The text of Gapon's petition was divided into three parts. The first part began with an address to the tsar. In accordance with
biblical and
old Russian tradition, the petition addressed the tsar to inform him that the workers and residents of St. Petersburg had come to him seeking truth and protection. The petition went on to speak of the plight and slavery of the workers, who were forced to endure their bitter plight in silence, of their poverty and oppression, and it was also said that the situation of the workers was getting worse and worse, and now their patience was at an end. "For us, the terrible moment has come when it is better to die than to continue in unbearable agony". The petition then recounted the history of the workers' dispute with the factory owners, commonly referred to as the bosses. It recounted how the workers had walked off the job and told their owners that they would not work until their demands were met. This was followed by a list of demands that the workers had made to their bosses during the January
strike. It was said that these demands were minor, but the owners refused to meet them as well. The petition went on to state that the reason for the refusal was that the workers' demands were recognized as not being in accordance with the law. It was said that from the owners' point of view, any request by the workers was a crime, and their desire to improve their situation was an intolerable impertinence. The petition also revealed its main thesis — the workmen's
disenfranchisement as the main cause of their oppression by their masters. It was claimed that the workers, like all the Russian people, were not recognized as having any
human rights, not even the right to speak, to think, to assemble, to discuss their needs and to take measures to improve their situation. The
repression of those who spoke in defense of the interests of the working class was mentioned. The petition then included an appeal to the tsar, pointing out the divine origin of
royal authority and the contradiction between human and divine laws. It was argued that the existing laws contradicted the divine regulations, that they were unjust, that it was impossible for ordinary people to live under them. "Is it not better to die, to die all of us, the working people of all Russia? Let the capitalists and officials —the common thieves, the robbers of the Russian people— live and enjoy themselves. Finally, the cause of unjust laws was also pointed out— the domination of officials who usurped power and became a middleman between the tsar and his people. In the second part the demands with which the workers came to the walls of the tsar's palace were presented. The main demand of the workers was the destruction of the power of the officials, who had become a wall between the tsar and his people, and the participation of the people in the management of the state. It was said that Russia was too big and its needs too diverse and numerous for officials alone to manage. It was concluded that popular representation was necessary. "It is necessary that the people should help themselves, for they alone know their true needs". The tsar was urged to immediately summon popular representatives from all
classes and all
estates: workers, capitalists, officials, clergy, intellectuals-to elect a constituent assembly on the basis of universal, direct, secret and
universal suffrage. This demand was declared to be the main demand of the workers, "in and on which everything rests", and the main remedy for their sore wounds. The demand for popular representation was followed by a list of additional demands necessary "to heal the wounds of the people. This list was an outline of the March "Program of Five," which was included in the first edition of the petition without changes. The list consisted of three sections: • Measures against the ignorance and powerlessness of the Russian people; • Measures against the poverty of the people; • Measures against the oppression of capital over labor. The first paragraph —"Measures against ignorance and disenfranchisement of the Russian people"— consisted of the following points
: personal freedom,
freedom of speech,
freedom of the press,
freedom of assembly,
freedom of thought in matters of religion; universal and compulsory public
education at public expense;
responsibility of officials before the people and guarantee of the
legality of the administration;
equality before the law for all without exception; immediate
amnesty of all those who had suffered for their beliefs. The second paragraph —"Measures against the Poverty of the People"— included the following points: abolition of
indirect taxes and their replacement by
direct,
progressive and
income taxes; abolition of redemption payments, cheap credit and gradual transfer of land to the people. Finally, the third paragraph, "Measures against the oppression of capital over labor", included the following points:
occupational safety and health; freedom of consumer-productive and professional
trade unions; an
eight-hour workday and rationing of
overtime; freedom of labor to struggle against capital; participation of representatives of the working class in drafting a bill on state insurance for workers; and normal wages. In the second and final version of the petition, with which the workers went to the tsar on January 9, several more points were added to these demands, in particular:
the separation of church and state; the execution of military and naval orders in Russia, not abroad; the cessation of war at the will of the people; the abolition of the institution of factory inspectors. As a result, the total number of demands increased to 17, and some of the demands were strengthened by adding the word "immediately". The list of demands was followed by the final part of the petition. It contained another appeal to the tsar to accept the petition and fulfill its demands, and the tsar was asked not only to accept them, but also to swear to fulfill them. "Command them and swear to fulfill them, and you will make Russia happy and glorious, and engrave your name in the hearts of ours and our descendants forever". The workers expressed their willingness to die on the walls of the
Winter Palace if the tsar did not meet their demands. "And if you do not order us, if you do not answer our plea, we will die here, in this square, in front of your palace. We have nowhere else to go and no reason to go! We have only two ways — either to freedom and happiness, or to the grave". This part ended with an expression of readiness to sacrifice one's life for the suffering Russia, and with the assertion that the workers were not sorry for this sacrifice and were willing to make it. ==Reading and recall of signatures==