population of Peru. It is the problem of the majority. It is
         the problem of nationality," Mariátegui observed, and
         he added: "A truly national policy cannot do without the
         Indian, it cannot ignore the Indian. The Indian is the
         foundation of our nationality in formation. Oppression makes
         the Indian an enemy of civility. It annuls them,
         practically, as an element of progress. Those who impoverish
         and depress the Indian, impoverish and depress the nation...
         Without the Indian, the condition of being Peruvian is not
         possible. This truth ought to be valid, above all, to
         persons of mere demo-liberal bourgeois and nationalist
         ideology..."
 Thus, the problem of the Indian is that of the majority
         ignored by the policies of the Peruvian State, of the
         republic generally, for more than 150 years; it is the
         problem of acting outside the interest of four fifths of the
         population. As our founder said, of looking and acting with
         eyes aimed at the imperialist metropolis dominating us.
         Digging deeper into the problem, Mariátegui set forth
         that the Indian problem is the problem of the land;
         consequently, the national question is based on the land
         question and in no way can one be separated from the other,
         a proposal which follows strictly the these; of Marxism,
         proved by the practice of the class struggle of our own
         masses and expressed, incontrovertibly, in the character of
         our revolution.
 
 On this basis, the founder of the Communist Party analyzed
         the classes and the anti-imperialist struggle in our
         country, and in Latin America in general; he pointed out
         that the Latin American bourgeoisie "feel sure enough of
         their ownership of power so as not to care much about
         national sovereignty," as well as having common interests
         with imperialism, adding that: "While imperialist policy ...
         is not forced to resort to armed intervention, in case of
         military occupation they will count on the absolute
         collaboration of the bourgeoisie." In that way the
         relationship of the Peruvian "mercantile bourgeoisie" and
         its position with respect to imperialism was clarified.
         Referring to our country, when treating the subject of the
         united front, Mariátegui proposed the possibility of
         uniting "with the left liberal bourgeoisie, truly disposed
         to struggle against the remnants of feudalism and against
         imperialist penetration," defining the position of what
         today we call the national bourgeoisie; and he specified,
         besides, as we saw, that the petty-bourgeoisie will go on
         developing "a revolutionary nationalist position" as the
         foreign domination increases.
 
 On the other hand, charging against the Apristas who had
         raised anti-imperialism "to the level of a program, a
         political attitude, a movement that is an end in itself and
         led spontaneously, due to what process we don't know,
         whether socialism or the social revolution" and exposing
         their thesis of "we are leftists (or socialists) because we
         are anti-imperialist" Mariátegui, keeping in mind
         that only the proletariat, together with the peasantry, can
         be consistently anti-imperialist, pointed out: "For us,
         anti-imperialism does not constitute, nor can it constitute
         by itself, a political program, a mass movement capable of
         conquering power," and he concluded: "In conclusion,
         we are anti-imperialists because we are socialists, because
         we are revolutionaries, because we counterpoise socialism as
         an opposite system to capitalism, destined to replace it,
         because in the struggle against foreign imperialism we
         fulfill our duties of solidarity with the revolutionary
         masses of the world."
 
 Thus, the anti-feudal and anti-imperialist struggle
         intermingle as two inseparable matters and as integral parts
         of the national-democratic revolution which only the working
         class is capable of leading, provided it establishes the
         worker-peasant alliance as the starting point of the united
         front of the revolution.
 
 d) The united front. Seeing the basic
         problems of the character of society and of the revolution
         and the anti-feudal and anti-imperialist struggles, the
         question arises of the instruments of social transformation,
         of the "three key levers of the revolution": The united
         front, the military problem and the Party.
 
 "My attitude, from the time I incorporated myself to this
         vanguard, was always one of a convinced, fervent
         propagandist of the united front," wrote Mariátegui
         on the occasion of the May 1st, 1924. He pointed out that
         "we are still too few to divide ourselves" and the many
         common tasks pending in the service of the class. He was a
         consistent defender of the united front, he demanded it as a
         solidarity action, concrete and practical for those who,
         without getting ideologically confused, "must feel
         themselves united by class solidarity, linked by the common
         struggle against the common adversary, linked by the same
         revolutionary will and the same renewing passion"; and after
         recognizing that "the variety of tendencies and the
         diversity of ideological shades is inevitable in that human
         legion called the proletariat," he demanded: "What matters
         is that those groups and those tendencies to know how to
         understand each other before the concrete reality of the
         day. So they do not crash like Byzantines in mutual
         excommunications and ex-confessions. That they do not
         alienate the masses from the revolution, by a big show of
         the dogmatic quarrels of their preachers. That they don't
         use their weapons or waste their time in hurting each other,
         but in fighting the old social order, its institutions, its
         injustices and its crimes."
 
