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Deportation of the Crimean Tatars

The deportation of the Crimean Tatars (Crimean Tatar: Qırımtatar halqınıñ sürgünligi, Cyrillic: Къырымтатар халкъынынъ сюргюнлиги) or the Sürgünlik ('exile') was the ethnic cleansing and cultural genocide[c 1] of at least 191,044[c 2] Crimean Tatars carried out by the Soviet authorities from 18 to 20 May 1944, which was supervised by Lavrentiy Beria, head of Soviet state security and the secret police, and which was ordered by the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. Within those three days, the NKVD used cattle trains to deport mostly women, children, and the elderly, even Communist Party members and Red Army members, to mostly the Uzbek SSR, several thousand kilometres away. They were one of the several ethnicities who were subjected to Stalin's policy of population transfer in the Soviet Union.

Deportation of the Crimean Tatars
Part of Forced population transfer in the Soviet Union and World War II
Left to right, top to bottom:
Memorial to the deportation in Eupatoria;
candle-lighting ceremony in Kyiv;
memorial rally in Taras Shevchenko park;
cattlecar similar to the type used in the deportation;
maps comparing the demographics of Crimea in 1939 and 2001.
LocationCrimean Peninsula
Date18–20 May 1944
TargetCrimean Tatars
Attack type
Forced population transfer, ethnic cleansing, genocide[1]
VictimsSeveral estimates
a) 34,000[2]
b) 40,000–44,000[3]
c) 42,000[4]
d) 45,000[5]
e) 109,956[6]
(between 18 and 46 percent of their total population[7])
PerpetratorsNKVD, the Soviet secret police

The deportation was officially presented as collective punishment for the claimed collaboration of some Crimean Tatars with Nazi Germany,[11] but modern experts say that the deportation was part of the Soviet plan to gain access to the Dardanelles and acquire territory in Turkey, where the Tatars had Turkic ethnic kin, or to remove minorities from the Soviet Union's border regions.

Nearly 8,000 Crimean Tatars died during the deportation, and tens of thousands perished subsequently due to the harsh exile conditions.[4] The Crimean Tatar deportation resulted in the abandonment of 80,000 households and 360,000 acres of land. An intense campaign of detatarization followed to try to erase the remaining traces of Crimean Tatar existence. In 1956, the new Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev condemned Stalin's policies, including the deportation of various ethnic groups, but did not lift the directive forbidding the return of the Crimean Tatars despite allowing most other deported peoples to return. The Crimean Tatars remained in Central Asia for several more decades until the perestroika era in the late 1980s, when 260,000 Crimean Tatars returned to Crimea. Their exile had lasted 45 years. The ban on their return was officially declared null and void when the Supreme Council of Crimea declared on 14 November 1989 that the deportations had been a crime.

By 2004, the number of Crimean Tatars who had returned to Crimea had increased their share of the peninsula's population to 12 percent. The Soviet authorities had neither assisted their return nor compensated them for the land they lost. Neither Ukraine nor the Russian Federation provided reparations, compensated those deported for lost property, or filed legal proceedings against the perpetrators of the forced resettlement. The deportation and subsequent assimilation efforts in Asia represent a crucial period in the history of the Crimean Tatars. Between 2015 and 2019, the deportation was formally recognized as genocide by Ukraine, Lithuania, Latvia and Canada.

Background

 
Crimea highlighted on a map of the Black Sea

The Crimean Tatars controlled the Crimean Khanate from 1441 to 1783, when Crimea was annexed by the Russian Empire as a target of Russian expansion. By the 14th century, most of the Turkic-speaking population of Crimea had adopted Islam, following the conversion of Ozbeg Khan of the Golden Horde. It was the longest surviving state of the Golden Horde.[12] They often engaged in conflicts with Moscow—from 1468 until the 17th century, Crimean Tatars were averse to the newly-established Russian rule. Thus, Crimean Tatars began leaving Crimea in several waves of emigration. Between 1784 and 1790, out of a total population of about a million, around 300,000 Crimean Tatars left for the Ottoman Empire.[13]

The Crimean War triggered another mass exodus of Crimean Tatars. Between 1855 and 1866 at least 500,000 Muslims, and possibly up to 900,000, left the Russian Empire and emigrated to the Ottoman Empire. Out of that number, at least one third were from Crimea, while the rest were from the Caucasus. These emigrants comprised 15–23 percent of the total population of Crimea. The Russian Empire used that fact as the ideological foundation to further Russify "New Russia".[14] Eventually, the Crimean Tatars became a minority in Crimea; in 1783, they comprised 98 per cent of the population,[15] but by 1897, this was down to 34.1 per cent.[16] While Crimean Tatars were emigrating, the Russian government encouraged Russification of the peninsula, populating it with Russians, Ukrainians, and other Slavic ethnic groups; this Russification continued during the Soviet era.[16]

 
Corpses of victims of the winter 1918 Red Terror in Evpatoria, Crimea

After the 1917 October Revolution, Crimea received autonomous status inside the USSR on 18 October 1921,[17] but collectivization in the 1920s led to severe famine from which up to 100,000 Crimeans perished when their crops were transported to "more important" regions of the Soviet Union.[18] By one estimate, three-quarters of the famine victims were Crimean Tatars.[17] Their status deteriorated further after Joseph Stalin became the Soviet leader and implemented repressions that led to the deaths of at least 5.2 million Soviet citizens between 1927 and 1938.[19]

World War II

In 1940, the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic had approximately 1,126,800 inhabitants, of which 218,000 people, or 19.4 percent of the population, were Crimean Tatars.[20] In 1941, Nazi Germany invaded Eastern Europe, annexing much of the western USSR. Crimean Tatars initially viewed the Germans as liberators from Stalinism, and they had also been positively treated by the Germans in World War I.[21]

Many of the captured Crimean Tatars serving in the Red Army were sent to POW camps after Romanians and Nazis came to occupy the bulk of Crimea. Though Nazis initially called for murder of all "Asiatic inferiors" and paraded around Crimean Tatar POW's labeled as "Mongol sub-humanity",[22][23] they revised this policy in the face of determined resistance from the Red Army. Beginning in 1942, Germans recruited Soviet prisoners of war to form support armies.[24] The Dobrujan Tatar nationalist Fazil Ulkusal and Lipka Tatar Edige Kirimal helped in freeing Crimean Tatars from German prisoner-of-war camps and enlisting them in the independent Crimean support legion for the Wehrmacht. This legion eventually included eight battalions, although many members were of other nationalities.[21] From November 1941, German authorities allowed Crimean Tatars to establish Muslim Committees in various towns as a symbolic recognition of some local government authority, though they were not given any political power.[25]

Number of Crimean Tatars in Crimea[26][15]
Year Number Percentage
1783 500,000 98%
1897 186,212 34.1%
1939 218,879 19.4%
1959
1979 5,422 0.3%
1989 38,365 1.6%

Many Crimean Tatar communists strongly opposed the occupation and assisted the resistance movement to provide valuable strategic and political information.[25] Other Crimean Tatars also fought on the side of the Soviet partisans, like the Tarhanov movement of 250 Crimean Tatars which fought throughout 1942 until its destruction.[27] Six Crimean Tatars were even named the Heroes of the Soviet Union, and thousands more were awarded high honors in the Red Army.

Up to 130,000 people died during the Axis occupation of Crimea.[28] The Nazis implemented a brutal repression, destroying more than 70 villages that were together home to about 25 per cent of the Crimean Tatar population. Thousands of Crimean Tatars were forcibly transferred to work as Ostarbeiter in German factories under the supervision of the Gestapo in what were described as "vast slave workshops", resulting in loss of all Crimean Tatar support.[29] In April 1944 the Red Army managed to repel the Axis forces from the peninsula in the Crimean Offensive.[30]

A majority of the hiwis (helpers), their families and all those associated with the Muslim Committees were evacuated to Germany and Hungary or Dobruja by the Wehrmacht and Romanian Army where they joined the Eastern Turkic division. Thus, the majority of the collaborators had been evacuated from Crimea by the retreating Wehrmacht.[31] Many Soviet officials had also recognized this and rejected claims that the Crimean Tatars had betrayed the Soviet Union en masse. The presence of Muslim Committees organized from Berlin by various Turkic foreigners appeared a cause for concern in the eyes of the Soviet government, already wary of Turkey at the time.[32]

Falsification of information in media

Soviet publications blatantly falsified information about Crimean Tatars in the Red Army, going so far as to describe Crimean Tatar Hero of the Soviet Union Uzeir Abduramanov as Azeri, not Crimean Tatar, on the cover of a 1944 issue of Ogonyok magazine - even though his family had been deported for being Crimean Tatar just a few months earlier.[33][34] The book In the Mountains of Tavria falsely claimed that volunteer partisan scout Bekir Osmanov was a German spy and shot, although the central committee later acknowledged that he never served the Germans and survived the war, ordering later editions to have corrections after still-living Osmanov and his family noticed the obvious falsehood.[35] Amet-khan Sultan, born to a Crimean Tatar mother and Lak father in Crimea, where he was born and raised, was often described as a Dagestani in post-deportation media, even though he always considered himself a Crimean Tatar.[36]

Deportation

We were told that we were being evicted and we had 15 minutes to get ready to leave. We boarded boxcars – there were 60 people in each, but no one knew where we were being taken to. To be shot? Hanged? Tears and panic were taking over.[37]

— Saiid, who was deported with his family from Yevpatoria when he was 10

 
Chronology of the ethnic makeup of Crimea. The sharp drop of the Crimean Tatars is visible after the deportation.
  Crimean Tatars

Officially due to the collaboration with the Axis Powers during World War II, the Soviet government collectively punished ten ethnic minorities,[c 3][38] among them the Crimean Tatars.[39] Punishment included deportation to distant regions of Central Asia and Siberia.[38] Soviet accounts of the late 1940s indict the Crimean Tatars as an ethnicity of traitors. Although the Crimean Tatars denied that they had committed treason, this idea was widely accepted during the Soviet period and persists in the Russian scholarly and popular literature.[40]

On 10 May 1944, Lavrentiy Beria recommended to Stalin that the Crimean Tatars should be deported away from the border regions due to their "traitorous actions".[41] Stalin subsequently issued GKO Order No. 5859ss, which envisaged the resettlement of the Crimean Tatars.[42] The deportation lasted only three days,[43] 18–20 May 1944, during which NKVD agents went house to house collecting Crimean Tatars at gunpoint and forcing them to enter sealed-off[44] cattle trains that would transfer them almost 3,200 kilometres (2,000 mi)[45] to remote locations in the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic. The Crimean Tatars were allowed to carry up to 500 kg of their property per family.[46] The only ones who could avoid this fate were Crimean Tatar women who were married to men of non-punished ethnic groups.[47] The exiled Crimean Tatars travelled in overcrowded wagons for several weeks and lacked food and water.[48] It is estimated that at least 228,392 people were deported from Crimea, of which at least 191,044 were Crimean Tatars[49] in 47,000 families.[50] Since 7,889 people perished in the long transit in sealed-off railcars, the NKVD registered the 183,155 living Crimean Tatars who arrived at their destinations in Central Asia.[51] The majority of the deportees were rounded up from the Crimean countryside. Only 18,983 of the exiles were from Crimean cities.[52]

On 4 July 1944, the NKVD officially informed Stalin that the resettlement was complete.[53] However, not long after that report, the NKVD found out that one of its units had forgotten to deport people from the Arabat Spit. Instead of preparing an additional transfer in trains, on 20 July the NKVD boarded hundreds of Crimean Tatars onto an old boat, took it to the middle of the Azov Sea, and sank the ship. Those who did not drown were finished off by machine-guns.[47]

 
Uzbekistan, the main destination of the deported

Officially, Crimean Tatars were eliminated from Crimea. The deportation encompassed every person considered by the government to be Crimean Tatar, including children, women, and the elderly, and even those who had been members of the Communist Party or the Red Army. As such, they were legally designated as special settlers, which meant that they were officially second-class citizens, prohibited from leaving the perimeter of their assigned area, attending prestigious universities, and had to regularly appear before the commandant's office.[54]

During this mass eviction, the Soviet authorities confiscated around 80,000 houses, 500,000 cattle, 360,000 acres of land, and 40,000 tons of agricultural provisions.[55] Besides 191,000 deported Crimean Tatars, the Soviet authorities also evicted 9,620 Armenians, 12,420 Bulgarians, and 15,040 Greeks from the peninsula. All were collectively branded as traitors and became second-class citizens for decades in the USSR.[55] Among the deported, there were also 283 persons of other ethnicities: Italians, Romanians, Karaims, Kurds, Czechs, Hungarians, and Croats.[56] During 1947 and 1948, a further 2,012 veteran returnees were deported from Crimea by the local MVD.[20]

In total, 151,136 Crimean Tatars were deported to the Uzbek SSR; 8,597 to the Mari Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic; and 4,286 to the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic; and the remaining 29,846 were sent to various remote regions of the Russian SFSR.[57] When the Crimean Tatars arrived at their destination in the Uzbek SSR, they were met with hostility by Uzbek locals who threw stones at them, even their children, because they heard that the Crimean Tatars were "traitors" and "fascist collaborators."[58] The Uzbeks objected to becoming the "dumping ground for treasonous nations." In the coming years, several assaults against the Crimean Tatars population were registered, some of which were fatal.[58]

