The
Atlantic Magazine, July 1926
The Russian Effort to Abolish Marriage
"Men
took to changing wives with the same zest which they
displayed in the consumption of the recently restored
forty-per-cent vodka"
By A
WOMAN RESIDENT IN RUSSIA
The question whether marriage as an institution
should be abolished is now being debated all over
Russia with a violence and depth of passion unknown
since the turbulent early days of the Revolution.
Last October a bill eliminating distinctions between
registered and unregistered marriages and giving the
unmarried consort the status and property rights of
the legal wife was introduced in the Tzik, or
Central Executive Committee. So much unforeseen
opposition to the proposed law developed that the
Tzik decided to postpone its final adoption until
the next session, meanwhile initiating a broad
popular discussion of the project.
Since that time factories, offices, clubs, and
various Soviet organizations and institutions have
passed resolutions for and against the bill, and the
halls have not been able to hold the eager crowds
that thronged to the meetings in city, town, and
village. One must live in Russia to-day, amid the
atmosphere of torment, disgust, and disillusionment
that pervades sex relations, the chaos, uncertainty,
and tragedy that hover over the Russian family, to
understand the reasons for this heated discussion,
for these passionate pros and cons.
When the Bolsheviki came into power in 1917 they
regarded the family, like every other 'bourgeois'
institution, with fierce hatred, and set out with a
will to destroy it. 'To clear the family out of the
accumulated dust of the ages we had to give it a
good shakeup, and we did,' declared Madame
Smidovich, a leading Communist and active
participant in the recent discussion. So one of the
first decrees of the Soviet Government abolished the
term 'illegitimate children.' This was done simply
by equalizing the legal status of all children,
whether born in wedlock or out of it, and now the
Soviet Government boasts that Russia is the only
country where there are no illegitimate children.
The father of a child is forced to contribute to its
support, usually paying the mother a third of his
salary in the event of a separation, provided she
has no other means of livelihood.
"Marriage should be abolished, because it is an
iniquitous law which makes a slavery of what nature
declared free, and constitutes an individual property in
the human body, thus rendering the community of
happiness impossible, as it is certain that community
admits of no description of property."
-
"l'Humanitaire, the avowed organ of the Communiste
ègalitaire doctrine" - London
Chronicle, November 20, 1841