 These words resound alive today as the current order,
         demanding to unite so as to fulfill the common "historic
         duties" of developing class consciousness and the feeling of
         the class, of sowing and spreading and renovating class
         ideas, to wrest the workers away from the false institutions
         claiming to represent them; to fight repression and the
         corporativist offensive, to defend the organization, the
         press and the tribune of the class, to struggle for the
         rights and gains of the peasantry; "historical duties" in
         whose fulfillment our paths will meet and join."
 
 On that basis Mariátegui proposed forming the
         anti-imperialist and anti-feudal front which under the
         leadership of the working class and based on the workers'
         and peasants' alliance could unite workers and peasants, the
         petty-bourgeoisie and, under certain conditions and
         circumstances, the "bourgeois left," which we now call the
         national bourgeoisie. The united front is a fundamental
         weapon of the national-democratic revolution; but it can
         only be developed based on the worker-peasant alliance and
         led by the proletariat, not by the bourgeoisie or the
         petty-bourgeoisie. In this front, the working class, through
         its Party, enters into an alliance with other classes. "But
         in any event it will give the proletariat ample freedom of
         criticism, of action, of the press and of organization."
         There we have the politics of the united front and the
         independent class politics which the Party must never
         abandon.
 
 On the other hand, Mariátegui highlighted that when
         confronted by a revolutionary threat the bourgeoisie also
         forms a united front, "but only temporarily, only while a
         definite assault on the revolution is prepared. Afterwards
         each one of the bourgeois groups tries to recover its
         autonomy .... Within the bourgeoisie there are contrasts of
         ideology and interests, contrasts which no one can
         suppress"; that way, the bourgeois block is necessity broken
         by the development of its own internal contradictions and
         the development of the class struggle.
 
 These theses, verified by reality, also demand overcoming
         sectarianism, which today is badly generalized, keeping in
         mind that "the masses demand unity" and keep our ears alert
         to these relevant and peremptory words: "The noble, lofty
         and sincere spirits of the revolution perceive and respect
         that above any theoretical barrier, the historical
         solidarity of their efforts and works. Sectarian egotism and
         the privilege of incomprehension belong to the lowly spirits
         without horizons or wings, to dogmatic mentalities, who want
         to petrify and immobilize life in a rigid formulation."
 
 Our country lives today under a corporativist offensive, a
         reactionary offensive which like all of its kind employs
         political deceit and repression, according to its needs;
         while in the people's camp sectarianism and hegemonism
         divide and conspire against the common united action, each
         day more necessary and urgent. We must struggle for
         unification, today more than ever, since "a reactionary
         policy will ultimately cause the polarization of the lefts.
         It will provoke the fusion of all proletarian forces. The
         capitalist counter offensive will achieve what the instinct
         of the working classes has been unable to do: The united
         proletarian front." We are fighting against a fascist
         government which carries on a general corporative
         readjustment that, after intense demagoguery and much
         propagandized "humanist, libertarian and Christian
         socialism," it confuses understanding and surrenders wills,
         deceitfully using the reactionary double tactic, of
         repression and political deceit, generates vacillation and
         sharpens conciliatory rightism in the people's own ranks. In
         these circumstances, we must adhere and apply the following
         proposals by Mariátegui:
 
 "We live in a period of open ideological belligerence. The
         men who represent a renewing force cannot enter into
         concerts with or be confused by, not even casually or
         fortuitously, those representing conservative or regressive
         forces. An historical abyss separates them. They speak
         diverse languages and do not have a common intuition of
         history."
 
 "I think we must unite those who are alike, not those who
         are unlike. We must get closer to those whom history wants
         united. That we must support those whom history wants to be
         solidarity. That I think is the only possible coordination.
         The only intelligence with a precise and effective
         historical sense."
 
 And also: "I am a revolutionary. But I think that among men
         of clear thinking and defined position it is easy to reach
         an understanding and appreciate each other, even while
         clashing with each other. Above all, while fighting each
         other. With the political sector, with which I will never
         reach an understanding is another thing: That of mediocre
         reformism, of domesticated socialism, or with the democracy
         of pharisees."
 
 f) The military problem. Not much is said
         about Mariátegui's theses on the military problem,
         moreover it is believed he never expounded on such an
         important question; on the contrary, in his works the
         importance Mariátegui gave to revolutionary violence,
         war and military organization is notable. Already by 1921 he
         wrote: "there is no such thing as a measured, even, soft,
         serene, placid revolution"; in 1923: "power is conquered
         through violence ... only through dictatorship is power
         preserved"; in 1925: "While reaction is the instinct of
         conservation, the agony of the past, revolution is the
         painful gestation, the bloody birth of the present"; and in
         1927: "if revolution demands violence, authority,
         discipline, I am for violence, authority, discipline. I
         accept them, as a whole with all their horrors without
         cowardly reservations." The thesis of revolutionary
         violence, therefore, is a constant theme of his thought,
         theses that are hidden by opportunism and which as Marxists
         we must raise firmly and consequently.
 
