Early life and political activities Lev Grigorievich Deutsch was born September 25, 1855, in
Tulchin, in the
Podolia Governorate of the
Russian Empire (today Tulchyn, Ukraine), the son of a
Jewish merchant father and a peasant mother. At the age of 19, he joined a
Narodnik group in Kiev, and took part in the 'to the people' movement, in which young radicals dressed as peasants, and went to villages to spread socialist ideas. He avoided arrest, unlike many of the participants, but returned, disillusioned in the summer of 1875 and volunteered to join the infantry, hoping to be sent to the Balkans to fight the Turks, but in February 1876, he was implicated in helping a revolutionary named Semyon Lurie, one of the defendants at the
Trial of the 193 to escape from Kiev prison, and deserted, to avoid a court martial. He joined an illegal group known as the Kiev
buntari. In June 1876, Deutsch was living illegally in
Elisavetgrad when a former student named Gorinovich sought to join his group. Gorinovich had been arrested for taking part in the 'to the people' movement in 1874, but was released. Deutsch believed that he had gained his release by denouncing others, and was an active police spy, and resolved to kill him. He and a fellow revolutionary, V.A.Malinka, persuaded Gorinovich to join them on a trip to Odessa, and on the way attacked him and left him for dead, though he recovered and named his attackers. Malinka was hanged for his part in attack in December 1878. This was the first act of violence committed by Russian revolutionaries during the 1870s, and made Deutsch so notorious that when a young Jewish woman was arrested as one of the conspirators who had
assassinated the
Tsar Alexander II in 1881, the Russian press wrongly assumed that she was Deutsch's sister. In summer 1877, he was arrested as an accomplice of
Yakov Stefanovich in the
Chigirin Affair and held in Kiev prison, but both men escaped in May 1878 after a fellow revolutionary,
Mikhail Frolenko, had obtained a post as a prison warden and let them out one night. Deutsch escaped to Europe, but returned to St Petersburg, and – despite his past record – was a founding member of
Chornyi peredel (
Black Repartition), rather than the more violent and conspiratorial
People's Will, who carried out the assassination of the Tsar.
Conversion to Marxism In 1880 Deutsch and other leaders of the Black Repartition group, including
George Plekhanov,
Vera Zasulich and
Pavel Axelrod emigrated to
Geneva. Abroad, Plekhanov studied the works of
Karl Marx, and persuaded the other three to join him in 1883 in creating the Marxist
Emancipation of Labour. All of Russia's Marxist parties, including the
Communist Party, traced their lineage from this group. As its most experienced illegal operator, Deutsch was put in charge of smuggling Marxist literature into Russia, but was arrested in Germany in March 1884.
Arrest and exile It was extremely rare for Russian revolutionaries to be extradited by any European government, but Deutsch was treated as a common criminal because the attempt to kill Gorinovich, and sent back to St Petersburg in a cattle truck. At this trial, he freely admitted the offence, but was denied the right to explain his reasons for it, and was sentenced to 13 years and four months in prison. In 1890, he was deported to the Kara region of Siberia, where he shared a cell with other political revolutionaries. According to his account, when Deutsch told them that he had become a Marxist — an ideology then little known outside Germany: "Had I announced myself a follower of the prophet Mohammed, they could scarcely have been more surprised."
Return to political activity In 1900, Deutsch made a dramatic escape from Siberia, through Japan, the US, Liverpool, London, and Paris, to rejoin the Emancipation of Labour League in Switzerland in November 1901. His three former comrades there had since joined
Vladimir Lenin,
Julius Martov, and
Alexander Potresov on the six-member editorial board of the newspaper
Iskra, which was riven by rivalry between the generations. Plekhanov hoped that Deutsch would take over the task of smuggling the paper into Russia from Lenin, putting the older revolutionaries back in control of the project, but his long imprisonment had taken too much of a toll for him to assume the task. Deutsch was present as an observer at the second congress of the
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party in 1903 when it split into its Bolshevik and Menshevik factions. He sided the
Mensheviks - Martov, Axelrod, Zasulich,
Leon Trotsky et al. Lenin's widow recalled incident involving Deutsch, and a Bolshevik named Vladimir Noskov, as the conference was ending: "Deutsch was angrily reprimanding 'Glebov' (Noskov) about something. The latter raised his head and with gleaming eyes said bitterly: 'You just keep your mouth shut, you old dodderer!'" During the
1905 Revolution Deutsch returned to Russia but was arrested and imprisoned. However, on the way to Siberia he escaped and made his way to London, starting a period of foreign exile which lasted until the
February 1917 Russian Revolution.
Exile and return From October 1915 to September 1916, Deutsch edited a monthly newspaper in
New York City called
Svobodnoe Slovo ("Free Word"). In 1917, Deutsch returned to
Petrograd and joined George Plekhanov in editing
Edinstvo ("Unity"). He also wrote his memoirs and edited a volume of documents associated with the Emancipation of Labour group. Deutsch adopted a "
defencist" position during the rule of the
Provisional Government and supported Russia's war efforts. He did not support the
October Revolution which he considered to be a "Bolshevik adventure". After the death of Plekhanov, Deutsch withdrew from political activity. From 1928 he was a personal pensioner and published books about the history of the revolutionary movement and memoirs. Deutsch died on August 5, 1941, and was buried at the
Novodevichy Cemetery. == Personal life ==