 
Lavrentiy Beria, the chief of the Soviet NKVD

The mass Crimean deportations were organized by Lavrentiy Beria, the chief of the Soviet secret police, the NKVD, and his subordinates Bogdan Kobulov, Ivan Serov, B. P. Obruchnikov, M.G. Svinelupov, and A. N. Apolonov. The field operations were conducted by G. P. Dobrynin, the Deputy Head of the Gulag system; G. A. Bezhanov, the Colonel of State Security; I. I. Piiashev, Major General; S. A. Klepov, Commissar of State Security; I. S. Sheredega, Lt. General; B. I. Tekayev, Lt. Colonel of State Security; and two local leaders, P. M. Fokin, head of the Crimea NKGB, and V. T. Sergjenko, Lt. General.[20] In order to execute this deportation, the NKVD secured 5,000 armed agents and the NKGB allocated a further 20,000 armed men, together with a few thousand regular soldiers.[42] Two of Stalin's directives from May 1944 reveal that many parts of the Soviet government, from financing to transit, were involved in executing the operation.[20]

On 14 July 1944 the GKO authorized the immigration of 51,000 people, mostly Russians, to 17,000 empty collective farms on Crimea. On 30 June 1945, the Crimean ASSR was abolished.[42]

Soviet propaganda sought to hide the population transfer by claiming that the Crimean Tatars had "voluntarily resettle[d] to Central Asia".[59] In essence, though, according to historian Paul Robert Magocsi, Crimea was "ethnically cleansed."[48] After this act, the term Crimean Tatar was banished from the Russian-Soviet lexicon, and all Crimean Tatar toponyms (names of towns, villages, and mountains) in Crimea were changed to Russian names on all maps as part of a wide detatarization campaign. Muslim graveyards and religious objects in Crimea were demolished or converted into secular places.[48] During Stalin's rule, nobody was allowed to mention that this ethnicity even existed in the USSR. This went so far that many individuals were even forbidden to declare themselves as Crimean Tatars during the Soviet censuses of 1959, 1970, and 1979. They could only declare themselves as Tatars. This ban was lifted during the Soviet census of 1989.[60]

Aftermath

Mortality and death toll

Mortality of deported Crimean Tatars according to NKVDs files[61]
Year Number of deceased
May 1944 – 1 January 1945 13,592
1 January 1945 – 1 January 1946 13,183

The first deportees started arriving in the Uzbek SSR on 29 May 1944 and most had arrived by 8 June 1944.[62] The consequent mortality rate remains disputed; the NKVD kept incomplete records of the death rate among the resettled ethnicities living in exile. Like the other deported peoples, the Crimean Tatars were placed under the regime of special settlements. Many of those deported performed forced labor:[31] their tasks included working in coal mines and construction battalions, under the supervision of the NKVD. Deserters were executed. Special settlers routinely worked eleven to twelve hours a day, seven days a week.[63] Despite this difficult physical labor, the Crimean Tatars were given only around 200 grams (7.1 oz)[64] to 400 grams (14 oz) of bread per day.[65] Accommodations were insufficient; some were forced to live in mud huts where "there were no doors or windows, nothing, just reeds" on the floor to sleep on.[66]

The sole transport to these remote areas and labour colonies was equally as strenuous. Theoretically, the NKVD loaded 50 people into each railroad car, together with their property. One witness claimed that 133 people were in her wagon.[67] They had only one hole in the floor of the wagon which was used as a toilet. Some pregnant women were forced to give birth inside these sealed-off railroad cars.[68] The conditions in the overcrowded train wagons were exacerbated by a lack of hygiene, leading to cases of typhus. Since the trains only stopped to open the doors at rare occasions during the trip, the sick inevitably contaminated others in the wagons. It was only when they arrived at their destination in the Uzbek SSR that the Crimean Tatars were released from the sealed-off railroad cars. Still, some were redirected to other destinations in Central Asia and had to continue their journey. Some witnesses claimed that they travelled for 24 consecutive days.[69] During this whole time, they were given very little food or water while trapped inside.[48] There was no fresh air since the doors and windows were bolted shut. In Kazakh SSR, the transport guards unlocked the door only to toss out the corpses along the railroad. The Crimean Tatars thus called these railcars "crematoria on wheels."[70] The records show that at least 7,889 Crimean Tatars died during this long journey, amounting to about 4 per cent of their entire ethnicity.[71]

We were forced to repair our own individual tents. We worked and we starved. Many were so weak from hunger that they could not stay on their feet.... Our men were at the front and there was no one who could bury the dead. Sometimes the bodies lay among us for several days.... Some Crimean Tatar children dug little graves and buried the unfortunate little ones.[72]
— anonymous Crimean Tatar woman, describing life in exile

The high mortality rate continued for several years in exile due to malnutrition, labor exploitation, diseases, lack of medical care, and exposure to the harsh desert climate of Uzbekistan. The exiles were frequently assigned to the heaviest construction sites. The Uzbek medical facilities filled with Crimean Tatars who were susceptible to the local Asian diseases not found on the Crimean peninsula where the water was purer, including yellow fever, dystrophy, malaria, and intestinal illness.[52] The death toll was the highest during the first five years. In 1949 the Soviet authorities counted the population of the deported ethnic groups who lived in special settlements. According to their records, there were 44,887 excess deaths in these five years, 19.6 per cent of that total group.[2][31] Other sources give a figure of 44,125 deaths during that time,[73] while a third source, using alternative NKVD archives, gives a figure of 32,107 deaths.[5] These reports included all the people resettled from Crimea (including Armenians, Bulgarians, and Greeks), but the Crimean Tatars formed a majority in this group. It took five years until the number of births among the deported people started to surpass the number of deaths. Soviet archives reveal that between May 1944 and January 1945 a total of 13,592 Crimean Tatars perished in exile, about 7 per cent of their entire population.[61] Almost half of all deaths (6,096) were of children under the age of 16; another 4,525 were adult women and 2,562 were adult men. During 1945, a further 13,183 people died.[61] Thus, by the end of December 1945, at least 27,000 Crimean Tatars had already died in exile.[74] One Crimean Tatar woman living near Tashkent recalled the events from 1944:

My parents were moved from Crimea to Uzbekistan in May 1944. My parents had sisters and brothers, but when they arrived in Uzbekistan, the only survivors were themselves. My parents' sisters and brothers and parents all died in transit because of catching bad colds and other diseases.... My mother was left completely alone and her first work was to cut trees.[75]

Estimates produced by Crimean Tatars indicate mortality figures that were far higher and amounted to 46% of their population living in exile.[7] In 1968, when Leonid Brezhnev presided over the USSR, Crimean Tatar activists were persecuted for using that high mortality figure under the guise that it was a "slander to the USSR." In order to show that Crimean Tatars were exaggerating, the KGB published figures showing that "only" 22 per cent of that ethnic group died.[7] The Karachay demographer Dalchat Ediev estimates that 34,300 Crimean Tatars died due to the deportation, representing an 18 per cent mortality rate.[2] Hannibal Travis estimates that overall 40,000–80,000 Crimean Tatars died in exile.[76] Professor Michael Rywkin gives a figure of at least 42,000 Crimean Tatars who died between 1944 and 1951, including 7,900 who died during the transit[4] Professor Brian Glyn Williams gives a figure of between 40,000 and 44,000 deaths as a consequence of this deportation.[3] The Crimean State Committee estimated that 45,000 Crimean Tatars died between 1944 and 1948. The official NKVD report estimated that 27 per cent of that ethnicity died.[5]

Various estimates of the mortality rates of the Crimean Tatars:

18%[2] 82%
Died in exile Survived in exile
27%[5] 73%
Died in exile Survived in exile
46%[7] 54%
Died in exile Survived in exile

Rehabilitation

 
A Crimean Tatar family in the 1960s during deportation after Soviet authorities refused to permit them to live in Crimea. Even after the "special-settlers" regime was lifted, Crimean Tatars were not allowed to live in Crimea without a residence permit

Stalin's government denied the Crimean Tatars the right to education or publication in their native language. Despite the prohibition, and although they had to study in Russian or Uzbek, they maintained their cultural identity. In 1956 the new Soviet leader, Nikita Khrushchev, held a speech in which he condemned Stalin's policies, including the mass deportations of various ethnicities. Still, even though many peoples were allowed to return to their homes, three groups were forced to stay in exile: the Soviet Germans, the Meskhetian Turks, and the Crimean Tatars.[77] In 1954, Khrushchev allowed Crimea to be included in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic since Crimea is linked by land to Ukraine and not with the Russian SFSR.[78] On 28 April 1956, the directive "On Removing Restrictions on the Special Settlement of the Crimean Tatars... Relocated during the Great Patriotic War" was issued, ordering a de-registration of the deportees and their release from administrative supervision. However, various other restrictions were still kept and the Crimean Tatars were not allowed to return to Crimea. Moreover, that same year the Ukrainian Council of Ministers banned the exiled Crimean Tatars, Greeks, Germans, Armenians and Bulgarians from relocating even to the Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Mykolaiv and Odesa Oblasts in the Ukrainian SSR.[79] The Crimean Tatars did not get any compensation for their lost property.[77]

In the 1950s, the Crimean Tatars started actively advocating for the right to return. In 1957, they collected 6,000 signatures in a petition that was sent to the Supreme Soviet that demanded their political rehabilitation and return to Crimea.[72] In 1961 25,000 signatures were collected in a petition that was sent to the Kremlin.[77]

Mustafa Dzhemilev, who was only six months old when his family was deported from Crimea, grew up in Uzbekistan and became an activist for the right of the Crimean Tatars to return. In 1966 he was arrested for the first time and spent a total of 17 years in prison during the Soviet era. This earned him the nickname of "Crimean Tatar Mandela."[80] In 1984 he was sentenced for the sixth time for "anti-Soviet activity" but was given moral support by the Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov, who had observed Dzhemilev's fourth trial in 1976.[81] When older dissidents were arrested, a new, younger generation emerged that would replace them.[77]

On 21 July 1967, representatives of the Crimean Tatars, led by the dissident Ayshe Seitmuratova, gained permission to meet with high-ranking Soviet officials in Moscow, including Yuri Andropov. During the meeting, the Crimean Tatars demanded a correction of all the injustices of the USSR against their people. In September 1967, the Supreme Soviet issued a decree that acknowledged the charge of treason against the entire nation was "unreasonable" but that did not allow Crimean Tatars the same full rehabilitation encompassing the right of return that other deported peoples were given. The carefully worded decree referred to them not as "Crimean Tatars" but as "citizens of Tatar nationality who having formerly lived in Crimea […] have taken root in the Uzbek SSR", thereby minimizing Crimean Tatar existence and downplaying their desire for the right of return in addition to creating a premise for claims of the issue being "settled".[82] Individuals united and formed groups that went back to Crimea in 1968 on their own, without state permission, but the Soviet authorities deported 6,000 of them once again.[83] The most notable example of such resistance was a Crimean Tatar activist, Musa Mamut, who was deported when he was 12 and who returned to Crimea because he wanted to see his home again. When the police informed him that he would be evicted, he set himself on fire.[83] Nevertheless, 577 families managed to obtain state permission to reside in Crimea.[84]

 
An empty Tatar home in Crimea, photographed in 1968

In 1968 unrest erupted among the Crimean Tatar people in the Uzbek city of Chirchiq.[85] In October 1973, the Jewish poet and professor Ilya Gabay committed suicide by jumping off a building in Moscow. He was one of the significant Jewish dissidents in the USSR who fought for the rights of the oppressed peoples, especially Crimean Tatars. Gabay had been arrested and sent to a labour camp but still insisted on his cause because he was convinced that the treatment of the Crimean Tatars by the USSR amounted to genocide.[86] In 1973, Dzhemilev was also arrested for his advocacy for Crimean Tatar right to return to Crimea.[87]

 
Amet-khan Sultan was a highly decorated Crimean Tatar flying ace who was twice awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. Amet-khan was one of the first people in the Soviet Union to publicly request the rehabilitation and right of return for the Crimean Tatars in 1956.[88][89]

Repatriation

Despite de-Stalinization, the situation didn't change until Gorbachev's perestroika in the late 1980s. A 1987 Tatar protest near the Kremlin[72] prompted Gorbachev to form the Gromyko Commission which found against Tatar claims, but a second commission recommended "renewal of autonomy" for Crimean Tatars.[90] In 1989 the ban on the return of deported ethnicities was declared officially null and void and the Supreme Council of Crimea further declared the deportations criminal,[55] paving the way for the Crimean Tatars to return. Dzhemilev returned to Crimea that year, with at least 166,000 other Tatars doing the same by January 1992.[91] The 1991 Russian law On the Rehabilitation of Repressed Peoples rehabilitated all Soviet repressed ethnicities and abolished all previous Russian laws relating to the deportations, calling for the "restoration and return of the cultural and spiritual values and archives which represent the heritage of the repressed people."[92]

