V.I.Lenin: A socialist Soviet Republic in Russia will
stand as a living example to the peoples of all countries, and the propaganda
and the revolutionising effect of this example will be immense.

The documents, photographs, models and replicas presented
in this hall recount the construction of socialism in the USSR.
On the central wall are the words from the Programme
of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) adopted at the 22nd
Congress in October 1961: "Socialism, which Marx and Engels scientifically
predicted as inevitable and the plan for the construction of which was
mapped out by Lenin, has become a reality in the Soviet Union." Quotations
from the works of K. Marx and V. I. Lenin on the role of the dictatorship
of the proletariat in the construction of socialism are seen beneath on
the display stand. Presented here is the part of the Programme adopted
at the Eighth Congress of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks), on
the economic tasks, and that part of the CPSU Programme in which
the basic elements of Lenin's plan for the building of socialism are stated.
V. I. Lenin's works which reveal this historic plan are on exhibit in
the display cases:
"The State and Revolution", "The Immediate Tasks of the
Soviet Government", "Economics and Politics in the Era of the Dictatorship
of the Proletariat", "Better Fewer, But Better", "On Co-operation" and
others.
The exposition in this hall consists of four sections.
The first is a documentary story of the realisation of Lenin's plan of
the industrialisation of the USSR. The decisions of Party congresses and
government decrees, awards instituted in the 1930s and early 1940s for
special achievements in labour—the Order of the Red Banner of Labour,
the Order of Lenin, the "Badge of Honour", the medal "For Valour In Labour",
the gold star "Hammer and Sickle", are among the exhibit items in this
section, as well as a replica of the V. I. Lenin Dnieper Hydroelectric
Power Station, one of the first hydroelectric stations in the country;
and models of the first Soviet tractors. Photographs reflecting the mass
labour enthusiasm of the Soviet people during the time of the first pre-war
five-year-plan periods are exhibited. The basic enterprises built in the
USSR from 1928 to 1941 are shown on the map-diagram.
The second section of the exposition is devoted to the
programme of the socialist reconstruction of agriculture which was drawn
up by V. I. Lenin and realised by the Party and the Soviet people. This
was a vastly complicated task-there were more than 20 million small peasant
farms in Russia before the October Revolution. Without a radical turn
of these vast, to a great extent backward, masses to collectivisation
the realisation of the plan for the building of socialism would have been
impossible. Lenin's works, his primary version of the article "The Immediate
Tasks of the Soviet Government", "Draft Programme of the RCP(B) Programme",
"Report on Work in the Countryside, March 23", at the Eighth Congress
of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks), "The Tax in Kind", "Co-operation"
and others are presented precisely in this part of the exposition, because
it was in them that V. I. Lenin defined the path for the transition of
the peasants to socialism, and drew up the basic principles and forms
of co-operation. And there is the resolution of the 15th Party Congress,
"On the Work in the Countryside". The 15th Congress went down in history
as the Congress of collectivisation. An entire collection of other Party
documents devoted to the problems of the socialist transformation of the
countryside are also on display.
Many of the exhibit items relate the tremendous aid rendered
by the working class to the toiling peasantry. V. I. Lenin dreamed of
100 thousand tractors for the countryside. The diagrams show that already
in 1932, 148 thousand tractors were manufactured for agriculture, and
in 1940, agriculture received 684 thousand tractors. The documentary photographs
attract special attention: the first tractor in the village Larino (Smolensk
Gubernia), sowing at the co-operative farm "Giant" (Northern Caucasus),
tractors in the shop of the Krasny Putilovets plant (Leningrad), joining
a collective farm (Borisogleb region. Central Russia), and the presentation
of the government act for perpetual use of the land to the collective
farm workers at the collective farm "Sotsialdy" (Kazakh Soviet Socialist
Republic).
The third section of the exposition tells of the gigantic
transformations in culture in the USSR. The following words of V.I.Lenin
are presented: "We shall be unable to solve this problem unless we clearly
realise that only a precise knowledge and transformation of the culture
created by the entire development of mankind will enable us to create
a proletarian culture." Diagrams, tables and photographs tell of the elimination
of illiteracy in the country and the growth of public education, and the
genuine cultural revolution which was realised throughout the entire country,
including the former outlying districts of Russia, Central Asia, the North
and the distant corners of Siberia.
The victory of socialism in the USSR was of world-wide
historical significance-such is the theme of the fourth section of the
exposition in this hall. On the display stands are the documents on the
achievements of Lenin's national policy, on the great industrial and cultural
construction in the national republics, on Lithuania's, Latvia's and Estonia's
entrance into the USSR, and on the formation of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist
Republic.
The Constitution of the USSR, adopted in 1936, and which
legislative consolidated the victory of socialism in the Soviet Union,
is displayed in this exposition.
The exposition concludes with Lenin's words: "A socialist
Soviet Republic in Russia will stand as a living example to the peoples
of all countries, and the propaganda and the revolutionising effect of
this example will be immense."

Replica of the V. I. Lenin Dnieper Hydroelectric Power Station
Defence
of the Achievements of Socialism in the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945)
|