 But this is not his entire understanding of the revolution,
         which is conceived and defined as protracted: "A revolution
         is not a coup d'etat, nor an insurrection, it is not one of
         those things here we call a revolution by the arbitrary use
         of that word. A revolution takes many years to be fulfilled.
         Frequently it has alternate periods when revolutionary
         forces are dominant and then when counterrevolutionary
         forces predominate. Just like a war is a process of
         offensives and counter-offensives, of victories and defeats,
         as long as one of the conflicting sides does not finally
         surrender, as long as it does not resign from the fight, it
         is not vanquished. Its defeat is temporary but not total.
         According to this interpretation of history, reaction, white
         terror ... are but episodes in the class struggle ... an
         ungrateful chapter of the revolution." Here we see the
         correct Marxist position before the struggle of revolution
         and counterrevolution, the unchanging confidence in the
         necessary revolutionary triumph; here we have the theses
         that must guide us.
 
 Besides, Mariátegui establishes the relationship
         between politics and war, he derives the weakness of the
         military front from the political weakness, and military
         strength also as a political product: "Because, that way, in
         this as in the rest of world war, as in the rest of its
         great aspects, the political factors, the morale factors,
         the psychological factors had more importance than purely
         military factors." So, war follows politics. He understood,
         as our founder, that revolution generates an army of the new
         type with its own tasks and different from the armies of the
         exploiters: "The red army is a new case in the world's
         military history, it is an army which feels its role as a
         revolutionary army and which does not forget that its aim is
         the defense of the revolution. Any specific and militarily
         imperialist feeling is by necessity excluded from its soul.
         Its discipline, its organization and its structure are
         revolutionary." Here we have the army of the new type which
         the revolution generates and which can only arise under the
         absolute control of the Party, as Mao Tse-tung teaches.
 
 Finally, Mariátegui paid special attention to the
         Mexican Revolution in Latin America and the Chinese
         Revolution in Asia, highlighting in both their
         national-democratic character, their agrarian roots, the
         role of the peasantry and the vital participation of the
         working class, while at the same time highlighting the
         contrary works of imperialism and of the bourgeoisie which
         betrayed or trafficked with the revolution.
 
 Starting from the basic premise of "land for those who till
         it," he proposed arming peasants and workers to conquer and
         defend it, arming the masses of peasants and workers to
         carry forward the national-democratic revolution. He
         highlighted its development as a peasant's revolution which
         advances from the countryside and which develops in
         "revolutionary actions," in montoneras
         [armed group of masses in the
         Andes--Trans.] joined together by the solidarity of
         soldiers and officers in "organic unity, in whose veins
         circulates the same blood"; in montoneras joined to
         the masses with the same solidarity relations existing
         within them: "the same relationship of body, of class,
         existed within the montonera and the workers and peasants
         masses. The montoneras simply were the most active,
         warlike and dynamic part of the masses." Evidently when
         Mariátegui wrote those words about the Soviet
         guerrillas which in the 1920's fought in Siberia against the
         reactionaries, he thought of the montoneras in our
         country and Latin America; and in doing so he described and
         revealed for us the essential relationship between
         guerrillas and the masses of the people, its undetachable
         unity, the guerrilla condition of being "the most active,
         warlike and dynamic part of the masses," integral part of
         the masses and never an action separate from them.
 
 These points make up Mariátegui's thought about the
         military problem besides his basic thesis that peasant
         uprisings cannot triumph on their own and if ever they
         triumphed it was under the leadership of the old
         bourgeoisie. But today, in the age of imperialism, and
         precisely in our America, where "the bourgeoisie has not
         known how or wanted to fulfill the tasks of liquidating
         feudalism," where "a close descendant of the Spanish
         conquerors, it has been impossible for it to appropriate the
         rights and gains of the peasant masses," it corresponds to
         the proletariat and only the proletariat, to lead the masses
         of the peasantry towards the destruction of feudalism
         through the protracted war of the countryside to the city in
         the national-democratic revolution.
 
 g) The Party of the Proletariat. "The
         political struggle demands creating a class Party," says
         point III of the Act of Constitution of the PCP. What does
         that mean? Simply that the class struggle demands from the
         proletariat their independent organization as a political
         party, with their own interests for the achievement of the
         historical goal of the working class. In that way, the party
         is the result of the development of the class struggle in
         our country and of the appearance, development and maturity
         of our proletariat. It is a need of the logical development
         of our history, of the existence of classes, of the
         existence of the working class and, therefore, in no way can
         it be considered superfluous, quite the contrary, it is the
         main and indispensable instrument for the working class to
         conquer power and for building the new Peruvian society,
         necessary for as long as there are classes and while the
         classless society is not yet achieved.
 