By 2004 the Crimean Tatars formed 12 per cent of the population of Crimea.[93] The return was fraught: with Russian nationalist protests in Crimea and clashes between locals and Crimean Tatars near Yalta, which needed army intervention. Local Soviet authorities were reluctant to help returnees with jobs or housing,[94] After the dissolution of the USSR, Crimea was part of Ukraine, but Kyiv gave limited support to Crimean Tatar settlers. Some 150,000 of the returnees were granted citizenship automatically under Ukraine's Citizenship Law of 1991, but 100,000 who returned after Ukraine declared independence faced several obstacles including a costly bureaucratic process.[95]

Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation

In March 2014, the annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation unfolded, which was, in turn, declared illegal by the United Nations General Assembly (United Nations General Assembly Resolution 68/262) and which led to further deterioration of the rights of the Crimean Tatars. Even though the Russian Federation issued Decree No. 268 "On the Measures for the Rehabilitation of Armenian, Bulgarian, Greek, Crimean Tatar and German Peoples and the State Support of Their Revival and Development" on 21 April 2014,[96] in practice it has treated Crimean Tatars with far less care. The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights issued a warning against the Kremlin in 2016 because it "intimidated, harassed and jailed Crimean Tatar representatives, often on dubious charges",[43] while the representative body the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People was banned.[97]

 
An event commemorating the victims of the Crimean Tatar deportation in Kyiv in 2016
 
Mustafa Dzhemilev, a Crimean Tatar activist of the OKND faction, spent 17 years in jail for his advocacy

The UN reported that of the over 10,000 people left Crimea after the annexation in 2014, most were Crimean Tatars,[98] which caused a further decline of their fragile community. Crimean Tatars stated several reasons for their departure, among them insecurity, fear, and intimidation from the new Russian authorities.[99] In its 2015 report, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights warned that various human rights violations were recorded in Crimea, including the prevention of Crimean Tatars from marking the 71st anniversary of their deportation.[100]

Modern views and legacy

The KGB collaborators are furious that we are gathering statistical evidence about Crimean Tatars who perished in exile and that we are collecting materials against the sadist commandants who derided the people during the Stalin years and who, according to the precepts of the Nuremberg Tribunal, should be tried for crimes against humanity. As a result of the crime of 1944, I lost thousands upon thousands of my brothers and sisters. And this must be remembered! [101]
— Mustafa Dzhemilev, 1966

Historian Edward Allworth has noted that the extent of marginalization of the Crimean Tatars was a distinct anomaly among national policy in the USSR given the party's firm commitment maintaining the status quo of not recognizing them as a distinct ethnic group in addition to assimilating and "rooting" them in exile, in sharp contrast to the rehabilitation other deported ethnic groups such as the Chechens, Ingush, Karachays, Balkars, and Kalmyks experienced in the Khrushchev era.[102]

Between 1989 and 1994, around a quarter of a million Crimean Tatars returned to Crimea from exile in Central Asia. This was seen as a symbolic victory of their efforts to return to their native land.[103] They returned after 45 years of exile.[104]

Not one of the several ethnic groups who were deported during Stalin's era received any kind of financial compensation.[38] Some Crimean Tatar groups and activists have called for the international community to put pressure on the Russian Federation, the successor state of the USSR, to finance rehabilitation of that ethnicity and provide financial compensation for forcible resettlement.[105]

 
Symbol of the anniversary of deportation of the Crimean Tatars

Despite the thousands of Crimean Tatars in the Red Army when it attacked Berlin, the Crimean Tatars continued to be seen and treated as a fifth column for decades.[106][107] Some historians explain this as part of Stalin's plan to take complete control of Crimea. The Soviet sought access to the Dardanelles and control of territory in Turkey, where the Crimean Tatars had ethnic kin. By painting the Crimean Tatars as traitors, this taint could be extended to their kin.[108] Scholar Walter Kolarz alleges that the deportation and the attempt of liquidation of Crimean Tatars as an ethnicity in 1944 was just the final act of the centuries-long process of Russian colonization of Crimea that started in 1783.[13] Historian Gregory Dufaud regards the Soviet accusations against Crimean Tatars as a convenient excuse for their forcible transfer through which Moscow secured an unrivalled access to the geostrategic southern Black Sea on one hand and eliminated hypothetical rebellious nations at the same time.[107] Professor of Russian and Soviet history Rebecca Manley similarly concluded that the real aim of the Soviet government was to "cleanse" the border regions of "unreliable elements".[109] Professor Brian Glyn Williams states that the deportations of Meskhetian Turks, despite never being close to the scene of combat and never being charged with any crime, lends the strongest credence to the fact that the deportations of Crimeans and Caucasians was due to Soviet foreign policy rather than any real "universal mass crimes".[110]

Modern interpretations by scholars and historians sometimes classify this mass deportation of civilians as a crime against humanity,[111] ethnic cleansing,[112][103][48] depopulation,[113] an act of Stalinist repression,[114] or an "ethnocide", meaning a deliberate wiping out of an identity and culture of a nation.[115][107] Crimean Tatars call this event Sürgünlik ("exile").[116] The perception of Crimean Tatars as "uncivilized" and deserving the deportation remains throughout the Russian and Ukrainian settlers in Crimea.[117]

Genocide question and recognition

# Name Date of recognition Source
1   Ukraine 12 December 2015 [118]
2   Latvia 9 May 2019 [119][120]
3   Lithuania 6 June 2019 [121]
4   Canada 10 June 2019 [122][123]
The projection mapping in Kyiv in 2020 for the Day of Remembrance for the victims of the Crimean Tatar genocide

Some activists, politicians, scholars, countries, and historians go even further and consider the deportation a crime of genocide[124][125][126][127] or cultural genocide.[128] Norman Naimark writes "[t]he Chechens and Ingush, the Crimean Tatars, and other 'punished peoples' of the wartime period were, indeed, slated for elimination, if not physically, then as self-identifying nationalities."[129] Professor Lyman H. Legters argued that the Soviet penal system, combined with its resettlement policies, should count as genocidal since the sentences were borne most heavily specifically on certain ethnic groups, and that a relocation of these ethnic groups, whose survival depends on ties to its particular homeland, "had a genocidal effect remediable only by restoration of the group to its homeland."[127] Soviet dissidents Ilya Gabay[86] and Pyotr Grigorenko[130] both classified the event as a genocide. Historian Timothy Snyder included it in a list of Soviet policies that “meet the standard of genocide."[131] On 12 December 2015, the Ukrainian Parliament issued a resolution recognizing this event as genocide and established 18 May as the "Day of Remembrance for the victims of the Crimean Tatar genocide."[118] The parliament of Latvia recognized the event as an act of genocide on 9 May 2019.[119][120] The Parliament of Lithuania did the same on 6 June 2019.[121] Canadian Parliament passed a motion on June 10, 2019, recognizing the Crimean Tatar deportation of 1944 (Sürgünlik) as a genocide perpetrated by Soviet dictator Stalin, designating May 18 to be a day of remembrance.[122][123] On 26 April 1991 the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Socialist Federal Soviet Republic, under its chairman Boris Yeltsin, passed the law On the Rehabilitation of Repressed Peoples with Article 2 denouncing all mass deportations as "Stalin's policy of defamation and genocide."[132]

A minority dispute defining the event as genocide. According to Alexander Statiev, the Soviet deportations resulted in a "genocidal death rate", but Stalin did not have the intent to exterminate these peoples. He considers such deportations merely an example of Soviet assimilation of "unwanted nations."[133] According to Amir Weiner, the Soviet regime sought to eradicate "only" their "territorial identity".[134] Such views were criticized by Jon Chang as "gentrified racism" and historical revisionism. He noted that the deportations had been in fact based on ethnicity of victims.[135]

In popular culture

 
Jamala dedicated her 2016 Eurovision winning song "1944" to the deported Crimean Tatars

In 2008, Lily Hyde, a British journalist living in Ukraine, published a novel titled Dreamland that revolves around a Crimean Tatar family return to their homeland in the 1990s. The story is told from the perspective of a 12-year-old girl who moves from Uzbekistan to a demolished village with her parents, brother, and grandfather. Her grandfather tells her stories about the heroes and victims among the Crimean Tatars.[136]

The 2013 Ukrainian Crimean Tatar-language film Haytarma portrays the experience of Crimean Tatar flying ace and Hero of the Soviet Union Amet-khan Sultan during the 1944 deportations.[137]

In 2015 Christina Paschyn released the documentary film A Struggle for Home: The Crimean Tatars in a Ukrainian–Qatari co-production. It depicts the history of the Crimean Tatars from 1783 up until 2014, with a special emphasis on the 1944 mass deportation.[138]

At the Eurovision Song Contest 2016 in Stockholm, Sweden, the Ukrainian Crimean Tatar singer Jamala performed the song "1944", which refers to the deportation of the Crimean Tatars in the eponymous year. Jamala, an ethnic Crimean Tatar born in exile in Kyrgyzstan, dedicated the song to her deported great-grandmother. She became the first Crimean Tatar to perform at Eurovision and also the first to perform with a song with lyrics in the Crimean Tatar language. She went on to win the contest, becoming the second Ukrainian artist to win the event.[139]

See also

Comments

  1. ^ The RSFSR officially recognized the deportations of peoples by Stalin's government from their territories as acts of genocide.[8][9] Nevertheless, there are still some researchers who do not consider these deportations to be acts of genocide. For more information, see the section § Genocide question and recognition.
  2. ^ Or, according to other sources, 423,100.[10]
  3. ^ Besides the Crimean Tatars, these included the Volga Germans, Chechens, Ingush, Meskhetian Turks, Balkars, Karachays, Soviet Koreans, Kalmyks and Kurds.

Citations

  1. ^ Naimark 2010, pp. 2–14, 126, 135.
  2. ^ a b c d Buckley, Ruble & Hofmann (2008), p. 207
  3. ^ a b Williams 2015, p. 109.
  4. ^ a b c Rywkin 1994, p. 67.
  5. ^ a b c d Ukrainian Congress Committee of America 2004, pp. 43–44.
  6. ^ Hall 2014, p. 53.
  7. ^ a b c d Human Rights Watch 1991, p. 34.
  8. ^ Закон РСФСР от 26 апреля 1991 г. N 1107-I «О реабилитации репрессированных народов» (с изменениями и дополнениями) Article 2 "Репрессированными признаются народы (нации, народности или этнические группы и иные исторически сложившиеся культурно-этнические общности людей, например, казачество), в отношении которых по признакам национальной или иной принадлежности проводилась на государственном уровне политика клеветы и геноцида, сопровождавшаяся их насильственным переселением, упразднением национально-государственных образований, перекраиванием национально-территориальных границ, установлением режима террора и насилия в местах спецпоселения"
  9. ^ Закон «О реабилитации репрессированных народов» (1991) // РИА — 26.04.2016
  10. ^ Allworth 1988, p. 6.
  11. ^ Bezverkha 2017, p. 127.
  12. ^ Spring 2015, p. 228.
  13. ^ a b Potichnyj 1975, pp. 302–319.
  14. ^ Fisher 1987, pp. 356–371.
  15. ^ a b Tanner 2004, p. 22.
  16. ^ a b Vardys (1971), p. 101
  17. ^ a b Smele 2015, p. 302.
  18. ^ Olson, Pappas & Pappas 1994, p. 185.
  19. ^ Rosefielde 1997, pp. 321–331.
  20. ^ a b c d Parrish 1996, p. 104.
  21. ^ a b Williams (2015), p. 92
  22. ^ Burleigh 2001, p. 748.
  23. ^ Fisher 2014, pp. 151–152.
  24. ^ Williams (2001), p. 377
  25. ^ a b Fisher 2014, p. 157.
  26. ^ Drohobycky 1995, p. 73.
  27. ^ Fisher 2014, p. 160.
  28. ^ Fisher 2014, p. 156.
  29. ^ Williams (2001), p. 381
  30. ^ Allworth 1998, p. 177.
  31. ^ a b c Uehling 2004, p. 38.
  32. ^ Williams (2001), pp. 382–384
  33. ^ Журнал «Огонёк» № 45 - 46, 1944 г.
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  39. ^ Banerji, 23 October 2012
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  58. ^ a b Stronski 2010, pp. 132–133.
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  62. ^ Kamenetsky 1977, p. 244.
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  75. ^ Dadabaev 2015, p. 56.
  76. ^ Travis 2010, p. 334.
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  78. ^ Requejo & Nagel 2016, p. 179.
  79. ^ Bazhan 2015, p. 182.
  80. ^ Vardy, Tooley & Vardy 2003, p. 554.
  81. ^ Shabad, 11 March 1984
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  87. ^ Williams 2015, p. 129.
  88. ^ "95-ю годовщину дважды Героя Советского союза Амет-Хана Султана отметят в Крыму и в Дагестане". Информационный портал РИА "Дагестан". Retrieved 11 January 2021.
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  91. ^ Kamm, 8 February 1992
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  93. ^ BBC News, 18 May 2004
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  97. ^ Nechepurenko, 26 April 2016
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  102. ^ Allworth 1988, p. 173, 191-193.
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  104. ^ Williams (2001), p. 439
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  106. ^ Williams (2001), p. 384
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  108. ^ Skutsch 2013, p. 1188.
  109. ^ Manley 2012, p. 40.
  110. ^ Williams (2002), p. 386
  111. ^ Wezel 2016, p. 225.
  112. ^ Requejo & Nagel 2016, p. 180.
  113. ^ Polian 2004, p. 318.
  114. ^ Lee 2006, p. 27.
  115. ^ Williams (2002), pp. 357–373
  116. ^ Zeghidour 2014, pp. 83–91.
  117. ^ Crimea's sad Tatars. Economist Newspaper Limited. 2000.
  118. ^ a b Radio Free Europe, 21 January 2016
  119. ^ a b "Foreign Affairs Committee adopts a statement on the 75th anniversary of deportation of Crimean Tatars, recognising the event as genocide". Saeima. 24 April 2019. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
  120. ^ a b "Latvian Lawmakers Label 1944 Deportation Of Crimean Tatars As Act Of Genocide". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 9 May 2019. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
  121. ^ a b "Lithuanian parliament recognizes Soviet crimes against Crimean Tatars as genocide". The Baltic Times. 6 June 2019. Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  122. ^ a b "Borys Wrzesnewskyj". Facebook.
  123. ^ a b "Foreign Affairs Committee passes motion by Wrzesnewskyj on Crimean Tatar genocide".
  124. ^ Tatz & Higgins 2016, p. 28.
  125. ^ Uehling 2015, p. 3.
  126. ^ Blank 2015, p. 18.
  127. ^ a b Legters 1992, p. 104.
  128. ^ Allworth 1998, p. 197.
  129. ^ Naimark 2010, p. 126.
  130. ^ Allworth 1998, p. 216.
  131. ^ Snyder, Timothy (5 October 2010). "The fatal fact of the Nazi-Soviet pact". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  132. ^ Perovic, Jeronim (June 2018). Perovic, Jeronim (2018). From Conquest to Deportation: The North Caucasus under Russian Rule. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190934675. OCLC 1083957407. p. 320. ISBN 9780190934675.
  133. ^ Statiev 2010, pp. 243–264.
  134. ^ Weiner 2002, pp. 44–53.
  135. ^ Chang 2019, p. 270.
  136. ^ O'Neil, 1 August 2014
  137. ^ Grytsenko, 8 July 2013
  138. ^ International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, 2016
  139. ^ John, 13 May 2016

