Aaron Soltz

Soviet politician and lawyer
title: "Aaron Soltz" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1872-births", "1945-deaths", "people-from-šalčininkai", "comintern-people", "jewish-socialists", "lithuanian-communists", "lithuanian-jews", "marxist-journalists", "old-bolsheviks", "russian-social-democratic-labour-party-members", "russian-communists", "revolutionaries-of-the-russian-revolution", "jewish-soviet-politicians", "soviet-jews"] description: "Soviet politician and lawyer" topic_path: "science/biology" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aaron_Soltz" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Soviet politician and lawyer ::
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/dc/Aaron_Soltz.jpg" caption="Portrait of Aron Soltz"] ::
Aaron Aleksandrovich Soltz (; 10 March 1872 – 30 April 1945) was an Old Bolshevik and a Soviet politician and lawyer. He was informally known as the "conscience of the Party".
Biography
Soltz was born in Soleniki (now Šalčininkai) to a Jewish merchant family of Lithuania. He studied at the Law School of Saint Petersburg University then became involved in revolutionary work. As a Jew living in Russia during a time of widespread anti-semitism, Soltz believed that his Jewishness, his outsider status drew him towards revolutionary thought. He was a member of Russian Social Democratic Labour Party from 1898, and was involved in the organization of underground printing and publishing of illegal literature. Soltz participated in all three Russian revolutions, and was many times jailed and exiled. Many times he also escaped from his exile. When exiled to Turukhansk Soltz shared the same house and reportedly the same bed with Joseph Stalin.
In 1917 Soltz was a member of Moscow Committee of the Bolshevik Party, an editor of Social Democrat and Pravda newspapers. When the Central Control Committee of the Bolshevik Party was established in November 1920, Soltz was one of its three members, and from March 1921, when it was expanded to seven members, he was its de facto chairman, remaining a member until 1934. From 1924, he was also a member of the executive of Comintern. Beginning in 1921 he was a Judge of the Supreme Court of Soviet Russia and from 1923 he was a Judge of the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union. During the Shakhty Trial, he called for the death sentence for all the defendants, and he was one of the prosecutors at the Menshevik Trial. From 1935 Aaron Soltz served as a Deputy Prosecutor General of the USSR, and was later the Chairman of the Judicial Collegium of the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union. (председатель юридической коллегии Верховного Суда).
Soltz was considered to be the expert on communist party ethics. He wrote that:
::quote
::
He appears not to have grasped the implications of Stalin's rise to power in the 1920s. seemingly thinking that Stalin was still subject to party control. In 1929, he was speaking at a party meeting when someone in the audience demanded to know why Lenin's Testament, which had called for Stalin to be removed from the post of General Secretary, had not carried out. Soltz is reported to have replied: "The party is putting Stalin to the test. If he works well, he will remain general secretary; if not, he'll be removed."
In October 1937, during the Great Purge, Soltz was outraged when his friend Valentin Trifonov was arrested, and shouted at the Prosecutor General of the USSR Andrey Vyshinsky, who asserted that anyone arrested by the NKVD must be an enemy of the people. Addressing a conference of party activists in Sverdlovsk, he called for a special commission to be set up to investigate Vyshinsky. According to Trifonov's son, Yury:
::quote
::
He was suspended from his work in Procurator Office and tried to contact Stalin, but to no avail. He held minor jobs until he retired in 1940. He died in 1945 and his ashes were placed at the Donskoye Cemetery in Moscow.
Family
Soltz did not marry. He lived with his sister, Esfir, and later with her daughter, Anna, the ex-wife of Isaak Zelensky.
Works
- Сольц А. Н. Ленин. К пятидесятилетнему юбилею. Пенза: Пенз. отделение Центропечати, 1920. - 22 с. 6000 экз.
- Сольц А. и Файнбит С. Революционная законность и наша карательная политика. М.: «Московский робочий», 1925.- 126 с.
References
References
- ru
- SLEZKINE, YURI. (2017-08-07). "The House of Government". Princeton University Press.
- (1973). "Biographical Dictionary of the Comintern". Hoover Institution Press.
- "Сольц А.А.".
- (2017). "The House of Government, A Saga of the Russian Revolution". Princeton U.P..
- (1979). "The Russian Enigma". Ink Links.
- (1976). "Let History Judge, The Origins and Consequences of Stalinism". Spokesman.
::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::