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Population transfer in the Soviet Union

From 1930 to 1952, the government of the Soviet Union, on the orders of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin under the direction of the NKVD official Lavrentiy Beria, forcibly transferred populations of various groups. These actions may be classified into the following broad categories: deportations of "anti-Soviet" categories of population (often classified as "enemies of workers"), deportations of entire nationalities, labor force transfer, and organized migrations in opposite directions to fill ethnically cleansed territories. Dekulakization marked the first time that an entire class was deported, whereas the deportation of Soviet Koreans in 1937 marked the precedent of a specific ethnic deportation of an entire nationality.[9]

Population transfer in the Soviet Union
Part of Dekulakization, Forced settlements in the Soviet Union, and World War II
The empty Crimean Tatar village of Üsküt, near Alushta, photo taken in 1945 after the complete deportation of its inhabitants
General routes of deportation during the Dekulakization across the Soviet Union in 1930–1931
LocationSoviet Union and occupied territories
Date1930–1952
TargetKulaks, peasants, ethnic minorities, and occupied territory citizens
Attack type
ethnic cleansing, population transfer, forced labor, genocide,[1][2][3][4] classicide
Deaths~800,000[5]–1,500,000[6] in USSR
PerpetratorsOGPU / NKVD
MotiveRussification,[7] colonialism,[8] cheap labor for forced settlements in the Soviet Union

In most cases, their destinations were underpopulated remote areas (see Forced settlements in the Soviet Union). This includes deportations to the Soviet Union of non-Soviet citizens from countries outside the USSR. It has been estimated that, in their entirety, internal forced migrations affected at least 6 million people.[6][10][11][12] Of this total, 1.8 million kulaks were deported in 1930–31, 1.0 million peasants and ethnic minorities in 1932–39, whereas about 3.5 million ethnic minorities were further resettled during 1940–52.[12]

Soviet archives documented 390,000[13] deaths during kulak forced resettlement and up to 400,000 deaths of persons deported to forced settlements during the 1940s;[14] however, Nicolas Werth places overall deaths closer to some 1 to 1.5 million perishing as a result of the deportations.[6] Contemporary historians classify these deportations as a crime against humanity and ethnic persecution. Two of these cases with the highest mortality rates, the deportation of the Crimean Tatars and the deportation of the Chechens and Ingush, were recognized as genocides by Ukraine, three other countries, and the European Parliament respectively[clarification needed].[1][2] 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."[3]

The Soviet Union also practiced deportations in occupied territories, with over 50,000 perishing from the Baltic States and 300,000 to 360,000 perishing during the expulsion of Germans from Eastern Europe due to Soviet deportation, massacres, and internment and labour camps.[15]

Deportation of social groups

Kulaks were a group of relatively affluent farmers and had gone by this class system term in the later Russian Empire, Soviet Russia, and early Soviet Union. They were the most numerous group deported by the Soviet Union.[16] Resettlement of people officially designated as kulaks continued until early 1950, including several major waves: on 5 September 1951 the Soviet government ordered the deportation of kulaks from the Lithuanian SSR for "hostile actions against kolhozes", which was one of the last resettlements of that social group.[17]

Large numbers of kulaks, regardless of their nationality, were resettled in Siberia and Central Asia. According to data from Soviet archives, which were published in 1990, 1,803,392 people were sent to labor colonies and camps in 1930 and 1931, and 1,317,022 reached the destination. Deportations on a smaller scale continued after 1931. The reported number of kulaks and their relatives who died in labour colonies from 1932 to 1940 was 389,521.[18] The total number of the deported people is disputed. Conservative estimates assume that 1,679,528-1,803,392 people were deported,[19] while the highest estimates are that 15 million kulaks and their families were deported by 1937, and that during the deportation many people died, but the full number is not known.[20]

Ethnic operations

 
A train with Romanian refugees following the Soviet annexation of Bessarabia

During the 1930s, categorisation of so-called enemies of the people shifted from the usual Marxist–Leninist, class-based terms, such as kulak, to ethnic-based ones.[21] The partial removal of potentially trouble-making ethnic groups was a technique used consistently by Joseph Stalin during his government;[22] between 1935 and 1938 alone, at least ten different nationalities were deported.[23] Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union led to a massive escalation in Soviet ethnic cleansing.[24]

The Deportation of Koreans in the Soviet Union, originally conceived in 1926, initiated in 1930, and carried through in 1937, was the first mass transfer of an entire nationality in the Soviet Union.[25] Almost the entire Soviet population of ethnic Koreans (171,781 persons) were forcibly moved from the Russian Far East to unpopulated areas of the Kazakh SSR and the Uzbek SSR in October 1937.[26]

Looking at the entire period of Stalin's rule, one can list: Poles (1939–1941 and 1944–1945), Kola Norwegians (1940–1942), Romanians (1941 and 1944–1953), Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians (1941 and 1945–1949), Volga Germans (1941–1945), Ingrian Finns (1929–1931 and 1935–1939), Finnish people in Karelia (1940–1941, 1944), Crimean Tatars, Crimean Greeks (1944) and Caucasus Greeks (1949–50), Kalmyks, Balkars, Italians of Crimea, Karachays, Meskhetian Turks, Karapapaks, Far East Koreans (1937), Chechens and Ingushs (1944). Shortly before, during and immediately after World War II, Stalin conducted a series of deportations on a huge scale which profoundly affected the ethnic map of the Soviet Union.[27] It is estimated that between 1941 and 1949 nearly 3.3 million were deported to Siberia and the Central Asian republics.[28] By some estimates, up to 43% of the resettled population died of diseases and malnutrition.[29]

Western annexations and deportations, 1939–1941

 
Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and Lavrenti Beria (in foreground). As head of the NKVD, Beria was responsible for mass deportations of ethnic minorities

Lavrentiy Beria, the Chief of NKVD, the Soviet secret police, was responsible for organizing and executing numerous deportations of ethnic minorities during that time.[30]

After the Soviet invasion of Poland following the corresponding German invasion that marked the start of World War II in 1939, the Soviet Union annexed eastern parts (known as Kresy to the Polish or as West Belarus and West Ukraine in the USSR and among Belarusians and Ukrainians) of the Second Polish Republic, which since then became western parts of the Belarusian SSR and the Ukrainian SSR. During 1939–1941, 1.45 million people inhabiting the region were deported by the Soviet regime. According to Polish historians, 63.1% of these people were Poles and 7.4% were Jews.[31] Previously it was believed that about 1.0 million Polish citizens died at the hands of the Soviets,[32] but recently Polish historians, based mostly on queries in Soviet archives, estimate the number of deaths at about 350,000 people deported in 1939–1945.[33][34]

The same followed in the Baltic republics of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia (see Soviet deportations from Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania).[35] More than 200,000 people are estimated to have been deported from the Baltic in 1940–1953. In addition, at least 75,000 were sent to the Gulag. 10% of the entire adult Baltic population was deported or sent to labor camps.[36][37] In 1989, native Latvians represented only 52% of the population of their own country. In Estonia, the figure was 62%.[38] In Lithuania, the situation was better because the migrants sent to that country actually moved to the former area of Eastern Prussia (now Kaliningrad) which, contrary to the original plans, never became part of Lithuania.[39]

Likewise, Romanians from Chernivtsi Oblast and Moldovia had been deported in great numbers which range from 200,000 to 400,000.[40] (See Soviet deportations from Bessarabia.)

World War II, 1941–1945

 
Route of people deported from Lithuania to remote regions of the Far East, up to 6,000 miles (9,700 km) away

During World War II, particularly in 1943–44, the Soviet government conducted a series of deportations. Some 1.9 million people were deported to Siberia and the Central Asian republics. Out of approximately 183,000 Crimean Tatars, 20,000 or 10% of the entire population served in German battalions.[41] Consequently, Tatars too were transferred en masse by the Soviets after the war.[42] Vyacheslav Molotov justified this decision saying "The fact is that during the war we received reports about mass treason. Battalions of Caucasians opposed us at the fronts and attacked us from the rear. It was a matter of life and death; there was no time to investigate the details. Of course innocents suffered. But I hold that given the circumstances, we acted correctly."[43] Historian Ian Grey writes "Towards the Moslem peoples, the Germans pursued a benign, almost paternalistic policy. The Karachai, Balkars, Ingush, Chechen, Kalmucks, and Tatars of the Crimea all displayed pro-German sympathies in some degree. It was only the hurried withdrawal of the Germans from the Caucasus after the battle of Stalingrad that prevented their organizing the Moslem people for effective anti-Soviet action. The Germans boasted loudly, however, that they had left a strong "fifth column" behind them in the Caucasus."[44]

Volga Germans[45] and seven (non-Slavic) nationalities of the Crimea and the northern Caucasus were deported: the Crimean Tatars,[46] Kalmyks, Chechens,[47] Ingush, Balkars, Karachays, and Meskhetian Turks. All Crimean Tatars were deported en masse, in a form of collective punishment, on 18 May 1944 as special settlers to Uzbekistan and other distant parts of the Soviet Union. According to NKVD data, nearly 20% died in exile during the following year and a half. Crimean Tatar activists have reported this figure to be nearly 46%.[48][49] (See Deportation of Crimean Tatars.)

