The Russian Revolution is a historical event from which not only 85 years separate us, but also numerous defeats of the Working Class, of the oppressed, a growing distrust in the capacity of the workers to transform the world, and even more, a strong crisis of class identity that provokes a widespread phenomenon of estrangement and alienation with the greatest revolutionary experience of the 20th century. We are not oblivious to this reality, but we live it rather as a contradictory tension insofar as we feel and understand the need to recover that experience for our class. This need is reinforced in the notorious inability to approach it in a scientific and comprehensive way (without abandoning a class point of view) on the part of the few analyses that are made today, which fall back on apologetic balances in some cases, or unilateral rejection in others, a rejection which concludes that every revolution, in the last instance, will end up bureaucratizing itself and rehabilitating a new domination.