This article needs to beupdated. The reason given is: the society may no longer exist – the only meeting still listed on the official website is a cancelled 2020 meeting. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(September 2025) |
TheStalin Society is a British discussion group for individuals who seeJoseph Stalin as a greatMarxist–Leninist and wish to preserve his legacy. The society originated as a consequence of thedissolution of the Soviet Union and what the members perceived as a subsequent increase in the criticism of Stalin.[1] According to the Stalin Society's website, "[t]he Stalin Society was formed in 1991 to defend Stalin and his work on the basis of fact and to refutecapitalist,revisionist,opportunist andTrotskyist propaganda directed against him".[2]
The society is based on individual membership but political groups such as theRevolutionary Communist Party of Britain (Marxist–Leninist), and theCommunist Party of Great Britain (Marxist–Leninist) are notably prominent within it. Many have pointed to a considerable overlap of membership withArthur Scargill'sSocialist Labour Party, including Scargill himself.[3] The Stalin Society's chair,Harpal Brar, for instance, was at one time a member of both organisations (although he subsequently left the SLP to head the CPGB-ML). Through Brar, the society was also linked to theAssociation of Communist Workers. One of the Stalin Society's founders,Bill Bland, was expelled in an organizational dispute.[3][4] Kamal Majid, a founding member of the Stalin Society, is a patron of theStop the War Coalition.[5][6]
The Stalin Society upholds traditional Soviet views on a number of controversial events that took place in the Soviet Union under Stalin's leadership. TheHolodomor, a famine that killed millions of Ukrainians in 1932–33 and which was part of theSoviet famine of 1930–1933, is said to have resulted from poor weather conditions and sabotage by rich peasants. The belief that Stalin intentionally brought the Holodomor about in order to break the Ukrainian national spirit is attributed to 1930santi-Soviet propaganda perpetuated by Ukrainian nationalists andMcCarthyists.[7] TheGreat Purge, a campaign of political repression in the Soviet Union in 1936–38, is regarded as a fair legal process designed to thwart an anti-Soviet coup, for which the numbers of imprisoned and dead have been exaggerated by anti-Soviet propagandists.[8] TheKatyn massacre, a mass execution of Polish figures in 1940, is said to have been committed byNazi German forces who captured Polish prisoners of war held by the Soviets. Nazi propaganda is said to have been responsible for its attribution to the Soviets.[9]

The society continues to hold public meetings.[10] The Stalin Society has produced many booklets on subjects includingCPSU purges, famines andGeorge Orwell.[11]
The "Stalin Society of Pakistan" was formed in 2013 and has a website and Facebook account. The society has claimed on Facebook that it "stands for communist revolution in Pakistan"[12] and on its website it states that it is "not a political party but an academic venture" which aims to "refute anti-Stalin propaganda and revisionism".[13] Stalin Societies have also been formed in the United States and Canada, Tunisia, India, Italy, Ireland, and Argentina, and an International Stalin Society was formed in 2014.[14]