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Purges of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union

Purges of the Communist Party in the Soviet Union (Russian: "Чистка партийных рядов", chistka partiynykh ryadov, "cleansing of the party ranks") were Soviet political events, especially during the 1920s,[1] in which periodic reviews of members of the Communist Party were conducted by other members and the security organs to get rid of "undesirables".[2] Such reviews would start with a short autobiography from the reviewed person and then an interrogation of him or her by the purge commission, as well as by the attending audience. Although many people were victims of the purge throughout this decade, the general Russian public was not aware of the purge until 1937.[3]

Although the term "purge" is largely associated with Stalinism because the greatest of the purges happened during Stalin's rule, the Bolsheviks carried out their first major purge of the party ranks as early as 1921. Approximately 220,000 members were purged or left the party. The Bolsheviks stated as justification the need to get rid of the members who had joined the party simply to be on the winning side. The major criteria were social origins (members of working classes were normally accepted without question) and contributions to the revolutionary cause.

The first Party purge of the Joseph Stalin era took place in 1929–1930 in accordance with a resolution of the XVI Party Conference.[4] Purges became deadly under Stalin. More than 10 percent of the party members were purged. At the same time, a significant number of new industrial workers joined the Party.

Operation Spring

Stalin ordered Operation Spring – the repression, arrest or execution of officers of the Red Army who had served previously in the Russian Imperial Army, of civilians who had been sympathetic to the White movement, or of other subversives rounded up by the OGPU. 3,496 people were arrested and 130 were executed in several regions, being accused of "preparing uprisings in anticipation of intervention".[5][6]

Business

The organizer of the initiated case "Spring" was the leader of the OGPU Izrail Leplevsky. With the support of the deputy chairman of the OGPU Genrikh Yagoda, he inflated the scale of "Spring" to the scale of the "case of the Industrial Party."[7]

In total, according to some reports, more than 3,000 people were arrested, among them Andrei Snesarev, A.L. Rodendorf, Alexander Andreyevich Svechin, Pavel Sytin, F.F. Novitsky, Aleksander Verkhovsky, I. Galkin, Yu. K. Gravitsky, Vladimir Olderogge, V. A. Yablochkin, Nikolai Sollogub, Aleksandr Baltiysky, Mikhail Dmitriyevich Bonch-Bruyevich, N. A. Morozov, Aleksei Gutor, A. Kh. Bazarevsky, Mikhail Matiyasevich, V. F. Rzhechitsky, V. N. Gatovsky, P. M. Sharangovich, D. D. Zuev and others.[8][9][10][11]

Historiography

This case gained fame with the release in 2000 of the book of the Ukrainian historian Yaroslav Tinchenko “The Calvary of Russian Officers”, which essentially raised this topic for the first time and made it accessible to the general reader.

Some documents relating to the operation "Spring" were published in the USSR in a two-volume collection of documents "From the archives of the Cheka, OGPU, NKVD" dedicated to this operation.

1932 to 1935

Stalin ordered the next systematic party purge in the Soviet Union in December 1932, to be performed during 1933. During this period, new memberships were suspended. A joint resolution of the Party Central Committee and Central Revision Committee specified the criteria for purging and called for setting up special Purge Commissions, to which every communist had to report. Furthermore, this purge concerned members of the Central Committee and of the Central Revision Committee, who previously had been immune to purges, because they were elected at Party Congresses. In particular, Nikolai Bukharin, Alexei Ivanovich Rykov, and Mikhail Tomsky were asked to defend themselves during this purge. As the purges unfolded, it became increasingly apparent that what had begun as an attempt to cleanse the party of unequipped and defecting members would culminate in nothing less than a cleansing of integral party members of all ranks. This included many prominent leading party members that had ruled the regime for over a decade.[12] At this time, of 1.9 million members, approximately 18 percent were purged (i.e. expelled from the party).

Until 1933 those purged (totaling 800,000) were not usually arrested. (The few that were became the first waves of the gulag forced labor system.)[13] But from 1934 onwards, during the Great Purge, the connotations of the term changed, because being expelled from the party came with the possibility of arrest, with long imprisonment or execution following.[13] The Party Central Committee would later state that the careless methodology used resulted in serious errors and perversions which hindered the work of cleansing the party from its real enemies.[14]

Great Purge

The most prolific period of executions occurred during the Great Purge, from 1936 to 1938.