 The Communist Party "is the organized vanguard of the
         proletariat, the political force assuming its task of
         orienting and leading the struggle for the fulfillment of
         its class ideals," says its Program, established by
         Mariátegui himself; and about social composition, the
         "organization of the workers and peasants with a strict
         class character is the object of our effort and our
         propaganda, and the base of the struggle," says point III of
         the aforementioned Act. The Communist Party is the organized
         vanguard of the Peruvian working class, there we have its
         precise demarcation and adherence to Marxism-Leninism,
         "revolutionary method in the age of imperialism" which "it
         adopts as a means of struggle," as the Program says; while
         its social composition aims at incorporating into its ranks
         the best of the proletariat and the peasantry.
 
 The Party is not and cannot be an electoral apparatus but an
         organization for the taking of power; while it may be able
         to take advantage of elections, its power is not rooted in
         them. Mariátegui, analyzing the German situation,
         clearly delimited what was happening: "The power of a Party,
         as shown in this case, does not depend strictly on its
         electoral and parliamentary strength. Universal suffrage may
         diminish their votes in the chamber, without touching its
         political influence .... The Socialist Party, which is a
         class Party with more than hundred and fifty parliamentary
         votes, are enough to assure for them organizing a cabinet,
         but does not authorize them to exclude from this cabinet the
         bankers and industrialists, unless it opts for a
         revolutionary road." That way, to Mariátegui the
         Party is not electoral nor can it follow "parliamentary
         cretinism," parliamentarism is a political
         organization of the bourgeoisie just as much as the
         corporativist modes of organization. Therefore, for
         the Party the question is to forge itself as a "system of
         organizations," as a war machine for the conquest of power
         by way of revolutionary violence to overthrow the governing
         social order, like our founder reminds us: "History teaches
         us that all new social State have been formed upon the ruins
         of the preceding social states. Between the birth of the one
         and the death of the other there was, logically, an
         intermediate period of crisis."
 
 Once again, the founding of the Communist Party is the
         fulfillment of Mariátegui's theoretical and practical
         struggle and of his direct participation in the class
         struggle, it was his great contribution and service to the
         proletariat, over more than 30 years of combat in our
         contemporary history, which sustained the appearance and
         development of the PCP. In contributing to the building of
         our Party, Mariátegui gave it the
         ideological-political bases we find in the Act of
         Constitution, the Party Program. In its three
         fundamental theses: Background and Development
         of the Class Action, Anti-Imperialist Viewpoint, and Outline
         of the Indigenous Problem; as well as
         Mariátegui's entire works, among which we note
         Seven Essays, History of the World Crisis, Let's Peruvianize
         Peru, and others, in each one of them he sets forth and
         resolves problems of the revolutionary struggle.
         Consequently, we must understand the written work of
         Mariátegui as part of the construction and
         political-ideological foundation of the Party.
 
 José Carlos Mariátegui, our founder, crowned
         his struggle for the Party with his Theses of
         Affiliation to the III (Third) International, an
         important text that must be remembered:
 
 "The Communists of the Party adhere to the Third
         International and agree to work to obtain that same adhesion
         from the groups which form the Party. The ideology we adopt
         is revolutionary and militant Marxism, a doctrine we accept
         in all its aspects: philosophical, political and
         social-economical. The methods we endorse are those of
         orthodox revolutionary socialism. We not only reject, but
         fight by all means and in all its forms the methods and
         tendencies of social-democracy of the Second
         International."
 
 "The Party is a class Party and therefore repudiates any
         tendency implying fusion with political forces and
         organizations of the other classes. The Party recognizes
         that, within national conditions, reality will impose upon
         us pacts and alliances, usually with the revolutionary
         petty-bourgeoisie; but in any event it will win for the
         proletariat freedom of criticism, of action, of the press
         and of organization."
 
 Here, we have a document edited by Mariátegui and
         which he himself presented to the Central Committee on 1st
         March 1930 and approved on following March 4th; this
         document is enough to topple so much anti-Party
         phrase-mongering which today does not deserve to be
         considered.
 