Other minorities evicted from the Black Sea coastal region included Bulgarians, Crimean Greeks, Romanians and Armenians.

The Soviet Union also deported people from occupied territories such as the Baltic states, Poland, and territories occupied by Germans. A study published by the German government in 1974 estimated the number of German civilian victims of crimes during expulsion of Germans after World War II between 1945 and 1948 to be over 600,000, with about 400,000 deaths in the areas east of the Oder and Neisse (ca. 120,000 in acts of direct violence, mostly by Soviet troops but also by Poles, 60,000 in Polish and 40,000 in Soviet concentration camps or prisons mostly from hunger and disease, and 200,000 deaths among civilian deportees to forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union), 130,000 in Czechoslovakia (thereof 100,000 in camps) and 80,000 in Yugoslavia (thereof 15,000 to 20,000 from violence outside of and in camps and 59,000 deaths from hunger and disease in camps).[15]

By January 1953, there were 988,373 special settlers residing in the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic, including 444,005 Germans, 244,674 Chechens, 95,241 Koreans, 80,844 Ingush, and the others. As a consequence of these deportations, Kazakhs comprised only 30% of their native Republic's population.[50]

Post-war expulsion and deportation

After World War II, the German population of the Kaliningrad Oblast, former East Prussia was expelled and the depopulated area resettled by Soviet citizens, mainly by Russians.

Poland and Soviet Ukraine conducted population exchanges; Poles who resided east of the established Poland–Soviet border were deported to Poland (c.a. 2,100,000 persons) and Ukrainians that resided west of the established Poland-Soviet Union border were deported to Soviet Ukraine. Population transfer to Soviet Ukraine occurred from September 1944 to April 1946 (ca. 450,000 persons). Some Ukrainians (ca. 200,000 persons) left southeast Poland more or less voluntarily (between 1944 and 1945).[51]

 
A dwelling typical to some deportees into Siberia in a museum in Rumšiškės, Lithuania

Post-Stalin policy on deportation

In February 1956, Nikita Khrushchev in his speech "On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences" condemned the deportations as a violation of Leninist principles:

All the more monstrous are the acts whose initiator was Stalin and which are violations of the basic Leninist principles of the national policy of the Soviet state. We refer to the mass deportations from their native places of whole nations... This deportation action was not dictated by any military considerations. Thus, already at the end of 1943, when there occurred a permanent breakthrough at the fronts... a decision was taken and executed concerning the deportation of all the Karachay from the lands on which they lived. In the same period, at the end of December 1943, the same lot befell whole population of the Autonomous Kalmyk Republic. In March all the Chechen and Ingush peoples were deported and the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Republic was liquidated. In April 1944, all Balkars were deported to faraway places from the territory of the Kalbino-Balkar Autonomous Republic and the Republic itself was renamed the Autonomous Kabardin Republic.[52]

According to a secret Soviet ministry of interior report dated December 1965, for the period 1940–1953, 46,000 people were deported from Moldova, 61,000 from Belarus, 571,000 from Ukraine, 119,000 from Lithuania, 53,000 from Latvia and 33,000 from Estonia.[53]

Labor force transfer

Punitive transfers of population transfers handled by the Gulag[54] and the system of forced settlements in the Soviet Union were planned in accordance with the needs of the colonization of the remote and underpopulated territories of the Soviet Union. (Their large scale has led to a controversial opinion in the West that the economic growth of the Soviet Union was largely based on the slave labor of Gulag prisoners.) At the same time, on a number of occasions the workforce was transferred by non-violent means, usually by means of "recruitment" (вербовка). This kind of recruitment was regularly performed at forced settlements, where people were naturally more willing to resettle. For example, the workforce of the Donbas and Kuzbass mining basins is known to have been replenished in this way. (As a note of historical comparison, in Imperial Russia the mining workers at state mines (bergals, "бергалы", from German Bergbau, 'mining') were often recruited in lieu of military service which, for a certain period, had a term of 25 years).

There were several notable campaigns of targeted workforce transfer.

Repatriation after World War II

When the war ended in May 1945, millions of Soviet citizens were forcefully repatriated (against their will) into the USSR.[55] On 11 February 1945, at the conclusion of the Yalta Conference, the United States and United Kingdom signed a Repatriation Agreement with the USSR.[56]

The interpretation of this Agreement resulted in the forcible repatriation of all Soviet citizens regardless of their wishes. Allied authorities ordered their military forces in Europe to deport to the Soviet Union millions of former residents of the USSR (some of whom collaborated with the Germans), including numerous persons who had left Russia and established different citizenships for up to decades prior. The forced repatriation operations took place from 1945 to 1947.[57]

At the end of World War II, more than 5 million "displaced persons" from the Soviet Union survived in German captivity. About 3 million had been forced laborers (Ostarbeiter)[58] in Germany and occupied territories.[59][60]

Surviving POWs, about 1.5 million, repatriated Ostarbeiter[clarification needed], and other displaced persons, totalling more than 4,000,000 people were sent to special NKVD filtration camps (not Gulag). By 1946, 80% civilians and 20% of PoWs were freed, 5% of civilians, and 43% of PoWs re-drafted, 10% of civilians and 22% of PoWs were sent to labor battalions, and 2% of civilians and 15% of the PoWs (226,127 out of 1,539,475 total) transferred to the NKVD, i.e. the Gulag.[61][62]

Modern views

Several historians, including Russian historian Pavel Polian[63] and Lithuanian Associate Research Scholar at Yale University Violeta Davoliūtė[64] consider these mass deportations of civilians a crime against humanity. They are also often described as Soviet ethnic cleansing.[65][66][12] Terry Martin of Harvard University observes:

... the same principles that informed Soviet nation building could and did lead to ethnic cleansing and ethnic terror against a limited set of stigmatized nationalities, while leaving nation-building policies in place for the majority of nonstigmatized nationalities.[67]

 
Funeral of the deported Crimean Tatars in Krasnovishersk, late 1944

Other academics and countries go further to call the deportations of the Crimean Tatars, Chechens and Ingushs genocide. Raphael Lemkin, a lawyer of Polish-Jewish descent who initiated the Genocide Convention and coined the term genocide himself, assumed that genocide was perpetrated in the context of the mass deportation of the Chechens, Ingush, Volga Germans, Crimean Tatars, Kalmyks and Karachay.[68] 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 depended on ties to their particular homeland, "had a genocidal effect remediable only by restoration of the group to its homeland".[69] Soviet dissidents Ilya Gabay[70] and Pyotr Grigorenko[71] both classified the population transfers of the Crimean Tatars as genocide. Historian Timothy Snyder included it in a list of Soviet policies that "meet the standard of genocide".[72] French historian and expert on communist studies Nicolas Werth,[73] German historian Philipp Ther,[74] Professor Anthony James Joes,[75] American journalist Eric Margolis,[76] Canadian political scientist Adam Jones,[77] professor of Islamic History at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth Brian Glyn Williams,[78] scholars Michael Fredholm[79] and Fanny E. Bryan[80] also considered the population transfers of the Chechens and Ingush as the crime of genocide. German investigative journalist Lutz Kleveman compared the deportations of Chechens and Ingush to a "slow genocide".[81]

On 12 December 2015, the Ukrainian Parliament issued a resolution recognizing the deportation of Crimean Tatars as genocide and established 18 May as the "Day of Remembrance for the victims of the Crimean Tatar genocide."[82] The parliament of Latvia recognized the event as an act of genocide on 9 May 2019.[83][84] The Parliament of Lithuania did the same on 6 June 2019.[85] Canadian Parliament passed a motion on 10 June 2019, recognizing the Crimean Tatar deportation of 1944 (Sürgünlik) as a genocide perpetrated by Soviet dictator Stalin, designating 18 May to be a day of remembrance.[86][87] The deportation of Chechens and Ingush was acknowledged by the European Parliament as an act of genocide in 2004:[88]

...Believes that the deportation of the entire Chechen people to Central Asia on 23 February 1944 on the orders of Stalin constitutes an act of genocide within the meaning of the Fourth Hague Convention of 1907 and the Convention for the Prevention and Repression of the Crime of Genocide adopted by the UN General Assembly on 9 December 1948.[89]

