The pamphlet's publication sparked a bitter controversy among German Marxists over whether Luxemburg truly stood by her criticisms of the Bolsheviks. The debate centered on whether she had changed her mind after her release from prison. According to
J. P. Nettl, the subsequent claims and counterclaims caused "the problem of Rosa's attitude to the Russian revolution" to become "a central issue" in the German Communist movement.
The Levi–Zetkin debate In a bid for damage control, Luxemburg's long-standing comrade
Clara Zetkin argued in her 1922 book
Um Rosa Luxemburgs Stellung zur russischen Revolution that Luxemburg had recanted her views. Zetkin claimed that while in prison, Luxemburg was cut off from information and grew concerned, but upon her release in November 1918 and her involvement in the
Spartacist uprising, she changed her mind about Leninist centralism. Zetkin claimed to have this information from
Leo Jogiches, but as he was already dead, there was no one to verify her statement. To support her argument, Zetkin cited a series of unattributed articles from the communist newspaper
Die Rote Fahne which praised Lenin's actions. Zetkin presented these as Luxemburg's "last and final testament", arguing that as a powerful force behind the paper, nothing could have been published without her consent. Later scholars have noted that "a consistent democratic thread in Luxemburg's work refutes Zetkin's argument". Zetkin framed the debate in
Manichaean terms, idealizing Luxemburg as "the sacred glowing heart of the proletariat" while portraying Paul Levi as a "desert[er] from the camp of the proletarian revolution" who had misrepresented her views to advance his "own barbed armed conflict against the Bolsheviks". Levi's publication of the pamphlet was not an innocent gesture. He provided a 63-page introduction, longer than the text itself, which he used as an indirect form of self-justification after his recent expulsion from the
Communist Party of Germany (KPD) for publicly criticizing its tactics during the failed
March Action of 1921. Levi prepared the pamphlet for publication after the 1921
Kronstadt rebellion, a revolt against the Bolshevik regime. At a time when he had his own "irreconcilable differences with Lenin," he was accused of using the pamphlet to "square his personal accounts." He argued that Luxemburg's criticisms foreshadowed the "betrayal" of the revolution in early 1921, citing the suppression of the Kronstadt rebellion and the announcement of the
New Economic Policy.
Evidence for a change of mind Evidence from Luxemburg's comrades suggests that her views on the Bolsheviks did shift after her release from prison, though the extent of this change is debated. In late November 1918,
Adolf Warski wrote to her from Warsaw asking for her position on Bolshevism. She responded: I shared all your reservations and doubts, but have dropped them in the most important questions, and in others I never went as far as you.
Terrorism is evidence of grave internal weakness, but it is directed against internal enemies, who ... get support and encouragement from foreign capitalists outside Russia. Once the European revolution comes, the Russian counter-revolutionaries lose not only this support, but—what is more important—they must lose all courage. Bolshevik terror is above all the expression of the weakness of the European proletariat. According to Nettl, this indicates a shift away from criticizing the Bolsheviks' actions as "false tactics" and toward seeing them as a logical consequence of the "fatal logic of the objective situation"—namely, the failure of the
German revolution. However, he argues against the idea of a full recantation, noting that her core criticisms remained. He suggests that her "change of mind" was less a revision of her theories and more a practical unwillingness to "grub around in the Russian past" while the German revolution was underway. She pointed out in her speech to the founding congress of the KPD that her opposition to a Constituent Assembly in Germany was based on the specific German context, making a direct comparison with Russia in November 1917 incorrect.
Later interpretations criticized Luxemburg's emphasis on spontaneity in
History and Class Consciousness (1923).
Georg Lukács devoted two chapters to Luxemburg in his influential 1923 book
History and Class Consciousness. In the second chapter, dated 1922 and written after the pamphlet's publication, Lukács critiqued Luxemburg's position. He argued that she had a "false view of the character of the proletarian revolution" due to an "overestimation" of the role of spontaneity. He contended that her analysis was "undialectical" and underplayed the role of the party, leading to her flawed attitude toward the Constituent Assembly. His critique was also an indirect polemic against Paul Levi, who had published the work and was opposed to the March Action which Lukács had supported. In 1931,
Joseph Stalin, in a "
papal bull" titled "Some Questions Concerning the History of Bolshevism," attacked Luxemburg's ideas. He lumped her with
Leon Trotsky and the
Mensheviks, accusing her of composing a "utopian and semi-Menshevik scheme of
permanent revolution". Katerina Clark suggests that Stalin's need to discredit Luxemburg over a decade after her death demonstrates her continuing prominence in communist ideological debates and the sensitivity of the issue of centralism as Stalin's regime grew more hierarchical. Trotsky defended Luxemburg against Stalin’s criticisms. In 1932, he argued that Stalin was misrepresenting Luxemburg's positions and highlighted Lenin's own acknowledgement that "Rosa Luxemburg was right" in her early critiques of
Karl Kautsky's opportunism. As Trotsky struggled against the growing bureaucracy of the Stalinist regime in the 1930s, he "rediscovered" Luxemburg, seeing in her work an early recognition of the dangers of an "ossified party machinery". He saw a parallel between the reformist bureaucracy she had fought in the
German Social Democratic Party and the Stalinized Communist parties of his own time. During the
Cold War, the pamphlet was often promoted as a definitive anti-
Leninist text. The translation by
Bertram D. Wolfe, published in 1947 and 1961, served as the main English-language version for many years. Wolfe's introduction framed the text as an "almost 'clairvoyant indictment of the Bolsheviks'", which became the standard Cold War reading of the work. The political theorist
Hannah Arendt, in a 1966 essay, also engaged with Luxemburg's work. Arendt claimed that Luxemburg "was not an orthodox Marxist, so little orthodox indeed that it might be doubted that she was a Marxist at all". Arendt focused on the significance of Luxemburg's Polish "peer group" as distinct from other revolutionary traditions, and saw her analysis of the Russian Revolution as vindicated. == Themes and legacy ==