 Finally, let's recall that to Mariátegui: "Parties
         are not born out of some academic little council" and that
         the Party "is not and cannot be a peaceful and unanimous
         academy"; but the Party is forged amidst the class
         struggle of the masses and advances amidst the internal
         two-line struggle, so its history cannot be
         understood outside the red line imprinted by
         Mariátegui and its protracted and winding struggle
         against the non-proletarian line which has always surfaced,
         openly or covertly, against Mariátegui's
         thought.
 h) The mass line.
         Along with all that has been exposed we see how at
         the bottom of all these proposals there is a position, the
         mass line, a basic question in Mariátegui's thought,
         which is little known. It suffices to highlight here that
         Mariátegui considers that the presence of the masses
         fills contemporary times, that the multitudes, as he says,
         are the main actors today. The working class have a myth, a
         goal--social revolution, a goal which the proletariat
         upholds and marches towards, with "an active and vehement
         faith", in contrast to the bourgeois skepticism and
         decadence. The masses fight for "the final struggle" sure of
         their victory and he says: "The sentence in Eugene Portier's
         song (The Internationale) acquires historical relief: 'It's
         the final struggle!' The Russian proletariat greets this
         ecumenical cry of the world proletariat. The war cry and
         hope by the multitudes, already heard in the streets of
         Rome, of Milan, of Berlin, of Paris, of Vienna and of Lima.
         All the emotion of an era is with them. The revolutionary
         multitudes believe they are waging the final
         struggle." The masses, the main actors of
         history, today more than ever before go on defining world
         history the way "the professionals of intelligence are
         unable to find ... that the multitudes will find"; the
         masses formed out of anonymous heroes, the real heroes
         Mariátegui admired: "The anonymous hero of the
         factory, of the mine, of field; the unknown soldier of the
         social revolution." Masses whose interests are in solidarity
         confronting the contradictory and concurrent interests of
         the bourgeoisie; masses "which work to create a new order"
         and to which we must serve and interpret, since individuals
         and leaders are judged according to "how well they have been
         able to serve and interpret the revolutionary masses."
 However, Mariátegui always emphasizes that the masses
         ultimately are the basic masses, the workers and peasants:
         "the force of the revolution always resided in the alliance
         between workers and agrarians, that is of the workers and
         peasants masses," as he says speaking of the Mexican
         Revolution; that before them opportunism is manifested by
         "trusting more the possibility of exploiting the
         contradictions and rivalries among chiefs than in the
         possibility of carrying the masses towards clear
         revolutionary politics," and that the Mexican struggle
         always crushed the counterrevolution "by way of a great
         mobilization of the workers and peasant revolutionary
         masses." These and other proposals show the definite
         position of Mariátegui with respect to the masses, in
         whose struggles he considers that Marxism is alive: "Marx
         lives in the struggle for the realization of socialism waged
         by innumerable multitudes animated by his doctrines
         throughout the world."
 
 What is said does not imply the negation of the importance
         of leaders in the class struggle, leaders whose dimension,
         we reiterate, are measured by the identification with the
         interests of the revolutionary classes and service rendered
         to them, mainly to the proletariat, the class that generates
         a new type of "thinking and acting" person. With respect to
         the acts of revolutionaries, Mariátegui demanded
         taking into account the class struggle in the mind of the
         individual: "Decadence and revolution coexist in the same
         world and also in the same individual. The conscience ... is
         the fighting arena of a struggle between the two spirits,
         the understanding of this struggle, sometimes, almost
         invariably, escapes ... but finally one or the other spirit
         prevails. The other one remains strangled on the arena."
         While speaking of the hero he stated: "the hero always
         arrives at the goal blooded and torn: only through this
         price can we wholly pay for his heroism," noticing that the
         struggle always leaves its marks; finally stating:
         "Today like yesterday a political order cannot be
         changed without individuals resolved to resist jail or
         exile" and, "to a revolutionary, a prison is merely a
         work-related accident.
 
