Everything about Fanny Kaplan totally explained
Fanya Yefimovna Kaplan (Фаниа Ефимовна Каплан;
February 10,
1890 –
September 3,
1918), also known as
Fanny Kaplan and as
Dora Kaplan), was a Russian political revolutionary and an attempted
assassin of
Vladimir Lenin.
There is some confusion as to her birth name.
Vera Figner, in her memoirs,
At Women's Katorga, gives the name Feiga Chaimovna Roytblat-Kaplan Фейга Хаимовна Ройтблат-Каплан. Other sources give her original family name as Ройтман (transcribed from Russian as Roytman, which corresponds to the common German/Yiddish name Reutemann). However, her ties to
Sidney Reilly, a British Intelligence officer, have only deepened the mystery concerning her background.
Kaplan was born into a
Jewish family, one of seven children. She became a political revolutionary at an early age and joined a
socialist group, the
Socialist Revolutionaries (Esers). In 1906, Kaplan was arrested in Kiev over her involvement in a
terrorist bomb plot, and committed for life to the
katorga system (a form of forced labour). She served in the
Maltsev and
Akatuy prisons of
Nerchinsk katorga,
Siberia, where she lost her sight (partially restored later). She was released on
March 3,
1917 after the
February Revolution overthrew the imperial government. As a result of her imprisonment, Kaplan suffered from continuous headaches and periods of blindness.
Kaplan became disillusioned with Lenin as a result of the conflict between the Socialist Revolutionaries and the
Bolshevik party. The Bolsheviks had strong support in the
soviets, which Lenin had argued in his 1917 tract "The State and Revolution" were the only legitimate avenue of post-revolutionary government; however, in elections to a competing body, the
Constituent Assembly, the Bolsheviks failed to win a majority in the November 1917 elections and a Socialist Revolutionary was elected President in January 1918. The Bolsheviks, favoring soviets, ordered the
Constituent Assembly to be dissolved. By August 1918 conflicts between the Bolsheviks and their political opponents had led to the banning of most other influential parties - most recently, of the
Left Socialist Revolutionaries, who had been the Bolsheviks' principal coalition partner for some time, but had organized a revolt in July because of their opposition to the
Brest-Litovsk Peace Treaty. Kaplan decided to assassinate Lenin.
According to official accounts, on
August 30,
1918, Lenin was speaking at a
Moscow factory. As Lenin left the building and before he entered his car, Kaplan called out to him. When Lenin turned towards her, she fired three shots. One passed through Lenin's coat, the other two hit him in the left shoulder and jaw.
Lenin was taken back to his living quarters at
the Kremlin. He feared there might be other plotters planning to kill him and refused to leave the security of the Kremlin to seek medical attention. Doctors were brought in to treat him but were unable to remove the bullets outside of a hospital. Despite the severity of his injuries, Lenin survived. However, Lenin's health never fully recovered from the attack and it's believed the shooting contributed to the strokes that incapacitated and later killed him.
Kaplan was taken into custody and interrogated by the
Cheka. She made the following statement:
My name is Fanya Kaplan. Today I shot at Lenin. I did it on my own. I won't say from whom I obtained my revolver. I'll give no details. I'd resolved to kill Lenin long ago. I consider him a traitor to the Revolution. I was exiled to Akatui for participating in an assassination attempt against a Tsarist official in Kiev. I spent 11 years at hard labour. After the Revolution, I was freed. I favoured the Constituent Assembly and am still for it. When it became clear that Kaplan wouldn't implicate any accomplices, she was shot on
September 3 1918.
In recent years the actual role of Kaplan in the assassination attempt has been questioned by several historians: believing it would be all too comforting that Lenin narrowly avoided being assassinated by a woman whose personality is so far from the stereotype of a national hero. In particular, it's suggested that she was working on behalf of others and after her arrest assumed sole responsibility. The main argument put forth in this and other versions is her near-blindness. Another argument points to the contradiction between the official Soviet account (Kaplan was immediately seized by angry workers who witnessed the event) and official documents, in particular a radiogram by
Yakov Peters which talks about an arrest of several suspects.
She freely admitted to her sole role in the assassination attempt in a letter to "Mika," a man who was to give this letter to Peters. In her letter Kaplan states:
They send one after another of their lackeys to pry information from me. They don't believe that I was capable of acting alone. Perhaps you also can't believe this? But it's true. Before this letter reaches you, you'll have read in the newspapers that I shot at Lenin. I don't think I succeeded in killing him. If I regret anything, it's only that. He is a traitor to the Revolution. I lay the responsibility for the treacherous peace with Germany and the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly at his feet. I've told my inquisitors as much and so expect that they won't censor it from this letter. That this letter reaches you at all I've entrusted to Yakov Peters.
In the official announcement she was declared a
Right Eser. On the same day,
Moisei Uritsky,
People's Commissar for Internal Affairs in the Northern Region and head of the Cheka in
Petrograd, was assassinated. While the Cheka didn't find any evidence linking the two events, their co-occurrence appeared significant in the overall context of the
intensifying civil war. The Bolshevik reaction was an abrupt escalation in the persecution of their opponents.
An official decree for
Red Terror was issued only hours after the Kaplan shooting, calling for "a merciless mass terror against all the enemies of the revolution." In the next few months, about 800 Right SRs and other political opponents of Bolsheviks were executed without trial.
(External Link
) During the first year the scope of Red Terror expanded significantly and the number of executions grew into the thousands.
(External Link
) Some historians consider this to be a harbinger of the
Great Purge, but others consider that the purges of the 1930s and the
Great Terror were not only quantitatively different from the Red Terror under Lenin, but also took place for very different reasons and in a very different context.
Fanny Kaplan was always presented by the Soviet propaganda as a complete monster. Her reputation hasn't been rehabilitated completely even after the fall of the Communist regime in Russia, but in popular opinion, the personality of Fanny Kaplan is often considered as one of a 'woman of mystery.'
Several writers included Kaplan as characters in their plays ('Fanny Kaplan' by
Venedikt Erofeev; 'Kill me, o my beloved!' by Elena Isaeva).
A bronze monument to Fanny Kaplan was erected in Moscow (the Street of the 1st Shchipkovsky Pereulok) on
April 1,
2002, by famous Russian sculptor Alexander Frolov.
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