General and cited sources

Books

Online news reports

  • Banerji, Robin (23 October 2012). "Crimea's Tatars: A fragile revival". BBC News. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • Colborne, Michael (19 May 2016). "For Crimean Tatars, it is about much more than 1944". Al Jazeera. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • Grytsenko, Oksana (8 July 2013). "'Haytarma', the first Crimean Tatar movie, is a must-see for history enthusiasts". Kyiv Post. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  • John, Tara (13 May 2016). "The Dark History Behind Eurovision's Ukraine Entry". Time. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • Kamm, Henry (8 February 1992). "Chatal Khaya Journal; Crimean Tatars, Exiled by Stalin, Return Home". The New York Times.
  • Lillis, Joanna (2014). "Uzbekistan: Long Road to Exile for the Crimean Tatars". EurasiaNet. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • Nechepurenko, Ivan (26 April 2016). "Tatar Legislature Is Banned in Crimea". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • O'Neil, Lorena (1 August 2014). "Telling Crimea's Story Through Children's Books". npr.org. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • Shabad, Theodore (11 March 1984). "Crimean Tatar Sentenced to 6th Term of Detention". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • "Crimean Tatars recall mass exile". BBC News. 18 May 2004. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • "A Struggle for Home: The Crimean Tatars". International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam. 2016. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • "Ukraine's Parliament Recognizes 1944 'Genocide' Of Crimean Tatars". Radio Free Europe. 21 January 2016. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • "Crimea Tatars say leader banned by Russia from returning". Reuters. 22 April 2014. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • "The Ukrainian Quarterly, Volumes 60-61". Ukrainian Congress Committee of America. 2004. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • "Some 10,000 people in Ukraine now affected by displacement, UN agency says". UN News Centre. 20 May 2014. Retrieved 4 August 2017.

Journal articles

  • Bezverkha, Anastasia (2017). "Reinstating Social Borders between the Slavic Majority and the Tatar Population of Crimea: Media Representation of the Contested Memory of the Crimean Tatars' Deportation". Journal of Borderlands Studies. 32 (2): 127–139. doi:10.1080/08865655.2015.1066699. S2CID 148535821.
  • Blank, Stephen (2015). "A Double Dispossession: The Crimean Tatars After Russia's Ukrainian War". Genocide Studies and Prevention. 9 (1): 18–32. doi:10.5038/1911-9933.9.1.1271.
  • Chang, Jon K. (2019). "Ethnic Cleansing and Revisionist Russian and Soviet History". Academic Questions. 32 (2): 270. doi:10.1007/s12129-019-09791-8. S2CID 150711796.
  • Dufaud, Grégory (2007). "La déportation des Tatars de Crimée et leur vie en exil (1944-1956): Un ethnocide?". Vingtième Siècle. Revue d'Histoire (in French). 96 (1): 151–162. doi:10.3917/ving.096.0151. JSTOR 20475182.
  • Finnin, Rory (2011). "Forgetting Nothing, Forgetting No One: Boris Chichibabin, Viktor Nekipelov, and the Deportation of the Crimean Tatars". The Modern Language Review. 106 (4): 1091–1124. doi:10.5699/modelangrevi.106.4.1091. JSTOR 10.5699/modelangrevi.106.4.1091. S2CID 164399794.
  • Fisher, Alan W. (1987). "Emigration of Muslims from the Russian Empire in the Years After the Crimean War". Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas. 35 (3): 356–371. JSTOR 41047947.
  • Hirsch, Francine (2002). "Race without the Practice of Racial Politics". Slavic Review. 61 (1): 30–43. doi:10.2307/2696979. JSTOR 2696979. S2CID 147121638.
  • Potichnyj, Peter J. (1975). "The Struggle of the Crimean Tatars". Canadian Slavonic Papers. 17 (2–3): 302–319. doi:10.1080/00085006.1975.11091411. JSTOR 40866872.
  • Rosefielde, Steven (1997). "Documented homicides and excess deaths: New insights into the scale of killing in the USSR during the 1930s". Communist and Post-Communist Studies. 30 (3): 321–31. doi:10.1016/S0967-067X(97)00011-1. PMID 12295079.
  • Statiev, Alexandar (2010). "Soviet ethnic deportations: intent versus outcome". Journal of Genocide Research. 11 (2–3): 243–264. doi:10.1080/14623520903118961. S2CID 71905569.
  • Uehling, Greta (2002). "Sitting on Suitcases: Ambivalence and Ambiguity in the Migration Intentions of Crimean Tatar Women". Journal of Refugee Studies. 15 (4): 388–408. doi:10.1093/jrs/15.4.388.
  • Uehling, Greta (2015). "Genocide's Aftermath: Neostalinism in Contemporary Crimea". Genocide Studies and Prevention. 9 (1): 3–17. doi:10.5038/1911-9933.9.1.1273.
  • Vardys, V. Stanley (1971). "The Case of the Crimean Tatars". The Russian Review. 30 (2): 101–110. doi:10.2307/127890. JSTOR 127890.
  • Weiner, Amir (2002). "Nothing but Certainty". Slavic Review. 61 (1): 44–53. doi:10.2307/2696980. JSTOR 2696980. S2CID 159548222.
  • Williams, Brian Glyn (2002). "Hidden ethnocide in the Soviet Muslim borderlands: The ethnic cleansing of the Crimean Tatars". Journal of Genocide Research. 4 (3): 357–373. doi:10.1080/14623520220151952. S2CID 72722630.
  • Williams, Brian Glyn (2002). "The Hidden Ethnic Cleansing of Muslims in the Soviet Union: The Exile and Repatriation of the Crimean Tatars". Journal of Contemporary History. 37 (3): 323–347. doi:10.1177/00220094020370030101. JSTOR 3180785. S2CID 220874696.
  • Zeghidour, Sliman (2014). "Le désert des Tatars". Médium (in French). 40 (3): 83. doi:10.3917/mediu.040.0083.

International and NGO sources

  • Prokopchuk, Natasha (8 June 2005). Vivian Tan (ed.). "Helping Crimean Tatars feel at home again". UNHCR. Retrieved 5 September 2017.
  • Amnesty International (1973). "A Chronicle of Current Events - Journal of the Human Rights Movement in the USSR" (PDF).
  • Human Rights Watch (1991). "Punished Peoples" of the Soviet Union: The Continuing Legacy of Stalin's Deportations" (PDF). New York City. LCCN 91076226.
  • Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (2015). "Report on the human rights situation in Ukraine" (PDF). Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (2014). "Report of the Special Rapporteur on minority issues, Rita Izsák - Addendum - Mission to Ukraine" (PDF). Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  • Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (2016). Rupert Colville (ed.). "Press briefing notes on Crimean Tatars". Geneva. Retrieved 4 August 2017.