Experts of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum cited the events of 1944 for a reason of placing Chechnya on their genocide watch list for its potential for genocide.[90] The separatist government of Chechnya also recognized it as genocide.[91] Some academics disagree with the classification of deportation as genocide. Professor Alexander Statiev argues that Stalin's administration did not have a conscious genocidal intent to exterminate the various deported peoples, but that Soviet "political culture, poor planning, haste, and wartime shortages were responsible for the genocidal death rate among them." He rather considers these deportations an example of Soviet assimilation of "unwanted nations."[92] According to Professor Amir Weiner, "...It was their territorial identity and not their physical existence or even their distinct ethnic identity that the regime sought to eradicate."[93] According to Professor Francine Hirsch, "although the Soviet regime practiced politics of discrimination and exclusion, it did not practice what contemporaries thought of as racial politics." To her, these mass deportations were based on the concept that nationalities were "sociohistorical groups with a shared consciousness and not racial-biological groups".[94] In contrast to this view, Jon K. Chang contends that the deportations had been in fact based on ethnicity and that "social historians" in the West have failed to champion the rights of marginalized ethnicities in the Soviet Union.[95]

Possible motivations

The dominant view among historians of Russia and the USSR was and remains that of Harvard's Terry Martin and his theory of "Soviet xenophobia." This theory espouses the belief that the Soviet Union ethnically cleansed the border peoples of the USSR from 1937 to 1951 (including the Caucasus and the Crimea) to remove Soviet nationalities whose political allegiances were allegedly suspect or inimical to Soviet socialism. In this view, the USSR did not practice direct negative ethnic animus or discrimination ("In neither case did the Soviet state itself conceive of these deportations as ethnic.").[96] Political ideology of all Soviet peoples was the primary consideration.[97] Martin stated that the various deportations of the Soviet border peoples were simply the "culmination of a gradual shift from predominantly class-based terror" which began during collectivization (1932–33) to "national/ethnic" based terror (1937).[98] Accordingly, Martin further claimed that the nationalities deportations were "ideological, not ethnic. It was spurred by an ideological hatred and suspicion of foreign capitalist governments, not the national hatred of non-Russians."[99] His theory entitled "Soviet xenophobia" paints the USSR and the Stalinist regime as having practiced and carried out in politics, education and Soviet society relatively pure socialism and Marxist practices. This view has been supported by many of the major historians of the USSR, those in Russian and even Korean studies such as Fitzpatrick, Suny, F. Hirsch, A. Weiner and A. Park.[100] A. Park, in her archival work, found very little evidence that Koreans had proven or were able to prove their loyalties beyond a shadow of a doubt, thus 'necessitating' deportation from the border areas.[101] Robert Conquest stated that these nationalities were transfered because "in Stalin’s view, either welcomed or not opposed the Germans".[102]

In contrast, the views of J. Otto Pohl and Jon K. Chang affirm that the Soviet Union, its officials and everyday citizens produced and reproduced (from the Tsarist era) racialized (primordialist) views, policies and tropes regarding their non-Slavic peoples. [103][104][105] Norman M. Naimark believed that the Stalinist "nationalities deportations" were forms of national-cultural genocide. The deportations at the very least changed the cultures, way of life and world views of the deported peoples as the majority were sent to Soviet Central Asia and Siberia.[106]

"Primordialism" is simply another way of saying ethnic chauvinism or racism because the said "primordial" peoples or ethnic groups are seen as possessing "permanent" traits and characteristics, which they pass on, one generation to the next. Interestingly, both Chang and Martin agree that the Stalinist regime took a turn towards primordializing nationality in the 1930s.[107][108] After the "primordialist turn" by the Stalinist regime in the mid-1930s, the Soviet Greeks, Finns, Poles, Chinese, Koreans, Germans, Crimean Tatars and the other deported peoples were seen to have loyalties to their "titular" nations (or to non-Soviet polities) as the Soviet state in the 1930s regarded nationality (ethnicity) and political loyalty (ideology) as a primordial equivalents.[107] Thus, it was no surprise that the regime would choose "deportation."

Martin's different interpretation is that the Soviet regime was not deporting the various diaspora peoples because of their nationality. Rather, nationality (ethnicity or phenotype) served as a referent or a signifier for the political ideology of the deported peoples.[109][110] Amir Weiner's argument is similar to Martin's, substituting "territorial identity" for Martin's "xenophobia."[111][112] The "Soviet xenophobia" argument also does not hold up semantically. Xenophobia is the fear by natives of invasion or loss of territory and influence to foreigners. The "Russians" and other Eastern Slavs are coming into the territory of the natives (the deported peoples) who were simply Soviet national minorities. They were not foreign elements. The Russian empire was not the "native" state, polity or government in the Asian Far East, the Caucasus and many other regions of the deported peoples.[112] Koguryo followed by Parhae/Balhae/Bohai were the first states of the Russian Far East.[113][114] John J. Stephan called the "erasure" of Chinese and Korean history (state-formation, cultural contributions, peoples) to the region by the USSR and Russia—the intentional "genesis of a 'blank spot.' "[115]

Chang notes that all forms of racism could be explained away in a like manner. Regardless, all of the Stalinist orders for "total deportation" of the thirteen nationalities (from 1937 to 1951) list each of the peoples by ethnicity as well as a charge of treason. Soviet law required that one's guilt or innocence (for treason) be determined individually and in a court of law prior to sentencing (per 1936 Constitution). Finally, on the other end of the "primordial" spectrum, the Eastern Slavs (Russians, Ukrainians, Belarusians) were seen as inherently more loyal and more representative of the Soviet people.[116] This is clearly a deviation from socialism and Marxist–Leninism.[117]

Death toll

The number of deaths attributed to deported people living in exile is considerable. The causes for such demographic catastrophe lie in harsh climates of Siberia and Kazakhstan, disease, malnutrition, work exploitation which lasted for up to 12 hours daily as well as the lack of any kind of appropriate housing or accommodation for the deported people. Overall, it is assumed that the fatalities caused by this relocation upheaval range from 800,000[5] up to 1,500,000.[6]

The partial documentation in the NKVD archives indicated that the mortality rates of these deported ethnic groups were considerable. The Meskhetian Turks had a 14.6% mortality rate, the Kalmyks 17.4%, people from Crimea 19.6%, while the Chechens, the Ingush and other people from the Northern Caucasus had the highest losses reaching 23.7%.[118] The NKVD did not record excess deaths for the deported Soviet Koreans, but their mortality rate estimates range from 10%[119] to 16.3%.[120]

Number of deaths of peoples in exile, 1930s–1950s
Group Estimated number of deaths References
Kulaks 1930–1937 389,521 [121][122]
Chechens 100,000–400,000 [123][124]
Poles 90,000 [125]
Koreans 16,500–40,000 [119][126][127]
Estonians 5,400 [128]
Latvians 17,400 [128]
Lithuanians 28,000 [129]
Finns 18,800 [130]
Hungarians 15,000–20,000 [131]
Karachays 13,100–35,000 [118][127][132]
Soviet Germans 42,823–228,800 [133][118]
Kalmyks 12,600–48,000 [118][130][127][134]
Ingush 20,300–23,000 [118][127]
Balkars 7,600–11,000 [118][130][127]
Crimean Tatars 34,300–109,956 [118][135][136][137]
Meskhetian Turks 12,859–50,000 [118][127][138]
TOTAL 824,203–1,514,877

Additionally, around 300,000–360,000 Germans deported after World War II from occupied territories in Eastern Europe perished,[15] but the Soviet Army was not the sole perpetrator of these expulsions, since other European countries also participated.

Timeline

Date of transfer Targeted group Approximate numbers Place of initial residence Transfer destination Stated reasons for transfer
April 1920 Cossacks, Terek Cossacks 45,000[139] North Caucasus Ukraine, northern Russian SFSR "Decossackization", stopping Russian colonisation of North Caucasus
1930–1931 Kulaks 1,679,528- 1,803,392[19] "Regions of total collectivization", most of Russian SFSR, Ukraine, other regions Northern Russian SFSR, Ural, Siberia, North Caucasus, Kazakh ASSR, Kirghiz ASSR Collectivization
1930–1937 Kulaks 15,000,000[20] "Regions of total collectivization", most of Russian SFSR, Ukraine, other regions Northern Russian SFSR, Ural, Siberia, North Caucasus, Kazakh ASSR, Kirghiz ASSR Collectivization
November–December 1932 Peasants 45,000[140] Krasnodar Krai (Russian SFSR) Northern Russia Sabotage
May 1933 People from Moscow and Leningrad who had been unable to obtain an internal passport 6,000 Moscow and Leningrad Nazino Island "cleanse Moscow, Leningrad and the other great urban centers of the USSR of superfluous elements not connected with production or administrative work, as well as kulaks, criminals, and other antisocial and socially dangerous elements."[141]
February–May 1935; September 1941; 1942 Ingrian Finns 420,000[142] Leningrad Oblast, Karelia (Russian SFSR) Astrakhan Oblast, Vologda Oblast, Western Siberia, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Finland
February–March 1935 Germans, Poles 412,000[140] Central and western Ukraine Eastern Ukraine
May 1936 Germans, Poles 45,000[140] Border regions of Ukraine Ukraine
July 1937 Kurds 1,325[143] Border regions of Georgia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan Kazakhstan, Kirghizia
September–October 1937 Koreans 172,000[144] Far East Northern Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
September–October 1937 Chinese, Harbin Russians At least 17,500[145] Southern Far East[140] Xinjiang,[145]

Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan[140]

At least 12,000 Chinese citizens were deported to Xinjiang, while 5,500 Chinese Soviet citizens were deported to Central Asia.[145]
1938 Persian Jews 6,000[146] Mary Province (Turkmenistan) Deserted areas of northern Turkmenistan
January 1938 Azeris, Persians, Kurds, Assyrians 6,000[147] Azerbaijan Kazakhstan Iranian citizenship
January 1940 – 1941 Poles, Jews, Ukrainians (including refugees from Poland) 320,000[148] Western Ukraine, western Byelorussia Northern Russian SFSR, Ural, Siberia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
July 1940 to 1953 Estonians, Latvians & Lithuanians 203,590[149] Baltic states Siberia and Northern Russian SFSR
September 1941 – March 1942 Germans 855,674[150] Povolzhye, the Caucasus, Crimea, Ukraine, Moscow, central Russian SFSR Kazakhstan, Siberia
August 1943 Karachais 69,267[151] Karachay–Cherkess AO, Stavropol Krai (Russian SFSR) Kazakhstan, Kirghizia, other Banditism, other
December 1943 Kalmyks 93,139[144] Kalmyk ASSR, (Russian SFSR) Kazakhstan, Siberia
February 1944 Chechens, Ingush 478,479[152] North Caucasus Kazakhstan, Kirghizia 1940-1944 insurgency in Chechnya
April 1944 Kurds, Azeris 3,000[153] Tbilisi (Georgia) Southern Georgia
May 1944 Balkars 37,406[151]–40,900[144] North Caucasus Kazakhstan, Kirghizia
May 1944 Crimean Tatars 191,014[151][144] Crimea Uzbekistan
May–June 1944 Greeks, Bulgarians, Armenians, Turks 37,080
(9,620 Armenians, 12,040 Bulgarians, 15,040 Greeks[154])
Crimea Uzbekistan (?)
June 1944 Kabardins 2,000 Kabardino-Balkarian ASSR, (Russian SFSR) Southern Kazakhstan Collaboration with the Nazis
July 1944 Russian True Orthodox Church members 1,000 Central Russian SFSR Siberia
November 1944 Meskhetian Turks, Kurds, Hamshenis, Pontic Greeks, Karapapaks, Lazes and other inhabitants of the border zone 115,000[144] Southwestern Georgia Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kirghizia
November 1944 – January 1945 Hungarians, Germans 30,000–40,000[131] Transcarpathian Ukraine Ural, Donbas, Byelorussia
January 1945 "Traitors and collaborators" 2,000[155] Mineralnye Vody (Russian SFSR) Tajikistan Collaboration with the Nazis
1944–1953 Families of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army 204,000[156] Western Ukraine Siberia
1944–1953 Poles 1,240,000[142] Kresy region postwar Poland Removal of indigenous population from the new territory acquired by Soviet Union
1945–1950 Germans Tens of thousands Königsberg West or Middle Germany Removal of indigenous population from the new territory acquired by Soviet Union
1945–1951 Japanese, Koreans 400,000[157] Mostly from Sakhalin, Kuril Islands Siberia, Far East, North Korea, Japan Removal of indigenous population from the new territory acquired by Soviet Union
1948–1951 Azeris 100,000[158] Armenia Kura-Aras Lowland, Azerbaijan "Measures for resettlement of collective farm workers"
May–June 1949 Greeks, Armenians, Turks 57,680[159]
(including 15,485 Dashnaks)[159]
The Black Sea coast (Russian SFSR), South Caucasus Southern Kazakhstan Membership in the nationalist Dashnaktsutiun Party (Armenians), Greek or Turkish citizenship (Greeks), other
March 1951 Basmachis 2,795[159] Tajikistan Northern Kazakhstan
April 1951 Jehovah's Witnesses 8,576–9,500 [160] Mostly from Moldavia and Ukraine Western Siberia Operation North
1920 to 1953 Total ~20,296,000

See also

Citations

  1. ^ a b UNPO: Chechnya: European Parliament recognizes the genocide of the Chechen People in 1944
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Further reading

  • Polian, Pavel (Павел Полян), Deportations in the USSR: An index of operations with list of corresponding directives and legislation, Russian Academy of Science.
  • Павел Полян, Не по своей воле... (Pavel Polyan, Not by Their Own Will... A History and Geography of Forced Migrations in the USSR), ОГИ Мемориал, Moscow, 2001, ISBN 5-94282-007-4
  • 28 августа 1941 г. Указ Президиума Верховного Совета СССР "О выселении немцев из районов Поволжья".
  • 1943 г. Указ Президиума Верховного Совета СССР "О ликвидации Калмыцкой АССР и образовании Астраханской области в составе РСФСР". *Постановление правительства СССР от 12 января 1949 г. "О выселении с территории Литвы, Латвии и Эстонии кулаков с семьями, семей бандитов и националистов, находящихся на нелегальном положении, убитых при вооруженных столкновениях и осужденных, легализованных бандитов, продолжающих вести вражескую работу, и их семей, а также семей репрессированных пособников и бандитов"
  • Указ Президиума Верховного Совета СССР от 13 декабря 1955 г. "О снятии ограничений в правовом положении с немцев и членов их семей, находящихся на спецпоселении".
  • 17 марта 1956 г. Указ Президиума Верховного Совета СССР "О снятии ограничений в правовом положении с калмыков и членов их семей, находящихся на спецпоселении".
  • 1956 г. Постановление ЦК КПСС "О восстановлении национальной автономии калмыцкого, карачаевского, балкарского, чеченского и ингушского народов".
  • 29 августа 1964 г. Указ Президиума Верховного Совета СССР "О внесении изменений в Указ Президиума Верховного Совета СССР от 28 августа 1941 г. о переселении немцев, проживающих в районах Поволжья".
  • 1991 г: Laws of Russian Federation: "О реабилитации репрессированных народов", "О реабилитации жертв политических репрессий".

Wikisource

  • State Defense Committee Decree No. 5859ss: On Crimean Tatars (See also )

External links

  • These Names Accuse (Soviet Deportations in Latvia)
  • Baltic Deportation Instructions – Full text, English
  • DEPORTATIONS Revelations from the Russian Archives at the Library of Congress
  • Chechnya: European Parliament recognises the genocide of the Chechen People in 1944
  • The scale and nature of German and Soviet repression and mass killings, 1930–45
  • Polish deportees in the USSR List compiled in 1941 by Tadeusz Romer, the Polish ambassador to Japan