 Mariátegui's mass line meritts our attention, more so
         today when the basic problem becomes the arena of a battle
         larger and increasing each day. Let's keep in mind today,
         more than ever, the following: "the masses demand unity. The
         masses want faith. Their souls reject the corroding voice,
         the dissolving and pessimistic voice of those who deny and
         who doubt. They seek the optimist and cordial voice,
         youthful and fruitful, of those who affirm and who
         believe."
 
 i) Other aspects of Mariátegui's
         line. All the above confirms the basic points of
         the general political line of Mariátegui about the
         Peruvian revolution; but that is not his entire work. The
         founder of the Communist Party, from the viewpoint of the
         working class and in function of the revolutionary
         transformation of our Peruvian society, set specific
         political lines for work in trade and industrial unions,
         among workers, feminist, youth, teachers and intellectual
         groups, and other working fronts. These specific policies
         are the basis to develop a class line in each front of the
         mass work; also the question in them is to Retake
         Mariátegui's Road and develop it according to the
         present circumstances in the class struggle.
 
 j) Mariátegui set the general political line
         of the Peruvian revolution. It follows clearly that
         Mariátegui, systematizing the experience of struggle
         of the working class and the people of Peru, established
         through his direct theoretical and practical participation
         in the class struggle the general political line of the
         Peruvian revolution, as well as the specific political class
         line in the various fronts of the mass work. All this can be
         considered Mariátegui's Road, the road of the
         Peruvian Revolution, the general laws of the revolution in
         our country and of the action of the working class as the
         leading class for the conquest of power and installing the
         dictatorship of the proletariat allowing the building of a
         new society in our nation, socialism as the revolutionary
         transformation towards the classless society, the Communist
         society.
 
 Mariátegui's Road has an axis: The Communist Party,
         without which there can be no revolution or genuine
         successes for the people. The Communist Party, the organized
         vanguard of the proletariat, is needed so the working class
         can lead, since only it, through its vanguard, is able to
         lead the national-democratic revolution and sustained by the
         worker-peasant alliance fulfill the first stage of the
         Peruvian Revolution so that, with the dictatorship of the
         proletariat, it can develop into the second stage, that of
         the proletarian revolution.
 So the decisive question in our
         revolution, today more than ever, is to Retake
         Mariátegui's Road and to develop it in the midst of
         the class struggle of the masses today to serve the working
         class, the people and the revolution. IV. TO RETAKE MARIATEGUI
         AND RECONSTITUTE HIS PARTY SERVES THE WORKING CLASS, THE
         PARTY AND THE REVOLUTION.
 a) Mariátegui's Road emerged and developed
         through struggle.
 
 Mariátegui's Road emerged in the midst of the class
         struggle against the existing social order; it had to fight
         against the reactionary system of prevailing ideas and
         battle arduously with APRA, which denied the need for a
         Party of the Proletariat. The founding of the Communist
         Party was the product of a sharp struggle and sets a
         fundamental milestone in the process of Mariátegui's
         Road. However the struggle which José Carlos
         Mariátegui waged was not only outside the ranks of
         the Party, but also within its ranks where he struggled to
         keep it adhering to Marxism-Leninism and the Communist
         International.
 
 Quite soon, almost immediately after his death, a whole
         opportunist line developed which treacherously began to
         speak about the "proletarianization" and "improvement" of
         Mariátegui; while outside Party ranks the "Aprista
         criticism" labeled Mariátegui as "intellectualized"
         and a "Europeanizer" with the veiled purpose of denying his
         line and destroying the Party. By the early 1940's,
         questions surfaced concerning Mariátegui's Marxist
         foundation, though hypocritically, they recognized its great
         quality. Later on Del Prado and company, while calling
         themselves "disciples of Mariátegui," made an
         "inoffensive icon" out of him, whom they enveloped in
         frankincense while renouncing his Road. That is how an
         entire period of denying and questioning Mariátegui
         and his Road evolved; however Mariátegui's red line
         kept on living embodied in the struggle of the classes,
         mainly of workers and peasants and in the minds and actions
         of communists who carried forward Mariátegui's flag
         and continued the struggle within the Party in search of
         Mariátegui's Road.
 
 b) Retaking Mariátegui's Road. The
         decade of the 1960's shook the international communist world
         with the struggle between Marxism-Leninism and revisionism,
         which had repercussions in our country, mainly the great
         works of Comrade Mao Tse-tung and the very important
         struggle waged by the Communist Party of China together with
         fraternal parties. Simultaneously, the 1960's in our country
         implied the sharpening of the class struggle and a great
         rise in the movement of the masses, especially of the
         peasantry. The country experienced the deepening of
         bureaucratic capitalism, still going on; the workers carried
         out large strike movements and increased affiliation to
         their unions; the peasantry spontaneously carried forward,
         most of the time, conquering the land with their own actions
         and an unending wave of land occupations shook the entire
         country. The petty-bourgeoisie, especially teachers and
         students, became more and more involved in the people's
         struggles. At the same time, the demo-liberal parliamentary
         order entered a crisis, as in other parts of America, and
         its political parties, its reactionary political parties
         entered a fierce battle to gain positions and reap
         privileges. This confronted reaction with the need to
         fulfill two tasks: To deepen bureaucratic capitalism, taking
         the State as the main economic leverage, and the corporate
         remodeling of Peruvian society so as to overcome the crisis
         of bourgeois parliamentarism. These are the conditions and
         the cause of the rise of the current fascist regime and the
         tasks the exploiting classes and imperialism have charged it
         with fulfilling, when they saw the dangers of the
         questioning of their order entailed by the rise in the
         struggles of the masses, one chapter of which was the
         guerrilla struggle, which contained important future lessons
         for the people.
 