External links

  •   Media related to Deportation of the Crimean Tatars at Wikimedia Commons

deportation, crimean, tatars, deportation, crimean, tatars, crimean, tatar, qırımtatar, halqınıñ, sürgünligi, cyrillic, Къырымтатар, халкъынынъ, сюргюнлиги, sürgünlik, exile, ethnic, cleansing, cultural, genocide, least, crimean, tatars, carried, soviet, autho. The deportation of the Crimean Tatars Crimean Tatar Qirimtatar halqinin surgunligi Cyrillic Kyrymtatar halkynyn syurgyunligi or the Surgunlik exile was the ethnic cleansing and cultural genocide c 1 of at least 191 044 c 2 Crimean Tatars carried out by the Soviet authorities from 18 to 20 May 1944 which was supervised by Lavrentiy Beria head of Soviet state security and the secret police and which was ordered by the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin Within those three days the NKVD used cattle trains to deport mostly women children and the elderly even Communist Party members and Red Army members to mostly the Uzbek SSR several thousand kilometres away They were one of the several ethnicities who were subjected to Stalin s policy of population transfer in the Soviet Union Deportation of the Crimean TatarsPart of Forced population transfer in the Soviet Union and World War IILeft to right top to bottom Memorial to the deportation in Eupatoria candle lighting ceremony in Kyiv memorial rally in Taras Shevchenko park cattlecar similar to the type used in the deportation maps comparing the demographics of Crimea in 1939 and 2001 LocationCrimean PeninsulaDate18 20 May 1944TargetCrimean TatarsAttack typeForced population transfer ethnic cleansing genocide 1 VictimsSeveral estimatesa 34 000 2 b 40 000 44 000 3 c 42 000 4 d 45 000 5 e 109 956 6 between 18 and 46 percent of their total population 7 PerpetratorsNKVD the Soviet secret policeThe deportation was officially presented as collective punishment for the claimed collaboration of some Crimean Tatars with Nazi Germany 11 but modern experts say that the deportation was part of the Soviet plan to gain access to the Dardanelles and acquire territory in Turkey where the Tatars had Turkic ethnic kin or to remove minorities from the Soviet Union s border regions Nearly 8 000 Crimean Tatars died during the deportation and tens of thousands perished subsequently due to the harsh exile conditions 4 The Crimean Tatar deportation resulted in the abandonment of 80 000 households and 360 000 acres of land An intense campaign of detatarization followed to try to erase the remaining traces of Crimean Tatar existence In 1956 the new Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev condemned Stalin s policies including the deportation of various ethnic groups but did not lift the directive forbidding the return of the Crimean Tatars despite allowing most other deported peoples to return The Crimean Tatars remained in Central Asia for several more decades until the perestroika era in the late 1980s when 260 000 Crimean Tatars returned to Crimea Their exile had lasted 45 years The ban on their return was officially declared null and void when the Supreme Council of Crimea declared on 14 November 1989 that the deportations had been a crime By 2004 the number of Crimean Tatars who had returned to Crimea had increased their share of the peninsula s population to 12 percent The Soviet authorities had neither assisted their return nor compensated them for the land they lost Neither Ukraine nor the Russian Federation provided reparations compensated those deported for lost property or filed legal proceedings against the perpetrators of the forced resettlement The deportation and subsequent assimilation efforts in Asia represent a crucial period in the history of the Crimean Tatars Between 2015 and 2019 the deportation was formally recognized as genocide by Ukraine Lithuania Latvia and Canada Contents 1 Background 1 1 World War II 1 2 Falsification of information in media 2 Deportation 3 Aftermath 3 1 Mortality and death toll 3 2 Rehabilitation 3 3 Repatriation 3 4 Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation 4 Modern views and legacy 4 1 Genocide question and recognition 4 2 In popular culture 5 See also 6 Comments 7 Citations 8 General and cited sources 8 1 Books 8 2 Online news reports 8 3 Journal articles 8 4 International and NGO sources 9 External linksBackground EditMain article History of Crimea Crimea highlighted on a map of the Black Sea The Crimean Tatars controlled the Crimean Khanate from 1441 to 1783 when Crimea was annexed by the Russian Empire as a target of Russian expansion By the 14th century most of the Turkic speaking population of Crimea had adopted Islam following the conversion of Ozbeg Khan of the Golden Horde It was the longest surviving state of the Golden Horde 12 They often engaged in conflicts with Moscow from 1468 until the 17th century Crimean Tatars were averse to the newly established Russian rule Thus Crimean Tatars began leaving Crimea in several waves of emigration Between 1784 and 1790 out of a total population of about a million around 300 000 Crimean Tatars left for the Ottoman Empire 13 The Crimean War triggered another mass exodus of Crimean Tatars Between 1855 and 1866 at least 500 000 Muslims and possibly up to 900 000 left the Russian Empire and emigrated to the Ottoman Empire Out of that number at least one third were from Crimea while the rest were from the Caucasus These emigrants comprised 15 23 percent of the total population of Crimea The Russian Empire used that fact as the ideological foundation to further Russify New Russia 14 Eventually the Crimean Tatars became a minority in Crimea in 1783 they comprised 98 per cent of the population 15 but by 1897 this was down to 34 1 per cent 16 While Crimean Tatars were emigrating the Russian government encouraged Russification of the peninsula populating it with Russians Ukrainians and other Slavic ethnic groups this Russification continued during the Soviet era 16 Corpses of victims of the winter 1918 Red Terror in Evpatoria Crimea After the 1917 October Revolution Crimea received autonomous status inside the USSR on 18 October 1921 17 but collectivization in the 1920s led to severe famine from which up to 100 000 Crimeans perished when their crops were transported to more important regions of the Soviet Union 18 By one estimate three quarters of the famine victims were Crimean Tatars 17 Their status deteriorated further after Joseph Stalin became the Soviet leader and implemented repressions that led to the deaths of at least 5 2 million Soviet citizens between 1927 and 1938 19 World War II Edit In 1940 the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic had approximately 1 126 800 inhabitants of which 218 000 people or 19 4 percent of the population were Crimean Tatars 20 In 1941 Nazi Germany invaded Eastern Europe annexing much of the western USSR Crimean Tatars initially viewed the Germans as liberators from Stalinism and they had also been positively treated by the Germans in World War I 21 Many of the captured Crimean Tatars serving in the Red Army were sent to POW camps after Romanians and Nazis came to occupy the bulk of Crimea Though Nazis initially called for murder of all Asiatic inferiors and paraded around Crimean Tatar POW s labeled as Mongol sub humanity 22 23 they revised this policy in the face of determined resistance from the Red Army Beginning in 1942 Germans recruited Soviet prisoners of war to form support armies 24 The Dobrujan Tatar nationalist Fazil Ulkusal and Lipka Tatar Edige Kirimal helped in freeing Crimean Tatars from German prisoner of war camps and enlisting them in the independent Crimean support legion for the Wehrmacht This legion eventually included eight battalions although many members were of other nationalities 21 From November 1941 German authorities allowed Crimean Tatars to establish Muslim Committees in various towns as a symbolic recognition of some local government authority though they were not given any political power 25 Number of Crimean Tatars in Crimea 26 15 Year Number Percentage1783 500 000 98 1897 186 212 34 1 1939 218 879 19 4 1959 1979 5 422 0 3 1989 38 365 1 6 Many Crimean Tatar communists strongly opposed the occupation and assisted the resistance movement to provide valuable strategic and political information 25 Other Crimean Tatars also fought on the side of the Soviet partisans like the Tarhanov movement of 250 Crimean Tatars which fought throughout 1942 until its destruction 27 Six Crimean Tatars were even named the Heroes of the Soviet Union and thousands more were awarded high honors in the Red Army Up to 130 000 people died during the Axis occupation of Crimea 28 The Nazis implemented a brutal repression destroying more than 70 villages that were together home to about 25 per cent of the Crimean Tatar population Thousands of Crimean Tatars were forcibly transferred to work as Ostarbeiter in German factories under the supervision of the Gestapo in what were described as vast slave workshops resulting in loss of all Crimean Tatar support 29 In April 1944 the Red Army managed to repel the Axis forces from the peninsula in the Crimean Offensive 30 A majority of the hiwis helpers their families and all those associated with the Muslim Committees were evacuated to Germany and Hungary or Dobruja by the Wehrmacht and Romanian Army where they joined the Eastern Turkic division Thus the majority of the collaborators had been evacuated from Crimea by the retreating Wehrmacht 31 Many Soviet officials had also recognized this and rejected claims that the Crimean Tatars had betrayed the Soviet Union en masse The presence of Muslim Committees organized from Berlin by various Turkic foreigners appeared a cause for concern in the eyes of the Soviet government already wary of Turkey at the time 32 Falsification of information in media Edit Soviet publications blatantly falsified information about Crimean Tatars in the Red Army going so far as to describe Crimean Tatar Hero of the Soviet Union Uzeir Abduramanov as Azeri not Crimean Tatar on the cover of a 1944 issue of Ogonyok magazine even though his family had been deported for being Crimean Tatar just a few months earlier 33 34 The book In the Mountains of Tavria falsely claimed that volunteer partisan scout Bekir Osmanov was a German spy and shot although the central committee later acknowledged that he never served the Germans and survived the war ordering later editions to have corrections after still living Osmanov and his family noticed the obvious falsehood 35 Amet khan Sultan born to a Crimean Tatar mother and Lak father in Crimea where he was born and raised was often described as a Dagestani in post deportation media even though he always considered himself a Crimean Tatar 36 Deportation EditMain article Soviet deportations We were told that we were being evicted and we had 15 minutes to get ready to leave We boarded boxcars there were 60 people in each but no one knew where we were being taken to To be shot Hanged Tears and panic were taking over 37 Saiid who was deported with his family from Yevpatoria when he was 10 Chronology of the ethnic makeup of Crimea The sharp drop of the Crimean Tatars is visible after the deportation Crimean TatarsOfficially due to the collaboration with the Axis Powers during World War II the Soviet government collectively punished ten ethnic minorities c 3 38 among them the Crimean Tatars 39 Punishment included deportation to distant regions of Central Asia and Siberia 38 Soviet accounts of the late 1940s indict the Crimean Tatars as an ethnicity of traitors Although the Crimean Tatars denied that they had committed treason this idea was widely accepted during the Soviet period and persists in the Russian scholarly and popular literature 40 On 10 May 1944 Lavrentiy Beria recommended to Stalin that the Crimean Tatars should be deported away from the border regions due to their traitorous actions 41 Stalin subsequently issued GKO Order No 5859ss which envisaged the resettlement of the Crimean Tatars 42 The deportation lasted only three days 43 18 20 May 1944 during which NKVD agents went house to house collecting Crimean Tatars at gunpoint and forcing them to enter sealed off 44 cattle trains that would transfer them almost 3 200 kilometres 2 000 mi 45 to remote locations in the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic The Crimean Tatars were allowed to carry up to 500 kg of their property per family 46 The only ones who could avoid this fate were Crimean Tatar women who were married to men of non punished ethnic groups 47 The exiled Crimean Tatars travelled in overcrowded wagons for several weeks and lacked food and water 48 It is estimated that at least 228 392 people were deported from Crimea of which at least 191 044 were Crimean Tatars 49 in 47 000 families 50 Since 7 889 people perished in the long transit in sealed off railcars the NKVD registered the 183 155 living Crimean Tatars who arrived at their destinations in Central Asia 51 The majority of the deportees were rounded up from the Crimean countryside Only 18 983 of the exiles were from Crimean cities 52 On 4 July 1944 the NKVD officially informed Stalin that the resettlement was complete 53 However not long after that report the NKVD found out that one of its units had forgotten to deport people from the Arabat Spit Instead of preparing an additional transfer in trains on 20 July the NKVD boarded hundreds of Crimean Tatars onto an old boat took it to the middle of the Azov Sea and sank the ship Those who did not drown were finished off by machine guns 47 Uzbekistan the main destination of the deported Officially Crimean Tatars were eliminated from Crimea The deportation encompassed every person considered by the government to be Crimean Tatar including children women and the elderly and even those who had been members of the Communist Party or the Red Army As such they were legally designated as special settlers which meant that they were officially second class citizens prohibited from leaving the perimeter of their assigned area attending prestigious universities and had to regularly appear before the commandant s office 54 During this mass eviction the Soviet authorities confiscated around 80 000 houses 500 000 cattle 360 000 acres of land and 40 000 tons of agricultural provisions 55 Besides 191 000 deported Crimean Tatars the Soviet authorities also evicted 9 620 Armenians 12 420 Bulgarians and 15 040 Greeks from the peninsula All were collectively branded as traitors and became second class citizens for decades in the USSR 55 Among the deported there were also 283 persons of other ethnicities Italians Romanians Karaims Kurds Czechs Hungarians and Croats 56 During 1947 and 1948 a further 2 012 veteran returnees were deported from Crimea by the local MVD 20 In total 151 136 Crimean Tatars were deported to the Uzbek SSR 8 597 to the Mari Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic and 4 286 to the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic and the remaining 29 846 were sent to various remote regions of the Russian SFSR 57 When the Crimean Tatars arrived at their