population, transfer, soviet, union, from, 1930, 1952, government, soviet, union, orders, soviet, leader, joseph, stalin, under, direction, nkvd, official, lavrentiy, beria, forcibly, transferred, populations, various, groups, these, actions, classified, into,. From 1930 to 1952 the government of the Soviet Union on the orders of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin under the direction of the NKVD official Lavrentiy Beria forcibly transferred populations of various groups These actions may be classified into the following broad categories deportations of anti Soviet categories of population often classified as enemies of workers deportations of entire nationalities labor force transfer and organized migrations in opposite directions to fill ethnically cleansed territories Dekulakization marked the first time that an entire class was deported whereas the deportation of Soviet Koreans in 1937 marked the precedent of a specific ethnic deportation of an entire nationality 9 Population transfer in the Soviet UnionPart of Dekulakization Forced settlements in the Soviet Union and World War IIThe empty Crimean Tatar village of Uskut near Alushta photo taken in 1945 after the complete deportation of its inhabitantsGeneral routes of deportation during the Dekulakization across the Soviet Union in 1930 1931LocationSoviet Union and occupied territoriesDate1930 1952TargetKulaks peasants ethnic minorities and occupied territory citizensAttack typeethnic cleansing population transfer forced labor genocide 1 2 3 4 classicideDeaths 800 000 5 1 500 000 6 in USSRPerpetratorsOGPU NKVDMotiveRussification 7 colonialism 8 cheap labor for forced settlements in the Soviet UnionIn most cases their destinations were underpopulated remote areas see Forced settlements in the Soviet Union This includes deportations to the Soviet Union of non Soviet citizens from countries outside the USSR It has been estimated that in their entirety internal forced migrations affected at least 6 million people 6 10 11 12 Of this total 1 8 million kulaks were deported in 1930 31 1 0 million peasants and ethnic minorities in 1932 39 whereas about 3 5 million ethnic minorities were further resettled during 1940 52 12 Soviet archives documented 390 000 13 deaths during kulak forced resettlement and up to 400 000 deaths of persons deported to forced settlements during the 1940s 14 however Nicolas Werth places overall deaths closer to some 1 to 1 5 million perishing as a result of the deportations 6 Contemporary historians classify these deportations as a crime against humanity and ethnic persecution Two of these cases with the highest mortality rates the deportation of the Crimean Tatars and the deportation of the Chechens and Ingush were recognized as genocides by Ukraine three other countries and the European Parliament respectively clarification needed 1 2 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 3 The Soviet Union also practiced deportations in occupied territories with over 50 000 perishing from the Baltic States and 300 000 to 360 000 perishing during the expulsion of Germans from Eastern Europe due to Soviet deportation massacres and internment and labour camps 15 Contents 1 Deportation of social groups 2 Ethnic operations 2 1 Western annexations and deportations 1939 1941 2 2 World War II 1941 1945 3 Post war expulsion and deportation 3 1 Post Stalin policy on deportation 4 Labor force transfer 5 Repatriation after World War II 6 Modern views 6 1 Possible motivations 7 Death toll 8 Timeline 9 See also 10 Citations 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 Wikisource 14 External linksDeportation of social groups EditMain articles Dekulakization and De Cossackization Kulaks were a group of relatively affluent farmers and had gone by this class system term in the later Russian Empire Soviet Russia and early Soviet Union They were the most numerous group deported by the Soviet Union 16 Resettlement of people officially designated as kulaks continued until early 1950 including several major waves on 5 September 1951 the Soviet government ordered the deportation of kulaks from the Lithuanian SSR for hostile actions against kolhozes which was one of the last resettlements of that social group 17 Large numbers of kulaks regardless of their nationality were resettled in Siberia and Central Asia According to data from Soviet archives which were published in 1990 1 803 392 people were sent to labor colonies and camps in 1930 and 1931 and 1 317 022 reached the destination Deportations on a smaller scale continued after 1931 The reported number of kulaks and their relatives who died in labour colonies from 1932 to 1940 was 389 521 18 The total number of the deported people is disputed Conservative estimates assume that 1 679 528 1 803 392 people were deported 19 while the highest estimates are that 15 million kulaks and their families were deported by 1937 and that during the deportation many people died but the full number is not known 20 Ethnic operations EditMain articles Flight of Poles from the USSR Deportations of the Ingrian Finns Deportation of Chinese in the Soviet Union Deportation of Koreans in the Soviet Union and Deportation of the Soviet Greeks A train with Romanian refugees following the Soviet annexation of Bessarabia During the 1930s categorisation of so called enemies of the people shifted from the usual Marxist Leninist class based terms such as kulak to ethnic based ones 21 The partial removal of potentially trouble making ethnic groups was a technique used consistently by Joseph Stalin during his government 22 between 1935 and 1938 alone at least ten different nationalities were deported 23 Germany s invasion of the Soviet Union led to a massive escalation in Soviet ethnic cleansing 24 The Deportation of Koreans in the Soviet Union originally conceived in 1926 initiated in 1930 and carried through in 1937 was the first mass transfer of an entire nationality in the Soviet Union 25 Almost the entire Soviet population of ethnic Koreans 171 781 persons were forcibly moved from the Russian Far East to unpopulated areas of the Kazakh SSR and the Uzbek SSR in October 1937 26 Looking at the entire period of Stalin s rule one can list Poles 1939 1941 and 1944 1945 Kola Norwegians 1940 1942 Romanians 1941 and 1944 1953 Estonians Latvians and Lithuanians 1941 and 1945 1949 Volga Germans 1941 1945 Ingrian Finns 1929 1931 and 1935 1939 Finnish people in Karelia 1940 1941 1944 Crimean Tatars Crimean Greeks 1944 and Caucasus Greeks 1949 50 Kalmyks Balkars Italians of Crimea Karachays Meskhetian Turks Karapapaks Far East Koreans 1937 Chechens and Ingushs 1944 Shortly before during and immediately after World War II Stalin conducted a series of deportations on a huge scale which profoundly affected the ethnic map of the Soviet Union 27 It is estimated that between 1941 and 1949 nearly 3 3 million were deported to Siberia and the Central Asian republics 28 By some estimates up to 43 of the resettled population died of diseases and malnutrition 29 Western annexations and deportations 1939 1941 Edit See also June deportation Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and Lavrenti Beria in foreground As head of the NKVD Beria was responsible for mass deportations of ethnic minorities Lavrentiy Beria the Chief of NKVD the Soviet secret police was responsible for organizing and executing numerous deportations of ethnic minorities during that time 30 After the Soviet invasion of Poland following the corresponding German invasion that marked the start of World War II in 1939 the Soviet Union annexed eastern parts known as Kresy to the Polish or as West Belarus and West Ukraine in the USSR and among Belarusians and Ukrainians of the Second Polish Republic which since then became western parts of the Belarusian SSR and the Ukrainian SSR During 1939 1941 1 45 million people inhabiting the region were deported by the Soviet regime According to Polish historians 63 1 of these people were Poles and 7 4 were Jews 31 Previously it was believed that about 1 0 million Polish citizens died at the hands of the Soviets 32 but recently Polish historians based mostly on queries in Soviet archives estimate the number of deaths at about 350 000 people deported in 1939 1945 33 34 The same followed in the Baltic republics of Latvia Lithuania and Estonia see Soviet deportations from Estonia Latvia and Lithuania 35 More than 200 000 people are estimated to have been deported from the Baltic in 1940 1953 In addition at least 75 000 were sent to the Gulag 10 of the entire adult Baltic population was deported or sent to labor camps 36 37 In 1989 native Latvians represented only 52 of the population of their own country In Estonia the figure was 62 38 In Lithuania the situation was better because the migrants sent to that country actually moved to the former area of Eastern Prussia now Kaliningrad which contrary to the original plans never became part of Lithuania 39 Likewise Romanians from Chernivtsi Oblast and Moldovia had been deported in great numbers which range from 200 000 to 400 000 40 See Soviet deportations from Bessarabia World War II 1941 1945 Edit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Population transfer in the Soviet Union news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Deportation of the Crimean Tatars Deportation of the Chechens and Ingush Deportation of the Meskhetian Turks Deportation of the Karachays Deportation of the Balkars and Deportation of the Kalmyks Route of people deported from Lithuania to remote regions of the Far East up to 6 000 miles 9 700 km away During World War II particularly in 1943 44 the Soviet government conducted a series of deportations Some 1 9 million people were deported to Siberia and the Central Asian republics Out of approximately 183 000 Crimean Tatars 20 000 or 10 of the entire population served in German battalions 41 Consequently Tatars too were transferred en masse by the Soviets after the war 42 Vyacheslav Molotov justified this decision saying The fact is that during the war we received reports about mass treason Battalions of Caucasians opposed us at the fronts and attacked us from the rear It was a matter of life and death there was no time to investigate the details Of course innocents suffered But I hold that given the circumstances we acted correctly 43 Historian Ian Grey