 In the midst of these conditions and sharpening struggle,
         the theoretical and practical action of the communists
         developed, the Peruvian Marxist-Leninists, who, taking Mao
         Tse-tung Thought and its wise teachings, battled to Retake
         Mariátegui's Road and Reconstitute his Party.
         In January 1964, the PCP expelled from its ranks the
         revisionist clique of Del Prado and company, a fact
         which established a milestone in the long road of the
         Party; that way at the IV Conference a step was
         given to adhere to Marxism under the guidance of Mao
         Tse-tung Thought. Another point of advance was the
         V Conference, in November 1965, which centered its
         attention in the understanding of our society and its
         revolution, getting us closer yet to
         Mariátegui's line. Other important moments in
         Retaking Mariátegui and Reconstituting His Party were
         the successful struggles the Communist Party waged against a
         right opportunist line masquerading as leftist, whose
         crowning point was the VI Conference, in January
         1969 an event in which the Party formalized its
         reconstitution starting from the Basis of Party Unity,
         Marxism-Leninism-Mao Tse-tung Thought, and
         Mariátegui's thought and the general political
         line, whose cornerstone is Mariátegui; a
         reconstitution which, as was sanctioned, implied
         reconstituting the Party for the People's War. That is how
         the long period of searching for Mariátegui's Thought
         was fulfilled, opening up the stage of: "Retaking
         Mariátegui's Road," one of whose stages is the
         reconstitution of the Party, as a basic and necessary
         question.
 
 However, the struggle did not end there but is constant. The
         rise of the current fascist regime and its
         counter-revolutionary program impacted our ranks by
         generating a liquidationist right opportunist line, which
         aimed dangerously against the life of the Party itself. This
         struggle had as milestones the II Plenum of the Central
         Committee, which characterized the struggle against
         liquidationist opportunism, and called to fight against it,
         and the III Plenum of the Central Committee "ON
         RECONSTITUTION" which corroborated the defeat of
         liquidationism and set the political, organizational and
         mass work basis for the function of the reconstitution of
         the Party. That way, an ever better perspective to the
         fulfillment of its historic mission opened up for the Party
         of Mariátegui. Finally, the VI Plenum of the PCP
         Central Committee, under the slogan of "FULLY RETAKE
         MARIATEGUI'S ROAD TO DEVELOP THE MASS WORK TAKING THE PARTY
         AS ITS CENTER," officially sanctioned RETAKING MARIATEGUI'S
         ROAD as the decisive question in the Reconstitution, in
         synthesis, the general political line around whose
         application and development we must fulfill the
         reconstitution of Mariátegui's Party.
 
 Of what was said, Mariátegui's Road, that is the
         general political line of the Peruvian Revolution, emerged
         and developed itself amidst the class struggle and the
         two-line struggle within the Party, the proletarian red line
         imposed by Mariátegui and the various non-proletarian
         lines it has assumed along the years. Thus three moments can
         be distinguished in its development:
 
 1) The emerging of Mariátegui's Road and
         founding of the Party;
 2) The search for
         Mariátegui's Road; 3) The Retaking of
         Mariátegui's Road and Reconstitution of the
         Party. Three moments which imply over 40 years of
         our Party's history, of the history of the Peruvian
         proletariat and of the history of the class struggle in
         contemporary Peru.
 c) The relevance of Mariátegui
         Thought. We saw how in the 1960's
         Mariátegui's thinking went on establishing itself
         more and more firmly; however in that period, in which we
         still live, interest for Mariátegui grows, inside and
         outside the country. At the same time, we see a denial of
         Mariátegui on two levels: Some attack and deny the
         Marxist bases of Mariátegui thinking, and others deny
         its relevance. Those questioning its Marxist bases contend
         the ideological base sustaining it is irrational idealism
         and the concepts predominating in western philosophical
         thought, mainly European. Once Mariátegui's theses
         about Marxist philosophy, politics economics and scientific
         socialism are set forth, these observations need not be
         analyzed any further; it suffices to reiterate that the
         Marxist character of the bases of Mariátegui are
         sufficiently clear, and point out that those impugning it
         have a the bottom a central argument: The impossibility for
         Marxism to develop in a country with few industrial workers.
         This starting point uncovers an unacceptable mechanical
         position; for Marxism to appear on a world scale, the
         development of the working class to the level it had
         attained in Europe by the mid 19th century was needed, and
         on that material base Marx and Engels created Marxism, which
         from that point on develops vigorously and spreads itself
         through the five continents. The revolutionaries of the
         backwards countries, where there are immense masses of
         peasants and proportionally a reduced industrial working
         class, found in Marxism an instrument to guide their actions
         and taking its principles they fused them with specific
         revolutionary conditions; in that way, Marxism-Leninism
         fused with the concrete conditions of the movements of
         national liberation and their democratic revolutions. This
         was consequently shown incontrovertibly by Mao Tse-tung
         Thought, as it developed Marxism.
 