destination in the Uzbek SSR they were met with hostility by Uzbek locals who threw stones at them even their children because they heard that the Crimean Tatars were traitors and fascist collaborators 58 The Uzbeks objected to becoming the dumping ground for treasonous nations In the coming years several assaults against the Crimean Tatars population were registered some of which were fatal 58 Lavrentiy Beria the chief of the Soviet NKVD The mass Crimean deportations were organized by Lavrentiy Beria the chief of the Soviet secret police the NKVD and his subordinates Bogdan Kobulov Ivan Serov B P Obruchnikov M G Svinelupov and A N Apolonov The field operations were conducted by G P Dobrynin the Deputy Head of the Gulag system G A Bezhanov the Colonel of State Security I I Piiashev Major General S A Klepov Commissar of State Security I S Sheredega Lt General B I Tekayev Lt Colonel of State Security and two local leaders P M Fokin head of the Crimea NKGB and V T Sergjenko Lt General 20 In order to execute this deportation the NKVD secured 5 000 armed agents and the NKGB allocated a further 20 000 armed men together with a few thousand regular soldiers 42 Two of Stalin s directives from May 1944 reveal that many parts of the Soviet government from financing to transit were involved in executing the operation 20 On 14 July 1944 the GKO authorized the immigration of 51 000 people mostly Russians to 17 000 empty collective farms on Crimea On 30 June 1945 the Crimean ASSR was abolished 42 Soviet propaganda sought to hide the population transfer by claiming that the Crimean Tatars had voluntarily resettle d to Central Asia 59 In essence though according to historian Paul Robert Magocsi Crimea was ethnically cleansed 48 After this act the term Crimean Tatar was banished from the Russian Soviet lexicon and all Crimean Tatar toponyms names of towns villages and mountains in Crimea were changed to Russian names on all maps as part of a wide detatarization campaign Muslim graveyards and religious objects in Crimea were demolished or converted into secular places 48 During Stalin s rule nobody was allowed to mention that this ethnicity even existed in the USSR This went so far that many individuals were even forbidden to declare themselves as Crimean Tatars during the Soviet censuses of 1959 1970 and 1979 They could only declare themselves as Tatars This ban was lifted during the Soviet census of 1989 60 Aftermath EditMortality and death toll Edit Mortality of deported Crimean Tatars according to NKVDs files 61 Year Number of deceasedMay 1944 1 January 1945 13 5921 January 1945 1 January 1946 13 183The first deportees started arriving in the Uzbek SSR on 29 May 1944 and most had arrived by 8 June 1944 62 The consequent mortality rate remains disputed the NKVD kept incomplete records of the death rate among the resettled ethnicities living in exile Like the other deported peoples the Crimean Tatars were placed under the regime of special settlements Many of those deported performed forced labor 31 their tasks included working in coal mines and construction battalions under the supervision of the NKVD Deserters were executed Special settlers routinely worked eleven to twelve hours a day seven days a week 63 Despite this difficult physical labor the Crimean Tatars were given only around 200 grams 7 1 oz 64 to 400 grams 14 oz of bread per day 65 Accommodations were insufficient some were forced to live in mud huts where there were no doors or windows nothing just reeds on the floor to sleep on 66 The sole transport to these remote areas and labour colonies was equally as strenuous Theoretically the NKVD loaded 50 people into each railroad car together with their property One witness claimed that 133 people were in her wagon 67 They had only one hole in the floor of the wagon which was used as a toilet Some pregnant women were forced to give birth inside these sealed off railroad cars 68 The conditions in the overcrowded train wagons were exacerbated by a lack of hygiene leading to cases of typhus Since the trains only stopped to open the doors at rare occasions during the trip the sick inevitably contaminated others in the wagons It was only when they arrived at their destination in the Uzbek SSR that the Crimean Tatars were released from the sealed off railroad cars Still some were redirected to other destinations in Central Asia and had to continue their journey Some witnesses claimed that they travelled for 24 consecutive days 69 During this whole time they were given very little food or water while trapped inside 48 There was no fresh air since the doors and windows were bolted shut In Kazakh SSR the transport guards unlocked the door only to toss out the corpses along the railroad The Crimean Tatars thus called these railcars crematoria on wheels 70 The records show that at least 7 889 Crimean Tatars died during this long journey amounting to about 4 per cent of their entire ethnicity 71 We were forced to repair our own individual tents We worked and we starved Many were so weak from hunger that they could not stay on their feet Our men were at the front and there was no one who could bury the dead Sometimes the bodies lay among us for several days Some Crimean Tatar children dug little graves and buried the unfortunate little ones 72 anonymous Crimean Tatar woman describing life in exileThe high mortality rate continued for several years in exile due to malnutrition labor exploitation diseases lack of medical care and exposure to the harsh desert climate of Uzbekistan The exiles were frequently assigned to the heaviest construction sites The Uzbek medical facilities filled with Crimean Tatars who were susceptible to the local Asian diseases not found on the Crimean peninsula where the water was purer including yellow fever dystrophy malaria and intestinal illness 52 The death toll was the highest during the first five years In 1949 the Soviet authorities counted the population of the deported ethnic groups who lived in special settlements According to their records there were 44 887 excess deaths in these five years 19 6 per cent of that total group 2 31 Other sources give a figure of 44 125 deaths during that time 73 while a third source using alternative NKVD archives gives a figure of 32 107 deaths 5 These reports included all the people resettled from Crimea including Armenians Bulgarians and Greeks but the Crimean Tatars formed a majority in this group It took five years until the number of births among the deported people started to surpass the number of deaths Soviet archives reveal that between May 1944 and January 1945 a total of 13 592 Crimean Tatars perished in exile about 7 per cent of their entire population 61 Almost half of all deaths 6 096 were of children under the age of 16 another 4 525 were adult women and 2 562 were adult men During 1945 a further 13 183 people died 61 Thus by the end of December 1945 at least 27 000 Crimean Tatars had already died in exile 74 One Crimean Tatar woman living near Tashkent recalled the events from 1944 My parents were moved from Crimea to Uzbekistan in May 1944 My parents had sisters and brothers but when they arrived in Uzbekistan the only survivors were themselves My parents sisters and brothers and parents all died in transit because of catching bad colds and other diseases My mother was left completely alone and her first work was to cut trees 75 Estimates produced by Crimean Tatars indicate mortality figures that were far higher and amounted to 46 of their population living in exile 7 In 1968 when Leonid Brezhnev presided over the USSR Crimean Tatar activists were persecuted for using that high mortality figure under the guise that it was a slander to the USSR In order to show that Crimean Tatars were exaggerating the KGB published figures showing that only 22 per cent of that ethnic group died 7 The Karachay demographer Dalchat Ediev estimates that 34 300 Crimean Tatars died due to the deportation representing an 18 per cent mortality rate 2 Hannibal Travis estimates that overall 40 000 80 000 Crimean Tatars died in exile 76 Professor Michael Rywkin gives a figure of at least 42 000 Crimean Tatars who died between 1944 and 1951 including 7 900 who died during the transit 4 Professor Brian Glyn Williams gives a figure of between 40 000 and 44 000 deaths as a consequence of this deportation 3 The Crimean State Committee estimated that 45 000 Crimean Tatars died between 1944 and 1948 The official NKVD report estimated that 27 per cent of that ethnicity died 5 Various estimates of the mortality rates of the Crimean Tatars 18 2 82 Died in exile Survived in exile27 5 73 Died in exile Survived in exile46 7 54 Died in exile Survived in exileRehabilitation Edit A Crimean Tatar family in the 1960s during deportation after Soviet authorities refused to permit them to live in Crimea Even after the special settlers regime was lifted Crimean Tatars were not allowed to live in Crimea without a residence permit Stalin s government denied the Crimean Tatars the right to education or publication in their native language Despite the prohibition and although they had to study in Russian or Uzbek they maintained their cultural identity In 1956 the new Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev held a speech in which he condemned Stalin s policies including the mass deportations of various ethnicities Still even though many peoples were allowed to return to their homes three groups were forced to stay in exile the Soviet Germans the Meskhetian Turks and the Crimean Tatars 77 In 1954 Khrushchev allowed Crimea to be included in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic since Crimea is linked by land to Ukraine and not with the Russian SFSR 78 On 28 April 1956 the directive On Removing Restrictions on the Special Settlement of the Crimean Tatars Relocated during the Great Patriotic War was issued ordering a de registration of the deportees and their release from administrative supervision However various other restrictions were still kept and the Crimean Tatars were not allowed to return to Crimea Moreover that same year the Ukrainian Council of Ministers banned the exiled Crimean Tatars Greeks Germans Armenians and Bulgarians from relocating even to the Kherson Zaporizhzhia Mykolaiv and Odesa Oblasts in the Ukrainian SSR 79 The Crimean Tatars did not get any compensation for their lost property 77 In the 1950s the Crimean Tatars started actively advocating for the right to return In 1957 they collected 6 000 signatures in a petition that was sent to the Supreme Soviet that demanded their political rehabilitation and return to Crimea 72 In 1961 25 000 signatures were collected in a petition that was sent to the Kremlin 77 Mustafa Dzhemilev who was only six months old when his family was deported from Crimea grew up in Uzbekistan and became an activist for the right of the Crimean Tatars to return In 1966 he was arrested for the first time and spent a total of 17 years in prison during the Soviet era This earned him the nickname of Crimean Tatar Mandela 80 In 1984 he was sentenced for the sixth time for anti Soviet activity but was given moral support by the Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov who had observed Dzhemilev s fourth trial in 1976 81 When older dissidents were arrested a new younger generation emerged that would replace them 77 On 21 July 1967 representatives of the Crimean Tatars led by the dissident Ayshe Seitmuratova gained permission to meet with high ranking Soviet officials in Moscow including Yuri Andropov During the meeting the Crimean Tatars demanded a correction of all the injustices of the USSR against their people In September 1967 the Supreme Soviet issued a decree that acknowledged the charge of treason against the entire nation was unreasonable but that did not allow Crimean Tatars the same full rehabilitation encompassing the right of return that other deported peoples were given The carefully worded decree referred to them not as Crimean Tatars but as citizens of Tatar nationality who having formerly lived in Crimea have taken root in the Uzbek SSR thereby minimizing Crimean Tatar existence and downplaying their desire for the right of return in addition to creating a premise for claims of the issue being settled 82 Individuals united and formed groups that went back to Crimea in 1968 on their own without state permission but the Soviet authorities deported 6 000 of them once again 83 The most notable example of such resistance was a Crimean Tatar activist Musa Mamut who was deported when he was 12 and who returned to Crimea because he wanted to see his home again When the police informed him that he would be evicted he set himself on fire 83 Nevertheless 577 families managed to obtain state permission to reside in Crimea 84 An empty Tatar home in Crimea photographed in 1968 In 1968 unrest erupted among the Crimean Tatar people in the Uzbek city of Chirchiq 85 In October 1973 the Jewish poet and professor Ilya Gabay committed suicide by jumping off a building in Moscow He was one of the significant Jewish dissidents in the USSR who fought for the rights of the oppressed peoples especially Crimean Tatars Gabay had been arrested and sent to a labour camp but still insisted on his cause because he was convinced that the treatment of the Crimean Tatars by the USSR amounted to genocide 86 In 1973 Dzhemilev was also arrested for his advocacy for Crimean Tatar right to return to Crimea 87 Amet khan Sultan was a highly decorated Crimean Tatar flying ace who was twice awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union Amet khan was one of the first people in the Soviet Union to publicly request the rehabilitation and right of return for the Crimean Tatars in 1956 88 89 Repatriation Edit Main article Crimean Tatar repatriation Despite de Stalinization the situation didn t change until Gorbachev s perestroika in the late 1980s A 1987 Tatar protest near the Kremlin 72 prompted Gorbachev to form the Gromyko Commission which found against Tatar claims but a second commission recommended renewal of autonomy for Crimean Tatars 90 In 1989 the ban on the return of deported ethnicities was declared officially null and void and the Supreme Council of Crimea further declared the deportations criminal 55 paving the way for the Crimean Tatars to return Dzhemilev returned to Crimea that year with at least 166 000 other Tatars doing the same by January 1992 91 The 1991 Russian law On the Rehabilitation of Repressed Peoples rehabilitated all Soviet repressed ethnicities and abolished all previous Russian laws relating to the deportations calling for the restoration and return of the cultural and spiritual values and archives which represent the heritage of the repressed people 92 By 2004 the Crimean Tatars formed 12 per cent of the population of Crimea 93 The return was fraught with Russian nationalist protests in Crimea and clashes between locals and Crimean Tatars near Yalta which needed army intervention Local Soviet authorities were reluctant to help returnees with jobs or housing 94 After the dissolution of the USSR Crimea was