writes Towards the Moslem peoples the Germans pursued a benign almost paternalistic policy The Karachai Balkars Ingush Chechen Kalmucks and Tatars of the Crimea all displayed pro German sympathies in some degree It was only the hurried withdrawal of the Germans from the Caucasus after the battle of Stalingrad that prevented their organizing the Moslem people for effective anti Soviet action The Germans boasted loudly however that they had left a strong fifth column behind them in the Caucasus 44 Volga Germans 45 and seven non Slavic nationalities of the Crimea and the northern Caucasus were deported the Crimean Tatars 46 Kalmyks Chechens 47 Ingush Balkars Karachays and Meskhetian Turks All Crimean Tatars were deported en masse in a form of collective punishment on 18 May 1944 as special settlers to Uzbekistan and other distant parts of the Soviet Union According to NKVD data nearly 20 died in exile during the following year and a half Crimean Tatar activists have reported this figure to be nearly 46 48 49 See Deportation of Crimean Tatars Other minorities evicted from the Black Sea coastal region included Bulgarians Crimean Greeks Romanians and Armenians The Soviet Union also deported people from occupied territories such as the Baltic states Poland and territories occupied by Germans A study published by the German government in 1974 estimated the number of German civilian victims of crimes during expulsion of Germans after World War II between 1945 and 1948 to be over 600 000 with about 400 000 deaths in the areas east of the Oder and Neisse ca 120 000 in acts of direct violence mostly by Soviet troops but also by Poles 60 000 in Polish and 40 000 in Soviet concentration camps or prisons mostly from hunger and disease and 200 000 deaths among civilian deportees to forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union 130 000 in Czechoslovakia thereof 100 000 in camps and 80 000 in Yugoslavia thereof 15 000 to 20 000 from violence outside of and in camps and 59 000 deaths from hunger and disease in camps 15 By January 1953 there were 988 373 special settlers residing in the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic including 444 005 Germans 244 674 Chechens 95 241 Koreans 80 844 Ingush and the others As a consequence of these deportations Kazakhs comprised only 30 of their native Republic s population 50 Post war expulsion and deportation EditAfter World War II the German population of the Kaliningrad Oblast former East Prussia was expelled and the depopulated area resettled by Soviet citizens mainly by Russians Poland and Soviet Ukraine conducted population exchanges Poles who resided east of the established Poland Soviet border were deported to Poland c a 2 100 000 persons and Ukrainians that resided west of the established Poland Soviet Union border were deported to Soviet Ukraine Population transfer to Soviet Ukraine occurred from September 1944 to April 1946 ca 450 000 persons Some Ukrainians ca 200 000 persons left southeast Poland more or less voluntarily between 1944 and 1945 51 A dwelling typical to some deportees into Siberia in a museum in Rumsiskes Lithuania Post Stalin policy on deportation Edit In February 1956 Nikita Khrushchev in his speech On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences condemned the deportations as a violation of Leninist principles All the more monstrous are the acts whose initiator was Stalin and which are violations of the basic Leninist principles of the national policy of the Soviet state We refer to the mass deportations from their native places of whole nations This deportation action was not dictated by any military considerations Thus already at the end of 1943 when there occurred a permanent breakthrough at the fronts a decision was taken and executed concerning the deportation of all the Karachay from the lands on which they lived In the same period at the end of December 1943 the same lot befell whole population of the Autonomous Kalmyk Republic In March all the Chechen and Ingush peoples were deported and the Chechen Ingush Autonomous Republic was liquidated In April 1944 all Balkars were deported to faraway places from the territory of the Kalbino Balkar Autonomous Republic and the Republic itself was renamed the Autonomous Kabardin Republic 52 According to a secret Soviet ministry of interior report dated December 1965 for the period 1940 1953 46 000 people were deported from Moldova 61 000 from Belarus 571 000 from Ukraine 119 000 from Lithuania 53 000 from Latvia and 33 000 from Estonia 53 Labor force transfer EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Punitive transfers of population transfers handled by the Gulag 54 and the system of forced settlements in the Soviet Union were planned in accordance with the needs of the colonization of the remote and underpopulated territories of the Soviet Union Their large scale has led to a controversial opinion in the West that the economic growth of the Soviet Union was largely based on the slave labor of Gulag prisoners At the same time on a number of occasions the workforce was transferred by non violent means usually by means of recruitment verbovka This kind of recruitment was regularly performed at forced settlements where people were naturally more willing to resettle For example the workforce of the Donbas and Kuzbass mining basins is known to have been replenished in this way As a note of historical comparison in Imperial Russia the mining workers at state mines bergals bergaly from German Bergbau mining were often recruited in lieu of military service which for a certain period had a term of 25 years There were several notable campaigns of targeted workforce transfer Twenty five thousanders NKVD labor columns Virgin Lands campaign Baku oil industry workers transfer during the German Soviet War in October 1942 about 10 000 workers from the petroleum sites of Baku together with their families were transferred to several sites with potential oil production the Second Baku area Volga Ural oil field Kazakhstan and Sakhalin in face of the potential German threat although Germany failed to seize Baku Khetagurovite Campaign a campaignRepatriation after World War II EditWhen the war ended in May 1945 millions of Soviet citizens were forcefully repatriated against their will into the USSR 55 On 11 February 1945 at the conclusion of the Yalta Conference the United States and United Kingdom signed a Repatriation Agreement with the USSR 56 The interpretation of this Agreement resulted in the forcible repatriation of all Soviet citizens regardless of their wishes Allied authorities ordered their military forces in Europe to deport to the Soviet Union millions of former residents of the USSR some of whom collaborated with the Germans including numerous persons who had left Russia and established different citizenships for up to decades prior The forced repatriation operations took place from 1945 to 1947 57 At the end of World War II more than 5 million displaced persons from the Soviet Union survived in German captivity About 3 million had been forced laborers Ostarbeiter 58 in Germany and occupied territories 59 60 Surviving POWs about 1 5 million repatriated Ostarbeiter clarification needed and other displaced persons totalling more than 4 000 000 people were sent to special NKVD filtration camps not Gulag By 1946 80 civilians and 20 of PoWs were freed 5 of civilians and 43 of PoWs re drafted 10 of civilians and 22 of PoWs were sent to labor battalions and 2 of civilians and 15 of the PoWs 226 127 out of 1 539 475 total transferred to the NKVD i e the Gulag 61 62 Modern views EditSeveral historians including Russian historian Pavel Polian 63 and Lithuanian Associate Research Scholar at Yale University Violeta Davoliute 64 consider these mass deportations of civilians a crime against humanity They are also often described as Soviet ethnic cleansing 65 66 12 Terry Martin of Harvard University observes the same principles that informed Soviet nation building could and did lead to ethnic cleansing and ethnic terror against a limited set of stigmatized nationalities while leaving nation building policies in place for the majority of nonstigmatized nationalities 67 Funeral of the deported Crimean Tatars in Krasnovishersk late 1944 Other academics and countries go further to call the deportations of the Crimean Tatars Chechens and Ingushs genocide Raphael Lemkin a lawyer of Polish Jewish descent who initiated the Genocide Convention and coined the term genocide himself assumed that genocide was perpetrated in the context of the mass deportation of the Chechens Ingush Volga Germans Crimean Tatars Kalmyks and Karachay 68 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 depended on ties to their particular homeland had a genocidal effect remediable only by restoration of the group to its homeland 69 Soviet dissidents Ilya Gabay 70 and Pyotr Grigorenko 71 both classified the population transfers of the Crimean Tatars as genocide Historian Timothy Snyder included it in a list of Soviet policies that meet the standard of genocide 72 French historian and expert on communist studies Nicolas Werth 73 German historian Philipp Ther 74 Professor Anthony James Joes 75 American journalist Eric Margolis 76 Canadian political scientist Adam Jones 77 professor of Islamic History at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth Brian Glyn Williams 78 scholars Michael Fredholm 79 and Fanny E Bryan 80 also considered the population transfers of the Chechens and Ingush as the crime of genocide German investigative journalist Lutz Kleveman compared the deportations of Chechens and Ingush to a slow genocide 81 On 12 December 2015 the Ukrainian Parliament issued a resolution recognizing the deportation of Crimean Tatars as genocide and established 18 May as the Day of Remembrance for the victims of the Crimean Tatar genocide 82 The parliament of Latvia recognized the event as an act of genocide on 9 May 2019 83 84 The Parliament of Lithuania did the same on 6 June 2019 85 Canadian Parliament passed a motion on 10 June 2019 recognizing the Crimean Tatar deportation of 1944 Surgunlik as a genocide perpetrated by Soviet dictator Stalin designating 18 May to be a day of remembrance 86 87 The deportation of Chechens and Ingush was acknowledged by the European Parliament as an act of genocide in 2004 88 Believes that