Soviet Union According to David Priestland, the concept of politically enforced "criticism and self-criticism" originated during the 1921–1924 purges of academia within the Soviet Union. This would eventually develop into the practice of "criticism and self-criticism" campaigns in which intellectuals suspected of possessing
counter-revolutionary tendencies were publicly interrogated as part of a policy of "
proletariatization." He would later expand this concept in his 1928 article "Against Vulgarising the Slogan of Self-Criticism". Stalin wrote in 1928 "I think, comrades, that self-criticism is as necessary to us as air or water. I think that without it, without self-criticism, our Party could not make any headway, could not disclose our ulcers, could not eliminate our shortcomings. And shortcomings we have in plenty. That must be admitted frankly and honestly." For Stalin self-criticism was not supposed to be "temporary and transient" but an "indispensable and permanent weapon in the arsenal of Bolshevism". However, Stalin posited that self-criticism "date[s] back to the first appearance of Bolshevism in our country". Stalin stated that self-criticism was needed even after obtaining power as failing to observe weaknesses "make things easier for their enemies" and that "without self-criticism there can be no proper education of the Party, the class, and the masses".
Vladimir Lenin wrote in
One Step Forward, Two Steps Back (1904) that the
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party engages in "self-criticism and ruthless exposure of their own shortcomings". Lenin further discussed the idea in
"Left-Wing" Communism: An Infantile Disorder (1920), "Frankly admitting a mistake, ascertaining the reasons for it, analysing the circumstances which gave rise to it, and thoroughly discussing the means of correcting it—that is the earmark of a serious party". Lenin again further elaborated at a later date (1922) that "All the revolutionary parties that have perished so far, perished because they grew conceited, failed to see where their strength lay, and feared to speak of their weaknesses. But we shall not perish, for we do not fear to speak of our weaknesses and shall learn to overcome them". According to the official history of the
October Revolution and Soviet Union produced under Stalin,
The History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolsheviks), the concept is described briefly in the twelfth chapter, In order to be fully prepared for this turn, the Party had to be its moving spirit, and the leading role of the Party in the forthcoming elections had to be fully ensured. But this could be done only if the Party organizations themselves became thoroughly democratic in their everyday work, only if they fully observed the principles of democratic centralism in their inner-Party life, as the Party Rules demanded, only if all organs of the Party were elected, only if criticism and self-criticism in the Party were developed to the full, only if the responsibility of the Party bodies to the members of the Party were complete, and if the members of the Party themselves became thoroughly active. Following the
death of Joseph Stalin in 1953, successor to Soviet premiership
Nikita Khrushchev would reaffirm the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union's ideological dedication to the concepts of "criticism and self criticism" in the conclusion to the
1956 speech before the
20th Party Congress, while also denouncing the policies and actions of Stalin.
China Mao Zedong provides a significant focus on the idea of self-criticism (), dedicating a whole chapter of the
Little Red Book to the issue. Mao saw "conscientious practice" of self-criticism as a quality that distinguished the
Chinese Communist Party from other parties. Mao championed self-criticism saying "dust will accumulate if a room is not cleaned regularly, our faces will get dirty if they are not washed regularly. Our comrades' minds and our Party's work may also collect dust, and also need sweeping and washing." Mao saw the timing of self-criticism as important also, writing that "do it in good time; don't get into the habit of criticizing only after the event". Mao advocated "active ideological struggle" in the form of self-criticism while warning "we must not become complacent over any success. We should check our complacency and constantly criticize our shortcomings" He said "inner-Party criticism is a weapon for strengthening the Party organization and increasing its fighting capacity"; however, he warned against criticism degenerating into personal attacks - "The method of correction is to help Party members understand that the purpose of criticism is to increase the Party's fighting capacity in order to achieve victory in the class struggle and that it should not be used as a means of personal attack". In the People's Republic of China, self-criticism—called
ziwo pipan () or
jiǎntǎo ()—is an important part of Maoist practice. Mandatory self-criticism as a part of
political rehabilitation common under Mao and ended by
Deng Xiaoping, is known as a
struggle session in reference to
class struggle. As
General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party,
Xi Jinping has partially brought back the practice of self-criticism. The first of his Party's Education Programs on Selected Themes dealt with the
mass line and required cadres to make self-criticism before their subordinates and to solicit critique from their subordinates. The Central Committee's 2016 Guidelines on Intra-Party Life in the New Situation also encourage self-criticism. In 1956 he critically assessed the Communist Party as having leaders who did not practice self-criticism and that criticism from the lower levels of the party was also lacking.
Cambodia In
Pol Pot's Democratic Kampuchea, self-criticism sessions were known as
rien sot (រៀនសូត្រ), meaning "learning and reciting". In his memoir
The Gate,
François Bizot recalls observing the
Khmer Rouge engaging in frequent self-criticism to reinforce
group cohesion during his imprisonment in rural
Cambodia in 1971:
North Korea North Koreans are required to engage in
saenghwal ch’onghwa (생활총화) sessions in which they confess to wrongdoings, transgressions, and deviations from
Kim Il Sung's
Ten Principles for the Establishment of a Monolithic Ideological System. They are required to attend self-criticism sessions from the age of 8. The practice was introduced in 1962 during a series of ideological disputes with the Soviet Union. The American
New Left revolutionary organization
Weather Underground dedicated a chapter of their work
Prairie Fire to self-criticism of their prior revolutionary strategies. Likewise, the German
Red Army Faction discussed the issues of self criticism in their publication
The Urban Guerrilla Concept. Within the
Japanese New Left groups, "internal struggle" (内ゲバ, uchigeba) sometimes manifested as violent self-criticism sessions, in order to expose those among their members who were not deemed ideologically pure enough. The
United Red Army, for example, murdered 14 of its 29 members in less than a year through such sessions. ==See also==