part of Ukraine but Kyiv gave limited support to Crimean Tatar settlers Some 150 000 of the returnees were granted citizenship automatically under Ukraine s Citizenship Law of 1991 but 100 000 who returned after Ukraine declared independence faced several obstacles including a costly bureaucratic process 95 Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation Edit In March 2014 the annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation unfolded which was in turn declared illegal by the United Nations General Assembly United Nations General Assembly Resolution 68 262 and which led to further deterioration of the rights of the Crimean Tatars Even though the Russian Federation issued Decree No 268 On the Measures for the Rehabilitation of Armenian Bulgarian Greek Crimean Tatar and German Peoples and the State Support of Their Revival and Development on 21 April 2014 96 in practice it has treated Crimean Tatars with far less care The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights issued a warning against the Kremlin in 2016 because it intimidated harassed and jailed Crimean Tatar representatives often on dubious charges 43 while the representative body the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People was banned 97 An event commemorating the victims of the Crimean Tatar deportation in Kyiv in 2016 Mustafa Dzhemilev a Crimean Tatar activist of the OKND faction spent 17 years in jail for his advocacyThe UN reported that of the over 10 000 people left Crimea after the annexation in 2014 most were Crimean Tatars 98 which caused a further decline of their fragile community Crimean Tatars stated several reasons for their departure among them insecurity fear and intimidation from the new Russian authorities 99 In its 2015 report the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights warned that various human rights violations were recorded in Crimea including the prevention of Crimean Tatars from marking the 71st anniversary of their deportation 100 Modern views and legacy EditThe KGB collaborators are furious that we are gathering statistical evidence about Crimean Tatars who perished in exile and that we are collecting materials against the sadist commandants who derided the people during the Stalin years and who according to the precepts of the Nuremberg Tribunal should be tried for crimes against humanity As a result of the crime of 1944 I lost thousands upon thousands of my brothers and sisters And this must be remembered 101 Mustafa Dzhemilev 1966Historian Edward Allworth has noted that the extent of marginalization of the Crimean Tatars was a distinct anomaly among national policy in the USSR given the party s firm commitment maintaining the status quo of not recognizing them as a distinct ethnic group in addition to assimilating and rooting them in exile in sharp contrast to the rehabilitation other deported ethnic groups such as the Chechens Ingush Karachays Balkars and Kalmyks experienced in the Khrushchev era 102 Between 1989 and 1994 around a quarter of a million Crimean Tatars returned to Crimea from exile in Central Asia This was seen as a symbolic victory of their efforts to return to their native land 103 They returned after 45 years of exile 104 Not one of the several ethnic groups who were deported during Stalin s era received any kind of financial compensation 38 Some Crimean Tatar groups and activists have called for the international community to put pressure on the Russian Federation the successor state of the USSR to finance rehabilitation of that ethnicity and provide financial compensation for forcible resettlement 105 Symbol of the anniversary of deportation of the Crimean Tatars Despite the thousands of Crimean Tatars in the Red Army when it attacked Berlin the Crimean Tatars continued to be seen and treated as a fifth column for decades 106 107 Some historians explain this as part of Stalin s plan to take complete control of Crimea The Soviet sought access to the Dardanelles and control of territory in Turkey where the Crimean Tatars had ethnic kin By painting the Crimean Tatars as traitors this taint could be extended to their kin 108 Scholar Walter Kolarz alleges that the deportation and the attempt of liquidation of Crimean Tatars as an ethnicity in 1944 was just the final act of the centuries long process of Russian colonization of Crimea that started in 1783 13 Historian Gregory Dufaud regards the Soviet accusations against Crimean Tatars as a convenient excuse for their forcible transfer through which Moscow secured an unrivalled access to the geostrategic southern Black Sea on one hand and eliminated hypothetical rebellious nations at the same time 107 Professor of Russian and Soviet history Rebecca Manley similarly concluded that the real aim of the Soviet government was to cleanse the border regions of unreliable elements 109 Professor Brian Glyn Williams states that the deportations of Meskhetian Turks despite never being close to the scene of combat and never being charged with any crime lends the strongest credence to the fact that the deportations of Crimeans and Caucasians was due to Soviet foreign policy rather than any real universal mass crimes 110 Modern interpretations by scholars and historians sometimes classify this mass deportation of civilians as a crime against humanity 111 ethnic cleansing 112 103 48 depopulation 113 an act of Stalinist repression 114 or an ethnocide meaning a deliberate wiping out of an identity and culture of a nation 115 107 Crimean Tatars call this event Surgunlik exile 116 The perception of Crimean Tatars as uncivilized and deserving the deportation remains throughout the Russian and Ukrainian settlers in Crimea 117 Genocide question and recognition Edit Name Date of recognition Source1 Ukraine 12 December 2015 118 2 Latvia 9 May 2019 119 120 3 Lithuania 6 June 2019 121 4 Canada 10 June 2019 122 123 source source source source source source source source source source source source source source track track track The projection mapping in Kyiv in 2020 for the Day of Remembrance for the victims of the Crimean Tatar genocide Some activists politicians scholars countries and historians go even further and consider the deportation a crime of genocide 124 125 126 127 or cultural genocide 128 Norman Naimark writes t he Chechens and Ingush the Crimean Tatars and other punished peoples of the wartime period were indeed slated for elimination if not physically then as self identifying nationalities 129 Professor Lyman H Legters argued that the Soviet penal system combined with its resettlement policies should count as genocidal since the sentences were borne most heavily specifically on certain ethnic groups and that a relocation of these ethnic groups whose survival depends on ties to its particular homeland had a genocidal effect remediable only by restoration of the group to its homeland 127 Soviet dissidents Ilya Gabay 86 and Pyotr Grigorenko 130 both classified the event as a genocide Historian Timothy Snyder included it in a list of Soviet policies that meet the standard of genocide 131 On 12 December 2015 the Ukrainian Parliament issued a resolution recognizing this event as genocide and established 18 May as the Day of Remembrance for the victims of the Crimean Tatar genocide 118 The parliament of Latvia recognized the event as an act of genocide on 9 May 2019 119 120 The Parliament of Lithuania did the same on 6 June 2019 121 Canadian Parliament passed a motion on June 10 2019 recognizing the Crimean Tatar deportation of 1944 Surgunlik as a genocide perpetrated by Soviet dictator Stalin designating May 18 to be a day of remembrance 122 123 On 26 April 1991 the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Socialist Federal Soviet Republic under its chairman Boris Yeltsin passed the law On the Rehabilitation of Repressed Peoples with Article 2 denouncing all mass deportations as Stalin s policy of defamation and genocide 132 A minority dispute defining the event as genocide According to Alexander Statiev the Soviet deportations resulted in a genocidal death rate but Stalin did not have the intent to exterminate these peoples He considers such deportations merely an example of Soviet assimilation of unwanted nations 133 According to Amir Weiner the Soviet regime sought to eradicate only their territorial identity 134 Such views were criticized by Jon Chang as gentrified racism and historical revisionism He noted that the deportations had been in fact based on ethnicity of victims 135 In popular culture Edit Jamala dedicated her 2016 Eurovision winning song 1944 to the deported Crimean Tatars In 2008 Lily Hyde a British journalist living in Ukraine published a novel titled Dreamland that revolves around a Crimean Tatar family return to their homeland in the 1990s The story is told from the perspective of a 12 year old girl who moves from Uzbekistan to a demolished village with her parents brother and grandfather Her grandfather tells her stories about the heroes and victims among the Crimean Tatars 136 The 2013 Ukrainian Crimean Tatar language film Haytarma portrays the experience of Crimean Tatar flying ace and Hero of the Soviet Union Amet khan Sultan during the 1944 deportations 137 In 2015 Christina Paschyn released the documentary film A Struggle for Home The Crimean Tatars in a Ukrainian Qatari co production It depicts the history of the Crimean Tatars from 1783 up until 2014 with a special emphasis on the 1944 mass deportation 138 At the Eurovision Song Contest 2016 in Stockholm Sweden the Ukrainian Crimean Tatar singer Jamala performed the song 1944 which refers to the deportation of the Crimean Tatars in the eponymous year Jamala an ethnic Crimean Tatar born in exile in Kyrgyzstan dedicated the song to her deported great grandmother She became the first Crimean Tatar to perform at Eurovision and also the first to perform with a song with lyrics in the Crimean Tatar language She went on to win the contest becoming the second Ukrainian artist to win the event 139 See also EditDe Tatarization of Crimea Deportation of the Chechens and Ingush Deportation of the Meskhetian Turks List of ethnic cleansing campaigns List of genocides by death toll Population transfer in the Soviet UnionComments Edit The RSFSR officially recognized the deportations of peoples by Stalin s government from their territories as acts of genocide 8 9 Nevertheless there are still some researchers who do not consider these deportations to be acts of genocide For more information see the section Genocide question and recognition Or according to other sources 423 100 10 Besides the Crimean Tatars these included the Volga Germans Chechens Ingush Meskhetian Turks Balkars Karachays Soviet Koreans Kalmyks and Kurds Citations Edit Naimark 2010 pp 2 14 126 135 a b c d Buckley Ruble amp Hofmann 2008 p 207 a b Williams 2015 p 109 a b c Rywkin 1994 p 67 a b c d Ukrainian Congress Committee of America 2004 pp 43 44 Hall 2014 p 53 a b c d Human Rights Watch 1991 p 34 Zakon RSFSR ot 26 aprelya 1991 g N 1107 I O reabilitacii repressirovannyh narodov s izmeneniyami i dopolneniyami Article 2 Repressirovannymi priznayutsya narody nacii narodnosti ili etnicheskie gruppy i inye istoricheski slozhivshiesya kulturno etnicheskie obshnosti lyudej naprimer kazachestvo v otnoshenii kotoryh po priznakam nacionalnoj ili inoj prinadlezhnosti provodilas na gosudarstvennom urovne politika klevety i genocida soprovozhdavshayasya ih nasilstvennym pereseleniem uprazdneniem nacionalno gosudarstvennyh obrazovanij perekraivaniem nacionalno territorialnyh granic ustanovleniem rezhima terrora i nasiliya v mestah specposeleniya Zakon O reabilitacii repressirovannyh narodov 1991 RIA 26 04 2016 Allworth 1988 p 6 Bezverkha 2017 p 127 Spring 2015 p 228 a b Potichnyj 1975 pp 302 319 Fisher 1987 pp 356 371 a b Tanner 2004 p 22 a b Vardys 1971 p 101 a b Smele 2015 p 302 Olson Pappas amp Pappas 1994 p 185 Rosefielde 1997 pp 321 331 a b c d Parrish 1996 p 104 a b Williams 2015 p 92 Burleigh 2001 p 748 Fisher 2014 pp 151 152 Williams 2001 p 377 a b Fisher 2014 p 157 Drohobycky 1995 p 73 Fisher 2014 p 160 Fisher 2014 p 156 Williams 2001 p 381 Allworth 1998 p 177 a b c Uehling 2004 p 38 Williams 2001 pp 382 384 Zhurnal Ogonyok 45 46 1944 g Uzeir Abduramanov Geroj slavnyj syn krymskotatarskogo naroda www qirimbirligi ru Retrieved 2 April 2019 Kasyanenko Nikita 14 April 2001 K synu ot otca zakalyat serdca Gazeta Den Nebolsina Margarita Khamidullin Bulat 2015 Vojna Sudby Pamyat Pesni War Destiny Memory Songs Kazan Idel Press ISBN 9785852477965 OCLC 949268869 Colborne 19 May 2016 a b c Human Rights Watch 1991 p 3 Banerji 23 October 2012 Williams 2001 p 374 375 Knight 1995 p 127 a b c Buckley Ruble amp Hoffman 2008 p 231 a b Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights 2016 Weiner 2003 p 224 Tweddell amp Kimball 1985 p 190 Kurtiev et al 2004 p 233 a b Levene 2013 p 317 a b c d e Magocsi 2010 p 690 Garrard amp Healicon 1993 p 167 Merridale 2007 p 261 Smoly 2004 p 8 a b Williams 2015 p 106 Kisse Anton 2006 Vozrozhdenie bolgar Ukrainy in Russian Odesa Optimum p 153 ISBN 9789663440903 Uehling 2004 p 100 a b c Sandole et al 2008 p 94 Bugay 1996 p 46 Syed Akhtar amp Usmani 2011 p 298 a b Stronski 2010 pp 132 133 Williams 2001 p 401 Buckley Ruble amp Hoffman 2008 p 238 a b c Amnesty International 1973 pp 160 161 Kamenetsky 1977 p 244 Viola 2007 p 99 Kucherenko 2016 p 85 Reid 2015 p 204 Lillis 2014 Reid 2015 Uehling 2004 p 3 Human Rights Watch 1991 p 33 Allworth 1998 p 155 Garrard amp Healicon 1993 p 168 a b c Human Rights Watch 1991 p 37 Human Rights Watch 1991 p 9 Moss 2008 p 17 Dadabaev 2015 p 56 Travis 2010 p 334 a b c d Tanner 2004 p 31 Requejo amp Nagel 2016 p 179 Bazhan 2015 p 182 Vardy Tooley amp Vardy 2003 p 554 Shabad 11 March 1984 Williams 2015 p 165 a b Williams 2001 p 425 Tanner 2004 p 32 Williams 2015 p 127 a b Fisher 2014 p 150 Williams 2015 p 129 95 yu godovshinu dvazhdy Geroya Sovetskogo soyuza Amet Hana Sultana otmetyat v Krymu i v Dagestane Informacionnyj portal RIA Dagestan Retrieved 11 January 2021 CGAOOU F 1 Op 24 D 4248 L 287 294 Zaverennaya kopiya Human Rights Watch 1991 p 38 Kamm 8 February 1992 Bugay 1996 p 213 BBC News 18 May 2004 Garrard amp Healicon 1993 p 173 Prokopchuk 8 June 2005 Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights 2014 p 15 Nechepurenko 26 April 2016 UN News Centre 20 May 2014 Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights 2014 p 13 Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights 2015 pp 40 41 Allworth 1998 p 214 Allworth 1988 p 173 191 193 a b Williams 2002 pp 323 347 Williams 2001 p 439 Allworth 1998 p 356 Williams 2001 p 384 a b c Dufaud 2007 pp 151 162 Skutsch 2013 p 1188 Manley 2012 p 40 Williams 2002 p 386 Wezel 2016 p 225 Requejo amp Nagel 2016 p 180 Polian 2004 p 318 Lee 2006 p 27 Williams 2002 pp 357 373 Zeghidour 2014 pp 83 91 Crimea s sad Tatars Economist Newspaper Limited 2000 a b Radio Free Europe 21 January 2016 a b Foreign Affairs Committee adopts a statement on the 75th anniversary of deportation of Crimean Tatars recognising the event as genocide Saeima 24 April 2019 Retrieved 11 May 