the deportation of the entire Chechen people to Central Asia on 23 February 1944 on the orders of Stalin constitutes an act of genocide within the meaning of the Fourth Hague Convention of 1907 and the Convention for the Prevention and Repression of the Crime of Genocide adopted by the UN General Assembly on 9 December 1948 89 Experts of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum cited the events of 1944 for a reason of placing Chechnya on their genocide watch list for its potential for genocide 90 The separatist government of Chechnya also recognized it as genocide 91 Some academics disagree with the classification of deportation as genocide Professor Alexander Statiev argues that Stalin s administration did not have a conscious genocidal intent to exterminate the various deported peoples but that Soviet political culture poor planning haste and wartime shortages were responsible for the genocidal death rate among them He rather considers these deportations an example of Soviet assimilation of unwanted nations 92 According to Professor Amir Weiner It was their territorial identity and not their physical existence or even their distinct ethnic identity that the regime sought to eradicate 93 According to Professor Francine Hirsch although the Soviet regime practiced politics of discrimination and exclusion it did not practice what contemporaries thought of as racial politics To her these mass deportations were based on the concept that nationalities were sociohistorical groups with a shared consciousness and not racial biological groups 94 In contrast to this view Jon K Chang contends that the deportations had been in fact based on ethnicity and that social historians in the West have failed to champion the rights of marginalized ethnicities in the Soviet Union 95 Possible motivations Edit The dominant view among historians of Russia and the USSR was and remains that of Harvard s Terry Martin and his theory of Soviet xenophobia This theory espouses the belief that the Soviet Union ethnically cleansed the border peoples of the USSR from 1937 to 1951 including the Caucasus and the Crimea to remove Soviet nationalities whose political allegiances were allegedly suspect or inimical to Soviet socialism In this view the USSR did not practice direct negative ethnic animus or discrimination In neither case did the Soviet state itself conceive of these deportations as ethnic 96 Political ideology of all Soviet peoples was the primary consideration 97 Martin stated that the various deportations of the Soviet border peoples were simply the culmination of a gradual shift from predominantly class based terror which began during collectivization 1932 33 to national ethnic based terror 1937 98 Accordingly Martin further claimed that the nationalities deportations were ideological not ethnic It was spurred by an ideological hatred and suspicion of foreign capitalist governments not the national hatred of non Russians 99 His theory entitled Soviet xenophobia paints the USSR and the Stalinist regime as having practiced and carried out in politics education and Soviet society relatively pure socialism and Marxist practices This view has been supported by many of the major historians of the USSR those in Russian and even Korean studies such as Fitzpatrick Suny F Hirsch A Weiner and A Park 100 A Park in her archival work found very little evidence that Koreans had proven or were able to prove their loyalties beyond a shadow of a doubt thus necessitating deportation from the border areas 101 Robert Conquest stated that these nationalities were transfered because in Stalin s view either welcomed or not opposed the Germans 102 In contrast the views of J Otto Pohl and Jon K Chang affirm that the Soviet Union its officials and everyday citizens produced and reproduced from the Tsarist era racialized primordialist views policies and tropes regarding their non Slavic peoples 103 104 105 Norman M Naimark believed that the Stalinist nationalities deportations were forms of national cultural genocide The deportations at the very least changed the cultures way of life and world views of the deported peoples as the majority were sent to Soviet Central Asia and Siberia 106 Primordialism is simply another way of saying ethnic chauvinism or racism because the said primordial peoples or ethnic groups are seen as possessing permanent traits and characteristics which they pass on one generation to the next Interestingly both Chang and Martin agree that the Stalinist regime took a turn towards primordializing nationality in the 1930s 107 108 After the primordialist turn by the Stalinist regime in the mid 1930s the Soviet Greeks Finns Poles Chinese Koreans Germans Crimean Tatars and the other deported peoples were seen to have loyalties to their titular nations or to non Soviet polities as the Soviet state in the 1930s regarded nationality ethnicity and political loyalty ideology as a primordial equivalents 107 Thus it was no surprise that the regime would choose deportation Martin s different interpretation is that the Soviet regime was not deporting the various diaspora peoples because of their nationality Rather nationality ethnicity or phenotype served as a referent or a signifier for the political ideology of the deported peoples 109 110 Amir Weiner s argument is similar to Martin s substituting territorial identity for Martin s xenophobia 111 112 The Soviet xenophobia argument also does not hold up semantically Xenophobia is the fear by natives of invasion or loss of territory and influence to foreigners The Russians and other Eastern Slavs are coming into the territory of the natives the deported peoples who were simply Soviet national minorities They were not foreign elements The Russian empire was not the native state polity or government in the Asian Far East the Caucasus and many other regions of the deported peoples 112 Koguryo followed by Parhae Balhae Bohai were the first states of the Russian Far East 113 114 John J Stephan called the erasure of Chinese and Korean history state formation cultural contributions peoples to the region by the USSR and Russia the intentional genesis of a blank spot 115 Chang notes that all forms of racism could be explained away in a like manner Regardless all of the Stalinist orders for total deportation of the thirteen nationalities from 1937 to 1951 list each of the peoples by ethnicity as well as a charge of treason Soviet law required that one s guilt or innocence for treason be determined individually and in a court of law prior to sentencing per 1936 Constitution Finally on the other end of the primordial spectrum the Eastern Slavs Russians Ukrainians Belarusians were seen as inherently more loyal and more representative of the Soviet people 116 This is clearly a deviation from socialism and Marxist Leninism 117 Death toll EditThe number of deaths attributed to deported people living in exile is considerable The causes for such demographic catastrophe lie in harsh climates of Siberia and Kazakhstan disease malnutrition work exploitation which lasted for up to 12 hours daily as well as the lack of any kind of appropriate housing or accommodation for the deported people Overall it is assumed that the fatalities caused by this relocation upheaval range from 800 000 5 up to 1 500 000 6 The partial documentation in the NKVD archives indicated that the mortality rates of these deported ethnic groups were considerable The Meskhetian Turks had a 14 6 mortality rate the Kalmyks 17 4 people from Crimea 19 6 while the Chechens the Ingush and other people from the Northern Caucasus had the highest losses reaching 23 7 118 The NKVD did not record excess deaths for the deported Soviet Koreans but their mortality rate estimates range from 10 119 to 16 3 120 Number of deaths of peoples in exile 1930s 1950s Group Estimated number of deaths ReferencesKulaks 1930 1937 389 521 121 122 Chechens 100 000 400 000 123 124 Poles 90 000 125 Koreans 16 500 40 000 119 126 127 Estonians 5 400 128 Latvians 17 400 128 Lithuanians 28 000 129 Finns 18 800 130 Hungarians 15 000 20 000 131 Karachays 13 100 35 000 118 127 132 Soviet Germans 42 823 228 800 133 118 Kalmyks 12 600 48 000 118 130 127 134 Ingush 20 300 23 000 118 127 Balkars 7 600 11 000 118 130 127 Crimean Tatars 34 300 109 956 118 135 136 137 Meskhetian Turks 12 859 50 000 118 127 138 TOTAL 824 203 1 514 877Additionally around 300 000 360 000 Germans deported after World War II from occupied territories in Eastern Europe perished 15 but the Soviet Army was not the sole perpetrator of these expulsions since other European countries also participated Timeline EditDate of transfer Targeted group Approximate numbers Place of initial residence Transfer destination Stated reasons for transferApril 1920 Cossacks Terek Cossacks 45 000 139 North Caucasus Ukraine northern Russian SFSR Decossackization stopping Russian colonisation of North Caucasus1930 1931 Kulaks 1 679 528 1 803 392 19 Regions of total collectivization most of Russian SFSR Ukraine other regions Northern Russian SFSR Ural Siberia North Caucasus Kazakh ASSR Kirghiz ASSR Collectivization1930 1937 Kulaks 15 000 000 20 Regions of total collectivization most of Russian SFSR Ukraine other regions Northern Russian SFSR Ural Siberia North Caucasus Kazakh ASSR Kirghiz ASSR CollectivizationNovember December 1932 Peasants 45 000 140 Krasnodar Krai Russian SFSR Northern Russia SabotageMay 1933 People from Moscow and Leningrad who had been unable to obtain an internal passport 6 000 Moscow and Leningrad Nazino Island cleanse Moscow Leningrad and the other great urban centers of the USSR of superfluous elements not connected with production or administrative work as well as kulaks criminals and other antisocial and socially dangerous elements 141 February May 1935 September 1941 1942 Ingrian Finns 420 000 142 Leningrad Oblast Karelia Russian SFSR Astrakhan Oblast Vologda Oblast Western Siberia Kazakhstan Tajikistan FinlandFebruary March 1935 Germans Poles 412 000 140 Central and western Ukraine Eastern UkraineMay 1936 Germans Poles 45 000 140 Border regions of Ukraine UkraineJuly 1937 Kurds 1 325 143 Border regions of Georgia Azerbaijan Armenia Turkmenistan Uzbekistan and Tajikistan Kazakhstan KirghiziaSeptember October 1937 Koreans 172 000 144 Far East Northern Kazakhstan UzbekistanSeptember October 1937 Chinese Harbin Russians