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While the Provisional Government grappled with foreign foes, the Bolsheviks,
who were opposed to bourgeois democracy, gained new strength. Lenin, the
Bolshevik leader, returned to Petrograd in April 1917 from his wartime residence
in Switzerland. Although he had been born into a noble family, from his youth
Lenin espoused the cause of the common workers. A committed revolutionary and
pragmatic Marxist thinker, Lenin astounded the Bolsheviks already in Petrograd
by his April Theses, boldly calling for the overthrow of the
Provisional Government, the transfer of "all power to the soviets,"
and the expropriation of factories by workers and of land belonging to the
church, the nobility, and the gentry by peasants. Lenin's dynamic presence
quickly won the other Bolshevik leaders to his position, and the radicalized
orientation of the Bolshevik faction attracted new members. Inspired by Lenin's
slogans, crowds of workers, soldiers, and sailors took to the streets of
Petrograd in July to wrest power from the Provisional Government. But the
spontaneity of the "July Days" caught the Bolshevik leaders by
surprise, and the Petrograd Soviet, controlled by moderate Mensheviks, refused
to take power or enforce Bolshevik demands. After the uprising died down, the
Provisional Government outlawed the Bolsheviks and jailed Leon Trotsky (Lev
Trotskii, originally Lev Bronstein), an active Bolshevik leader. Lenin fled to
Finland.
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