There was a good deal of press coverage of the Tolstoy Jubilee. An unsigned editorial in
Part 1: The Jubilee and Our Tasks
Part 2: Tolstoy as a Thinker
Tolstoy and his Epoch The Lack of Synthesis; The Social Reasons for This
Dialectical Materialism and Religious Idealism
Class war/Struggle and Non-Resistance to Evil
Tolstoy’s Criticism of Capitalism
Tolstoy’s Criticism of Patriotism and Militarism
Part 3: Tolstoy as Artist
Part 4: Tolstoy and the Soviet Public 88
In the face of this ideological onslaught, Alexandra’s work at Yasnaya Polyana became more and more difficult. Once the Jubilee was over, she was once again subject to harassment by local Party officials when she refused to comply with their demands. Eventually she was forced to accept as her deputy at the estate-museum an anonymous Soviet writer who proposed using Tolstoy’s teachings as a weapon in the anti-religious campaign. The requirement by the ‘League of the Godless’ that pupils at the Yasnaya Polyana school were to have lessons on Easter Sunday, in keeping with Stalin’s calendar ‘reforms’, was the last straw. In the autumn of 1929 Alexandra got on a train for Vladivostok, en route for Japan, where she had been invited to lecture. She never returned to Russia.89
By 1930, only two volumes of the Jubilee Edition had appeared, and there were still problems with obtaining funds to keep going. Chertkov was seventy-six and very ill by this time, but this was his life’s work and he plodded resolutely on, despite having exhausted all his savings to fund the enterprise. In February 1934 he wrote about the lack of funds to Molotov, who had been head of Sovnarkom (Council of Ministers) since 1930, but he received no answer. On 27 May he wrote to Stalin:
The situation of our editorial team is now completely hopeless as a result of the lack of funds to complete our work, the release of which, to the tune of 75,000 roubles, I requested from Sovnarkom. Meanwhile, my requests to accelerate the publication and fund the editing work to the end, as I have been informed by Sovnarkom, have not met with any objections in principle, and the entire delay is to do with the paperwork, which has been going on for four months already. I am not writing again to Comrade Molotov, because I have already written to him twice, and having not received a reply, I am not sure that he has the time to turn his personal attention to my appeal to him amongst many complex governmental affairs. But I am being so bold as to appeal to you, esteemed Iosif Vissarionovich, as the comrade on whose initiative this project was essentially launched following the lead of the late V. I. Lenin. I think that just one word from you would be enough to bring an immediate conclusion to the formal side of the protracted satisfaction of my requests, as set out in my letter of 23 February 1934 to Comrade Molotov …90
There was again no response, nor to a letter Chertkov wrote in July 1934, by which time he was so ill he was no longer in full control of his faculties, but in August that year the money started to trickle through at last.