At least 17 500 145 Southern Far East 140 Xinjiang 145 Kazakhstan Uzbekistan 140 At least 12 000 Chinese citizens were deported to Xinjiang while 5 500 Chinese Soviet citizens were deported to Central Asia 145 1938 Persian Jews 6 000 146 Mary Province Turkmenistan Deserted areas of northern TurkmenistanJanuary 1938 Azeris Persians Kurds Assyrians 6 000 147 Azerbaijan Kazakhstan Iranian citizenshipJanuary 1940 1941 Poles Jews Ukrainians including refugees from Poland 320 000 148 Western Ukraine western Byelorussia Northern Russian SFSR Ural Siberia Kazakhstan UzbekistanJuly 1940 to 1953 Estonians Latvians amp Lithuanians 203 590 149 Baltic states Siberia and Northern Russian SFSRSeptember 1941 March 1942 Germans 855 674 150 Povolzhye the Caucasus Crimea Ukraine Moscow central Russian SFSR Kazakhstan SiberiaAugust 1943 Karachais 69 267 151 Karachay Cherkess AO Stavropol Krai Russian SFSR Kazakhstan Kirghizia other Banditism otherDecember 1943 Kalmyks 93 139 144 Kalmyk ASSR Russian SFSR Kazakhstan SiberiaFebruary 1944 Chechens Ingush 478 479 152 North Caucasus Kazakhstan Kirghizia 1940 1944 insurgency in ChechnyaApril 1944 Kurds Azeris 3 000 153 Tbilisi Georgia Southern GeorgiaMay 1944 Balkars 37 406 151 40 900 144 North Caucasus Kazakhstan KirghiziaMay 1944 Crimean Tatars 191 014 151 144 Crimea UzbekistanMay June 1944 Greeks Bulgarians Armenians Turks 37 080 9 620 Armenians 12 040 Bulgarians 15 040 Greeks 154 Crimea Uzbekistan June 1944 Kabardins 2 000 Kabardino Balkarian ASSR Russian SFSR Southern Kazakhstan Collaboration with the NazisJuly 1944 Russian True Orthodox Church members 1 000 Central Russian SFSR SiberiaNovember 1944 Meskhetian Turks Kurds Hamshenis Pontic Greeks Karapapaks Lazes and other inhabitants of the border zone 115 000 144 Southwestern Georgia Uzbekistan Kazakhstan KirghiziaNovember 1944 January 1945 Hungarians Germans 30 000 40 000 131 Transcarpathian Ukraine Ural Donbas ByelorussiaJanuary 1945 Traitors and collaborators 2 000 155 Mineralnye Vody Russian SFSR Tajikistan Collaboration with the Nazis1944 1953 Families of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army 204 000 156 Western Ukraine Siberia1944 1953 Poles 1 240 000 142 Kresy region postwar Poland Removal of indigenous population from the new territory acquired by Soviet Union1945 1950 Germans Tens of thousands Konigsberg West or Middle Germany Removal of indigenous population from the new territory acquired by Soviet Union1945 1951 Japanese Koreans 400 000 157 Mostly from Sakhalin Kuril Islands Siberia Far East North Korea Japan Removal of indigenous population from the new territory acquired by Soviet Union1948 1951 Azeris 100 000 158 Armenia Kura Aras Lowland Azerbaijan Measures for resettlement of collective farm workers May June 1949 Greeks Armenians Turks 57 680 159 including 15 485 Dashnaks 159 The Black Sea coast Russian SFSR South Caucasus Southern Kazakhstan Membership in the nationalist Dashnaktsutiun Party Armenians Greek or Turkish citizenship Greeks otherMarch 1951 Basmachis 2 795 159 Tajikistan Northern KazakhstanApril 1951 Jehovah s Witnesses 8 576 9 500 160 Mostly from Moldavia and Ukraine Western Siberia Operation North1920 to 1953 Total 20 296 000See also EditAgainst Their Will Crimes against humanity under communist regimes Demographic engineering Doctors plot Speculation about a planned deportation of Jews Ethnic cleansing Jewish Autonomous Oblast Jewish settlement in the region Mass killings under communist regimes National operations of the NKVD German operation of the NKVD Latvian operation of the NKVD Polish operation of the NKVD On the Rehabilitation of Repressed Peoples Operation Priboi Baltics Repatriation of Poles 1955 1959 World War II evacuation and expulsion Evacuation of East Prussia Flight and expulsion of Germans 1944 1950 Forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union June deportation Baltics Nazi Soviet population transfers Polish population transfers 1944 1946 Soviet deportations from Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina Territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet UnionCitations Edit a b UNPO Chechnya European Parliament recognizes the genocide of the Chechen People in 1944 a b Rosefielde Steven 2009 Red Holocaust Routledge p 84 ISBN 978 0 415 77757 5 a b 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of Georgia 2 ed Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781442241466 LCCN 2014024518 Morris James 2004 The Polish terror spy mania and ethnic cleansing in the great terror Europe Asia Studies 56 5 751 766 doi 10 1080 0966813041000235137 S2CID 154560102 Naimark Norman M 2010 Stalin s Genocides Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691147840 LCCN 2010019063 Pai Hyung Il 2000 Constructing Korean Origins A Critical Review of Archaeology Historiography and Racial Myth in Korean State Formation Theories Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674002449 Park Alyssa M 2019 Sovereignty experiments Korean migrants and the building of borders in northeast Asia 1860 1945 Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 9781501738371 LCCN 2019001070 Pavlenko Aneta 2008 Multilingualism in Post Soviet Countries Multilingual Matters ISBN 9781847690876 LCCN 2008012757 Pettai Eva Clarita Pettai Vello 2014 Transitional and Retrospective Justice in the Baltic States Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107049499 LCCN 2014 043729 Pohl J Otto 1997 The Stalinist Penal System McFarland ISBN 0786403365 Pohl J Otto 1999 Ethnic Cleansing in the USSR 1937 1949 Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 30921 2 LCCN 98 046822 Pohl J Otto 2000 Stalin s genocide against the Repressed Peoples Journal of Genocide Research 2 2 267 293 doi 10 1080 713677598 S2CID 59194258 Polian Pavel 2004 Against Their Will The History and Geography of Forced Migrations in the USSR Budapest Central European University Press ISBN 978 9 639 24168 8 Rywkin Michael 1994 Moscow s Lost Empire Routledge ISBN 9781315287713 LCCN 93029308 Salitan Laurie P 1992 Rosemary Thorp ed Politics and Nationality in Contemporary Soviet Jewish Emigration 1968 89 Springer ISBN 978 1349097562 Sanford George 2007 Katyn and the Soviet Massacre of 1940 Truth Justice and Memory Routledge ISBN 9781134302994 LCCN 2004 065124 Statiev Alexandar 2010 Soviet ethnic deportations intent versus outcome Journal of Genocide Research 11 2 3 243 264 doi 10 1080 14623520903118961 S2CID 71905569 Stephan John J 1994 The Russian Far East A History Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804727013 Ther Philipp 2014 The Dark Side of Nation States Ethnic Cleansing in Modern Europe Gottingen Berghahn Books p 118 ISBN 9781782383031 LCCN 2011516970 Tishkov Valery 2004 Chechnya Life in a War Torn Society Vol 6 Berkeley University of California Press p 33 ISBN 9780520930209 LCCN 2003017330 Viola Lynne 2007 The Unknown Gulag The Lost World of Stalin s Special Settlements Oxford University Press p 32 ISBN 9780195187694 Weiner Amir 2002 Nothing but Certainty Slavic Review 61 1 44 53 doi 10 2307 2696980 JSTOR 2696980 S2CID 159548222 Werth Nicolas 2004 Strategies of Violence in the Stalinist USSR In Rousso Henry Golsan Richard Joseph eds Stalinism and Nazism History and Memory Compared University of Nebraska Press ISBN 9780803290006 LCCN 2003026805 Werth Nicholas 2008 The Crimes of the Stalin Regime Outline for an Inventory and Classification In Stone Dan ed The Historiography of Genocide repeated ed Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan p 412 ISBN 9780230297784 LCCN 2007048561 Williams Brian Glyn 2015 The Crimean Tatars From Soviet Genocide to Putin s Conquest London New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190494728 LCCN 2015033355 Further reading EditPolian Pavel Pavel Polyan Deportations in the USSR An index of operations with list of corresponding directives and legislation Russian Academy of Science Pavel Polyan Ne po svoej vole Pavel Polyan Not by Their Own Will A History and Geography of Forced Migrations in the USSR OGI Memorial Moscow 2001 ISBN 5 94282 007 4 28 avgusta 1941 g Ukaz Prezidiuma Verhovnogo Soveta SSSR O vyselenii nemcev iz rajonov Povolzhya 1943 g Ukaz Prezidiuma Verhovnogo Soveta SSSR O likvidacii Kalmyckoj ASSR i obrazovanii Astrahanskoj oblasti v sostave RSFSR Postanovlenie pravitelstva SSSR ot 12 yanvarya 1949 g O vyselenii s territorii Litvy Latvii i Estonii kulakov s semyami semej banditov i nacionalistov nahodyashihsya na nelegalnom polozhenii ubityh pri vooruzhennyh stolknoveniyah i osuzhdennyh legalizovannyh banditov prodolzhayushih vesti vrazheskuyu rabotu i ih semej a takzhe semej repressirovannyh posobnikov i banditov Ukaz Prezidiuma Verhovnogo Soveta SSSR ot 13 dekabrya 1955 g O snyatii ogranichenij v pravovom polozhenii s nemcev i chlenov ih semej nahodyashihsya na specposelenii 17 marta 1956 g Ukaz Prezidiuma Verhovnogo Soveta SSSR O snyatii ogranichenij v pravovom polozhenii s kalmykov i chlenov ih semej nahodyashihsya na specposelenii 1956 g Postanovlenie CK KPSS O vosstanovlenii nacionalnoj avtonomii kalmyckogo karachaevskogo balkarskogo chechenskogo i ingushskogo narodov 29 avgusta 1964 g Ukaz Prezidiuma Verhovnogo Soveta SSSR O vnesenii izmenenij v Ukaz Prezidiuma Verhovnogo Soveta SSSR ot 28 avgusta 1941 g o pereselenii nemcev prozhivayushih v rajonah Povolzhya 1991 g Laws of Russian Federation O reabilitacii repressirovannyh narodov O reabilitacii zhertv politicheskih repressij Wikisource EditState Defense Committee Decree No 5859ss On Crimean Tatars See also Three answers to the Decree No 5859ss External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Soviet deportations These Names Accuse Soviet Deportations in Latvia Baltic Deportation Instructions Full text English DEPORTATIONS Revelations from the Russian Archives at the Library of Congress Chechnya European Parliament recognises the genocide of the Chechen People in 1944 The scale and nature of German and Soviet repression and mass killings 1930 45 Ediev D M Demograficheskie poteri deportirovannyh narodov SSSR Stavropol 2003 Polish deportees in the USSR List compiled in 1941 by Tadeusz Romer the Polish ambassador to Japan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Population transfer in the Soviet Union amp oldid 1133056349, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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