One member of a Bolshevik committee in Baku during this period, Cecilia Bobrovskaya, has described a strike in the oil fields in which “a very good agitator” from the Menshevik faction “was never tired at mass meetings of discussing minor questions like the provision of aprons, mitts, etc., by the employers, without touching upon the real significance of the strike.” Acknowledging that the local Bolshevik committee “adopted a somewhat academic approach to the working masses,” she has offered this account of the workers’ reactions to the Bolshevik speakers: “They were often interrupted by uncomplimentary shouts about the Bolsheviks who instead of demanding mitts and aprons demanded the overthrow of the autocracy.”28
Consequently, when the overthrow of the autocracy became a real issue for Russian workers in 1905, the Bolsheviks were, to a large extent, not in a position to provide leadership. At the beginning of that year, Lenin complained to Bolshevik underground organizers: “Really, I sometimes think nine-tenths of the Bolsheviks are actually formalists. . . . You must be sure to organize, organize, organize hundreds of circles, completely pushing into the background the customary, well meant committee (hierarchic) stupidities. . . . Either you create new, young, fresh, energetic battle organizations everywhere for revolutionary Social Democratic work of all varieties among all strata, or you will go under wearing the aureole of ‘committee’ bureaucrats.”29