All-Ukrainian National Congress

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Building of the National Philharmonic of Ukraine, where the congress took place

All-Ukrainian National Congress became the first representative forum of the Ukrainian national movement in Ukraine and the first step towards the creation of Ukrainian National State. The congress was organized by the Ukrainian Central Rada and took place on 1921 April [O.S. 6–8 April] 1917. The congress took place about a month after the creation of the Central Council of Ukraine and the 1917 March events in Petrograd. There were 1,500 delegates that participated in the congress, including 700 delegates with voting rights, 200 with consultative voting rights, and the rest as guests and invited participants. The key purpose of the congress was to recognize the Central Council of Ukraine as the All-Ukrainian National representative authority and widen its competency over the whole territory of Ukraine (until mid-April, decisions of the Central Council of Ukraine de facto had power only for the city of Kyiv).

The growth of the national movement

The All-Ukrainian National Congress was convened on April 6–8, 1917 in Kyiv. Its importance was determined by the very purpose of convening the forum - to make the Central Rada the governing body of the Ukrainian national movement and to expand its social base, to refocus the priorities of activities from cultural and educational to state-centered.

During the month of the revolution, after a series of national demonstrations, and in particular the Freedom Day in Kyiv, the Ukrainian liberation movement gained such a magnitude that the Ukrainian Central Rada, in its original composition, could no longer count on its successful leadership. All Ukrainian society of that time, its leadership, also felt the need to transform the Central Rada into a more authoritative and competent body than the one created in early March 1917, mainly by representatives of Kyiv NGOs. At the same time, leading politicians wanted to demonstrate in a unique way their potential on an all-Ukrainian scale and to identify with the support of a reputable national body the principle line of the national liberation struggle, which inevitably became more evident.

Organization of the congress

The first notice of the convening of the congress was published on March 19, 1917, in the newspaper "Visti from the Ukrainian Central Council". On March 28, the "Kievskaya Mysl" newspaper published a program of the congress and instructions for its election, prepared by Mikhaylo Hrushevsky. The congress is scheduled for Easter holidays - April 6, 7, 8 (Thursday, Friday and Saturday of Easter). The leaders of the Central Rada intended to hold a congress on the principles of territorial representation with the participation of all regions of Ukraine in order to transform the organization into a nationwide one.

In his article "On the All-Ukrainian Congress", published on March 29, 1917, Mykhailo Hrushevsky called on Ukrainians and non-Ukrainians "of all regions, territories and nooks and crannies of our national territory standing on the Ukrainian political platform" to take an active part in its work, which will contribute to the successful fulfillment of its expectations. The author emphasized:

"The central task of the congress is to complete our organization. The Central Rada, created in Kyiv by representatives of all Kyiv strata and supplemented by delegates of extracurricular organizations, is now recognized as a central Ukrainian government by all Ukrainian conscious people. The congress should give it the latest form, select it in its permanent composition… in a word, systematize and bring to the system and order an all-Ukrainian national organization."

The preparation of the forum took place under intense circumstances. There were rumors throughout the city that the Central Rada could be dispersed by military force to prevent the National Congress from being convened and Ukraine's autonomy proclaimed. At a meeting with the Kyiv Executive Committee, Mykhailo Hrushevsky and Dmitry Antonovich expressed the desire of Ukrainian Central Council to build their activities on a legal basis and assured that the Congress did not aim to proclaim the autonomy of Ukraine. At the time, they considered this case a task of the future.

The hidden purpose of the Congress

However, in his memoirs, Mykhailo Hrushevsky cites some facts that reveal the "internal logic" of congressional preparation.

The Chairman of the Central Rada noted that the initiators of the action wanted to conduct it as soon as possible in order to document the seriousness and inaccessibility of the Ukrainian social claims to the central government:

"The Provisional Government tended to postpone everything to the Constituent Assembly and packed Ukrainian business there in the complex of the national question altogether. But it recognized the cases of Finland, Poland, the Caucasus noon so clear to himself that it thought it possible to immediately decree his political rights to them, without waiting for the Constituent Assembly. So, we needed to demonstrate the nation-wide imperative nature of Ukrainian claims, perhaps vividly and unequivocally… Through the heads of our Kyiv enemies and slanderers, we needed to show not only the Provisional Government, but all Russian citizenship, that our claims are common, popular and the people await their fulfillment impatiently, take every wire to heart, and joke with such a delay "to the Constituent Assembly," which, when unknown, is not entirely safe."

Composition and participants

From March 28 until the moment of the convening of the Congress Ukrainian newspapers regularly covered the topic of the convening of April 6, 1917, national Congress, the norms of representation in it and the printed proposed program. In particular, it was emphasized:

"Representatives should be sent by all Ukrainian organizations, political, cultural, professional, territorial, which accept the claim of broad national-territorial autonomy of Ukraine and the fullness of political and cultural Ukrainian life, that is: party organizations; societies cultural, educational and economic; working, peasant, military, clergy, clerks, youth of all schools; villages, towns and counties organizations."

Conditions for participation in the meeting

If the number of members of the organization did not exceed 50, it had the right to send one delegate with a decisive vote, more than 50 - respectively two, more than 100 - three, 200 - four, 300 five (but no more). With an advisory vote, any "organized Ukrainian" could take part in the Congress, with the permission of the Presidium.

This system was developed personally by Mykhailo Hrushevsky. In his "Memories" he wrote:

"… For the сongress I created a system of mixed representation, so that in addition to the representation of the national, there was something from the representation of the territorial. Representation was given to Ukrainian national organizations - from every ten Ukrainians organized in any organization, one representative could be sent to the congress; but one representative could send each village community, whatever it wanted, every factory and every military unit. Only such representatives, who are given written mandates, will have the right to cast a decisive vote at the congress - we have emphasized that the tributaries should not be treated as arbitrary and irresponsible gathering - all other guests will be non-voting guests at the congress."

Arrival of guests and delegates

The organizers feared that due to poor awareness, poor transport performance, and possibly low political activity of the Ukrainian Congress, it would not be sufficiently representative. However, these expectations were not met. The Congress was widely represented by delegates from all Ukrainian provinces, different sections of the population, many political parties (USSR, USDP, UPSF, UPP, social movements, peasant unions, student communities, cooperative organizations). Representatives of Ukrainian communities of Petrograd, Moscow, Kuban, Voronezh region, Bessarabia, Saratov and other territories outside Ukraine also attended the meeting. In total, about 1500 participants (delegates with a decisive and advisory vote, as well as guests) registered.

Famous Ukrainian cultural and social figures - Mykhailo Hrushevsky, Volodymyr Vynnychenko, Serhiy Yefremov, Ilia Shrah, Petro Stebnytsky, Liudmyla Starytska-Cherniakhivska, Dmytro Doroshenko, Motepan, took the honorary place among the delegates who arrived at the congress.

However, the most important role in this assembly was played by a small element - peasants, soldiers and workers. Together with the intelligentsia and the student youth, they became aware and proudly called themselves "Ukrainians" for the shortest time. In some ways - intuitively, and in some - consciously, but unconditionally infusing into the ranks of the movement, they thus irrevocably gave him a mass national-political orientation and character. This fact has touched even, for the most part, always academically cold, Hrushevsky:

"The sincere impulse immediately united and merged into a single body this multi-thousand-strong community that gathered from different parts of Ukraine for the first time at a large national assembly."

The course of the All-Ukrainian Congress

References

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