 A similar case is that of the founder of the Communist
         Partyof Peru. Mariátegui also applied
         Marxism-Leninism to a semi-feudal and semi-colonial country,
         furthermore, he analyzed similar countries in Latin America;
         and participating directly in the class struggle in our
         country he was able to develop himself as a Marxist and to
         apply the universal principles creatively, therefore, there
         is a similarity between many of his ideas and Mao's
         proposals. Facts prove, as the years passed, the Marxist
         essence of Mariátegui's thought. What happens is that
         those who are unguarded get disoriented by the language he
         uses, which they are unfamiliar with, compounded by ignoring
         the conditions in our Latin America and, more fundamentally,
         by starting off from positions which are contrary to
         Marxism.
 
 Those questioning the relevance of Mariátegui allege
         that, while he was indeed a Marxist and a notable thinker,
         his positions were left behind 40 years ago. These people
         forget that later studies and researches do not deny but
         quite the contrary confirm Mariátegui's theses; and,
         what is more important, that not having completed the
         national-bourgeois revolution and much less initiated the
         proletarian one, Mariátegui's thought and his Road,
         his general political line of the Peruvian Revolution
         continue to be fully current as shown, precisely, by the
         four decades elapsed and even more by the need to Retake His
         Roads born amidst the great struggles of the 1960's and the
         current class struggle.
 
 c) Retake Mariátegui and Reconstitute His
         Party. In reaching this point and after having seen
         the above on Mariátegui's thought, which is
         materialized politically in his Road for the Peruvian
         Revolution, the first thing we must reiterate is that
         Mariátegui is the culminating political expression of
         the Peruvian proletariat. On the other hand, the almost 50
         years of development of Mariátegui's Road show that
         its flags are those of the working class, proven over long
         decades during which it has been clearly established that
         the success of the proletariat depends on holding them
         firmly to carry them forward, while its failure is in
         abandoning or underestimating them. No Peruvian class or
         party, except the Communist Patty, is able to show such
         accumulated experience, nor such lofty flags proven in the
         class struggle.
 
 The key today, more than ever, is Retaking
         Mariátegui's Road; which implies placing the working
         class in command of the revolution, establishing the
         leadership of the only consistent revolutionary class to the
         process which will demolish the prevailing social order; to
         develop the organized vanguard of the proletariat, the
         Communist Party, so it can fulfill its role of chief of
         staff without which there cannot be a revolution; while
         adhering to Mariátegui as the concentrated political
         expression of the working class; in synthesis, it is to
         struggle for the leadership of the working class in the
         Peruvian Revolution. In that way, Mariátegui becomes
         the flag for the people of Peru, the basis of the unity of
         the exploited and broad masses and the only road to our
         national-democratic revolution.
 
 To Retake Mariátegui's Road is to Reconstitute the
         Communist Party, his Party; to work for its
         ideological-political buildup, develop the foundations given
         by its founder and simultaneously, to fight for its
         organizational buildup by readjusting the organizational to
         the political. To Reconstitute the Party today is, in sum,
         promoting its reconstitution by Retaking Mariátegui
         and aiming at developing the People's War.
 
 The Communist Party, sure of its road and conscious of its
         goal, in the 80th anniversary of its founder and 47th of its
         founding, raises its red proletarian flags and declares
         before the masses of our country, especially before the
         workers and peasants, that in the current
         counterrevolutionary offensive and the perspective of the
         increasing development of the struggle of the masses, our
         duty is to get ready for the struggle by preparing ourselves
         in the midst of the storm of the class struggle of the
         masses under the slogan of RETAKE MARIATEGUI AND
         RECONSTITUTE HIS PARTY TO SERVE THE WORKING CLASS, THE
         PEOPLE AND THE REVOLUTION.
 
 
 
            
               | October, 1975 | PCP-CENTRAL
                  COMMITTEE | 
 ¹This
         is a temporary translation, final correction is
         pending. |