2019 a b Latvian Lawmakers Label 1944 Deportation Of Crimean Tatars As Act Of Genocide Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 9 May 2019 Retrieved 10 May 2019 a b Lithuanian parliament recognizes Soviet crimes against Crimean Tatars as genocide The Baltic Times 6 June 2019 Retrieved 6 June 2019 a b Borys Wrzesnewskyj Facebook a b Foreign Affairs Committee passes motion by Wrzesnewskyj on Crimean Tatar genocide Tatz amp Higgins 2016 p 28 Uehling 2015 p 3 Blank 2015 p 18 a b Legters 1992 p 104 Allworth 1998 p 197 Naimark 2010 p 126 Allworth 1998 p 216 Snyder Timothy 5 October 2010 The fatal fact of the Nazi Soviet pact The Guardian Retrieved 6 August 2018 Perovic Jeronim June 2018 Perovic Jeronim 2018 From Conquest to Deportation The North Caucasus under Russian Rule Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190934675 OCLC 1083957407 p 320 ISBN 9780190934675 Statiev 2010 pp 243 264 Weiner 2002 pp 44 53 Chang 2019 p 270 O Neil 1 August 2014 Grytsenko 8 July 2013 International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam 2016 John 13 May 2016General and cited sources EditBooks Edit Allworth Edward 1998 The Tatars of Crimea Return to the Homeland Studies and Documents Durham Duke University Press ISBN 9780822319948 LCCN 97019110 OCLC 610947243 Allworth Edward 1988 Tatars of the Crimea Their Struggle for Survival Original Studies from North America Unofficial and Official Documents from Czarist and Soviet Sources Michigan Columbia University Center for the Study of Central Asia ISBN 0822307588 Bazhan Oleg 2015 The Rehabilitation of Stalin s Victims in Ukraine 1953 1964 A Socio Legal Perspective In McDermott Kevin Stibbe Matthew eds De Stalinising Eastern Europe The Rehabilitation of Stalin s Victims after 1953 Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9781137368928 OCLC 913832228 Buckley Cynthia J Ruble Blair A Hofmann Erin Trouth 2008 Migration Homeland and Belonging in Eurasia Washington D C Woodrow Wilson Center Press ISBN 9780801890758 LCCN 2008015571 OCLC 474260740 Bugay Nikolay 1996 The Deportation of Peoples in the Soviet Union New York City Nova Publishers ISBN 9781560723714 OCLC 36402865 Burleigh Michael 2001 The Third Reich A New History Macmillan ISBN 978 0 8090 9326 7 OCLC 44084002 Dadabaev Timur 2015 Identity and Memory in Post Soviet Central Asia Uzbekistan s Soviet Past Milton Park Routledge ISBN 9781317567356 LCCN 2015007994 OCLC 1013589408 Drohobycky Maria 1995 Crimea Dynamics Challenges and Prospects Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9780847680672 LCCN 95012637 OCLC 924871281 Fisher Alan W 2014 Crimean Tatars Stanford California Hoover Press ISBN 9780817966638 LCCN 76041085 OCLC 946788279 Garrard John Healicon Alison 1993 World War 2 and the Soviet People Selected Papers from the Fourth World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies New York City Springer ISBN 9781349227969 LCCN 92010827 OCLC 30408834 Hall M Clement 2014 The Crimea A very short history ISBN 978 1 304 97576 8 Kamenetsky Ihor 1977 Nationalism and Human Rights Processes of Modernization in the USSR Littleton Colorado Association for the Study of the Nationalities USSR and East Europe Incorporated ISBN 9780872871434 LCCN 77001257 Knight Amy 1995 Beria Stalin s First Lieutenant Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691010939 LCCN 93003937 Kucherenko Olga 2016 Soviet Street Children and the Second World War Welfare and Social Control under Stalin London Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781474213448 LCCN 2015043330 Kurtiev Refat Kandim Yunus Muslimova Edie Suleymanov Seyran 2004 Deportaciya krymskih tatar 18 maya 1944 goda Kak eto bylo vospominaniya deportirovannyh in Russian Simferopol Odzhak ISBN 9789668535147 OCLC 255117144 Lee Jongsoo James 2006 The Partition of Korea After World War II A Global History New York City Springer ISBN 9781403983015 LCCN 2005054895 Legters Lyman H 1992 The American Genocide In Lyden Fremont J ed Native Americans and Public Policy Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 9780822976820 OCLC 555693841 Levene Mark 2013 The crisis of genocide Annihilation Volume II The European Rimlands 1939 1953 New York City OUP Oxford ISBN 9780191505553 LCCN 2013942047 Magocsi Paul R 2010 A History of Ukraine The Land and Its Peoples Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 9781442610217 LCCN 96020027 OCLC 899979979 Manley Rebecca 2012 To The Tashkent Station Evacuation and Survival in the Soviet Union at War Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801457760 OCLC 979968105 Merridale Catherine 2007 Ivan s War Life and Death in the Red Army 1939 1945 New York City Henry Holt and Company ISBN 9780571265909 LCCN 2005050457 Moss Walter G 2008 An Age of Progress Clashing Twentieth Century Global Forces London Anthem Press ISBN 9780857286222 LCCN 2007042449 OCLC 889947280 Motadel David 2014 Islam and Nazi Germany s War Harvard University Press p 235 ISBN 9780674724600 OCLC 900907482 Naimark Norman 2010 Stalin s Genocides Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691152387 LCCN 2010019063 Olson James Stuart Pappas Lee Brigance Pappas Nicholas Charles 1994 An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires Westport Conn Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780313274978 OCLC 27431039 Parrish Michael 1996 The Lesser Terror Soviet State Security 1939 1953 Westport Conn Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780275951139 OCLC 473448547 Polian Pavel 2004 Against Their Will The History and Geography of Forced Migrations in the USSR Budapest New York City Central European University Press ISBN 9789639241688 LCCN 2003019544 Reid Anna 2015 Borderland A Journey Through the History of Ukraine New York City Hachette UK ISBN 9781780229287 LCCN 2015938031 Requejo Ferran Nagel Klaus Jurgen 2016 Federalism Beyond Federations Asymmetry and Processes of Resymmetrisation in Europe repeated ed Surrey England Routledge ISBN 9781317136125 LCCN 2010033623 OCLC 751970998 Rywkin Michael 1994 Moscow s Lost Empire Armonk N Y M E Sharpe ISBN 9781315287713 LCCN 93029308 OCLC 476453248 Sandole Dennis J D Byrne Sean Sandole Staroste Ingrid Senehi Jessica 2008 Handbook of Conflict Analysis and Resolution London Routledge ISBN 9781134079636 LCCN 2008003476 OCLC 907001072 Skutsch Carl 2013 Encyclopedia of the World s Minorities New York Routledge ISBN 9781135193881 OCLC 863823479 Smele Jonathan D 2015 Historical Dictionary of the Russian Civil Wars 1916 1926 Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781442252813 OCLC 985529980 Smoly Valery 2004 Krimski tatari shlyah do povernennya krimskotatarskij nacionalnij ruh druga polovina 1940 h pochatok 1990 h rokiv ochima Radyanskih specsluzhb zbirnik dokumentiv ta materialiv in Ukrainian Kyiv In t istoriyi Ukrayini ISBN 978 966 02 3286 0 Spring Peter 2015 Great Walls and Linear Barriers Barnsley South Yorkshire Pen and Sword Books ISBN 9781473853843 LCCN 2015458193 Studies on the Soviet Union 1970 Studies on the Soviet Union Munich Institute for the Study of the USSR OCLC 725829715 Stronski Paul 2010 Tashkent Forging a Soviet City 1930 1966 Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 9780822973898 LCCN 2010020948 Syed Muzaffar Husain Akhtar Saud Usmani B D 2011 A Concise History of Islam New Delhi Vij Books India ISBN 9789382573470 OCLC 868069299 Tanner Arno 2004 The Forgotten Minorities of Eastern Europe The History and Today of Selected Ethnic Groups in Five Countries Helsinki East West Books ISBN 9789529168088 LCCN 2008422172 OCLC 695557139 Tatz Colin Higgins Winton 2016 The Magnitude of Genocide Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO ISBN 9781440831614 LCCN 2015042289 OCLC 930059149 Travis Hannibal 2010 Genocide in the Middle East The Ottoman Empire Iraq and Sudan Durham N C Carolina Academic Press ISBN 9781594604362 LCCN 2009051514 OCLC 897959409 Tweddell Colin E Kimball Linda Amy 1985 Introduction to the Peoples and Cultures of Asia Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall ISBN 9780134915722 LCCN 84017763 OCLC 609339940 Uehling Greta 2004 Beyond Memory The Crimean Tatars Deportation and Return Palgrave ISBN 9781403981271 LCCN 2003063697 OCLC 963444771 Vardy Steven Bela Tooley T Hunt Vardy Agnes Huszar 2003 Ethnic Cleansing in Twentieth century Europe New York City Social Science Monographs ISBN 9780880339957 OCLC 53041747 Viola Lynne 2007 The Unknown Gulag The Lost World of Stalin s Special Settlements Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195187694 LCCN 2006051397 OCLC 456302666 Weiner Amir 2003 Landscaping the Human Garden Twentieth century Population Management in a Comparative Framework Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804746304 LCCN 2002010784 OCLC 50203946 Wezel Katja 2016 Geschichte als Politikum Lettland und die Aufarbeitung nach der Diktatur in German Berlin BWV Verlag ISBN 9783830534259 OCLC 951013191 Williams Brian Glyn 2001 The Crimean Tatars The Diaspora Experience and the Forging of a Nation Boston BRILL ISBN 9789004121225 LCCN 2001035369 OCLC 46835306 Williams Brian Glyn 2015 The Crimean Tatars From Soviet Genocide to Putin s Conquest London New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190494728 LCCN 2015033355 OCLC 910504522 Online news reports Edit Banerji Robin 23 October 2012 Crimea s Tatars A fragile revival BBC News Retrieved 4 August 2017 Colborne Michael 19 May 2016 For Crimean Tatars it is about much more than 1944 Al Jazeera Retrieved 4 August 2017 Grytsenko Oksana 8 July 2013 Haytarma the first Crimean Tatar movie is a must see for history enthusiasts Kyiv Post Retrieved 22 October 2013 John Tara 13 May 2016 The Dark History Behind Eurovision s Ukraine Entry Time Retrieved 4 August 2017 Kamm Henry 8 February 1992 Chatal Khaya Journal Crimean Tatars Exiled by Stalin Return Home The New York Times Lillis Joanna 2014 Uzbekistan Long Road to Exile for the Crimean Tatars EurasiaNet Retrieved 4 August 2017 Nechepurenko Ivan 26 April 2016 Tatar Legislature Is Banned in Crimea The New York Times Retrieved 4 August 2017 O Neil Lorena 1 August 2014 Telling Crimea s Story Through Children s Books npr org Retrieved 4 August 2017 Shabad Theodore 11 March 1984 Crimean Tatar Sentenced to 6th Term of Detention The New York Times Retrieved 4 August 2017 Crimean Tatars recall mass exile BBC News 18 May 2004 Retrieved 4 August 2017 A Struggle for Home The Crimean Tatars International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam 2016 Retrieved 4 August 2017 Ukraine s Parliament Recognizes 1944 Genocide Of Crimean Tatars Radio Free Europe 21 January 2016 Retrieved 4 August 2017 Crimea Tatars say leader banned by Russia from returning Reuters 22 April 2014 Retrieved 4 August 2017 The Ukrainian Quarterly Volumes 60 61 Ukrainian Congress Committee of America 2004 Retrieved 4 August 2017 Some 10 000 people in Ukraine now affected by displacement UN agency says UN News Centre 20 May 2014 Retrieved 4 August 2017 Journal articles Edit Bezverkha Anastasia 2017 Reinstating Social Borders between the Slavic Majority and the Tatar Population of Crimea Media Representation of the Contested Memory of the Crimean Tatars Deportation Journal of Borderlands Studies 32 2 127 139 doi 10 1080 08865655 2015 1066699 S2CID 148535821 Blank Stephen 2015 A Double Dispossession The Crimean Tatars After Russia s Ukrainian War Genocide Studies and Prevention 9 1 18 32 doi 10 5038 1911 9933 9 1 1271 Chang Jon K 2019 Ethnic Cleansing and Revisionist Russian and Soviet History Academic Questions 32 2 270 doi 10 1007 s12129 019 09791 8 S2CID 150711796 Dufaud Gregory 2007 La deportation des Tatars de Crimee et leur vie en exil 1944 1956 Un ethnocide Vingtieme Siecle Revue d Histoire in French 96 1 151 162 doi 10 3917 ving 096 0151 JSTOR 20475182 Finnin Rory 2011 Forgetting Nothing Forgetting No One Boris Chichibabin Viktor Nekipelov and the Deportation of the Crimean Tatars The Modern Language Review 106 4 1091 1124 doi 10 5699 modelangrevi 106 4 1091 JSTOR 10 5699 modelangrevi 106 4 1091 S2CID 164399794 Fisher Alan W 1987 Emigration of Muslims from the Russian Empire in the Years After the Crimean War Jahrbucher fur Geschichte Osteuropas 35 3 356 371 JSTOR 41047947 Hirsch Francine 2002 Race without the Practice of Racial Politics Slavic Review 61 1 30 43 doi 10 2307 2696979 JSTOR 2696979 S2CID 147121638 Potichnyj Peter J 1975 The Struggle of the Crimean Tatars Canadian Slavonic Papers 17 2 3 302 319 doi 10 1080 00085006 1975 11091411 JSTOR 40866872 Rosefielde Steven 1997 Documented homicides and excess deaths New insights into the scale of killing in the USSR during the 1930s Communist and Post Communist Studies 30 3 321 31 doi 10 1016 S0967 067X 97 00011 1 PMID 12295079 Statiev Alexandar 2010 Soviet ethnic deportations intent versus outcome Journal of Genocide Research 11 2 3 243 264 doi 10 1080 14623520903118961 S2CID 71905569 Uehling Greta 2002 Sitting on Suitcases Ambivalence and Ambiguity in the Migration Intentions of Crimean Tatar Women Journal of Refugee Studies 15 4 388 408 doi 10 1093 jrs 15 4 388 Uehling Greta 2015 Genocide s Aftermath Neostalinism in Contemporary Crimea Genocide Studies and Prevention 9 1 3 17 doi 10 5038 1911 9933 9 1 1273 Vardys V Stanley 1971 The Case of the Crimean Tatars The Russian Review 30 2 101 110 doi 10 2307 127890 JSTOR 127890 Weiner Amir 2002 Nothing but Certainty Slavic Review 61 1 44 53 doi 10 2307 2696980 JSTOR 2696980 S2CID 159548222 Williams Brian Glyn 2002 Hidden ethnocide in the Soviet Muslim borderlands The ethnic cleansing of the Crimean Tatars Journal of Genocide Research 4 3 357 373 doi 10 1080 14623520220151952 S2CID 72722630 Williams Brian Glyn 2002 The Hidden Ethnic Cleansing of Muslims in the Soviet Union The Exile and Repatriation of the Crimean Tatars Journal of Contemporary History 37 3 323 347 doi 10 1177 00220094020370030101 JSTOR 3180785 S2CID 220874696 Zeghidour Sliman 2014 Le desert des Tatars Medium in French 40 3 83 doi 10 3917 mediu 040 0083 International and NGO sources Edit Prokopchuk Natasha 8 June 2005 Vivian Tan ed Helping Crimean Tatars feel at home again UNHCR Retrieved 5 September 2017 Amnesty International 1973 A Chronicle of Current Events Journal of the Human Rights Movement in the USSR PDF Human Rights Watch 1991 Punished Peoples of the Soviet Union The Continuing Legacy of Stalin s Deportations PDF New York City LCCN 91076226 Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights 2015 Report on the human rights situation in Ukraine PDF Retrieved 4 August 2017 Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights 2014 Report of the Special Rapporteur on minority issues Rita Izsak Addendum Mission to Ukraine PDF Retrieved 4 August 2017 Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights 2016 Rupert Colville ed Press briefing notes on Crimean Tatars Geneva Retrieved 4 August 2017 External links Edit Media related to Deportation of the Crimean Tatars at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Deportation of the Crimean Tatars amp oldid 1133134316, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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