The Central Committee Plenum passed a resolution in 1935 declaring an end to the purges of 1933.[15] Sergey Kirov, leader of the Leningrad section of the Communist party, was murdered in 1934.[16] In response, Stalin's Great Purge saw one third of the Communist party executed or sentenced to work in labor camps.[17][18] Stalin induced terror among his own party and justified it with Marxist principles.[19] Victims of the Great Purge were placed in a losing scenario regardless of what view they took. They were required to confess their transgressions towards the party and name accomplices. Although most were innocent, many chose to name accomplices either in hopes of gaining freedom or just to stop their torture by interrogators, which was ubiquitous at the time. The prisoner most often was still punished the same whether they denied their crimes, admitted them and provided no accomplices, or admitted them and provided accomplices. It made little difference as to their fate. This can be described as a one-shot, n-person prisoner's dilemma.[20] The punishment remained the same regardless of the terms of confession.

The Great Purge was no less perilous for those few foreigners who attempted to assimilate into Soviet culture. In one piece of literature, the author recalls a Soviet general describing the Great Purges as "difficult years to understand" for citizens and foreigners alike.[21] These foreigners were treated much the same as Soviet ethnic minorities, and they were thought to be potential threats in the impending war. Germans, Poles, Finns, and other westerners were shown the same fate the bourgeoisie had been dealt following the end of NEP. Punishments ranged from eviction and relocation to summary execution.[22]

1950s

Following Stalin's death in 1953 purges as systematic campaigns of expulsion from the party ended; thereafter, the center's political control was exerted instead mainly through loss of party membership and its attendant nomenklatura privileges, which effectively downgraded one's opportunities in society – see Trade unions in the Soviet Union § Role in the Soviet class system, chekism, and party rule. Recalcitrant cases could be reduced to nonpersons via involuntary commitment to a psychiatric institution.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ Fitzpatrick, S. Everyday Stalinism. Oxford University Press. New-York, 1999. page 20. ISBN 0195050010
  2. ^ Alex Inkeles and Raymond A. Bauer. The Soviet Citizen. Daily Life in a Totalitarian Society. New-York, 1968 (1st published in 1959).
  3. ^ Siegel, Ada (January 1954). "The Soviet Purge System" (PDF). Challenge. 2: 54–59 JSTOR 40716727
  4. ^ Gregor, Richard, editor. Resolutions and Decisions of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union Volume 2: The Early Soviet Period 1917-1929. University of Toronto Press, 1974. JSTOR 10.3138/j.ctt1vxmdr5
  5. ^ Jaroslav Tinchenko (2000). Calvary Russian officers in the USSR. 1930-1931 years (in Russian). Moscow: Moscow Public Science Foundation. ISBN 978-5-89554-195-1.
  6. ^ Velikanova, Olga (2013). Popular Perceptions of Soviet Politics in the 1920s: Disenchantment of the Dreamers. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9781137030757. Retrieved 2018-01-28. Operation 'Spring' in 1930–31 targeted the former officers and generals of the Tsarist army serving in the Red Army. According to incomplete data, 3496 officers were arrested and 130 were executed in the Ukraine, Voronezh and Leningrad regions being accused of preparing uprisings in anticipation of intervention.
  7. ^ Публикация
  8. ^ Ярослав Тинченко Голгофа русского офицерства в СССР. 1930—1931 годы
  9. ^ Служили два офицера. О книге Я. Тинченко
  10. ^ З архівів ВУЧК, ГПУ, НКВД, КГБ. 2002 год, номер 1-2, изд-во «Сфера», Киев.А. А. Зданович.
  11. ^ «Органы государственной безопасности и Красная Армия», глава, посвященная делу «Генштабисты» и операции «Весна»
  12. ^ Unger, A.L. (January 1969). "Stalin's Renewal of the Leading Stratum: A Note on the Great Purge" (PDF). Soviet Studies. 20: 321–330 JSTOR 149486
  13. ^ a b Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr (1974), The Gulag Archipelago [Архипела́г ГУЛА́Г], vol. 1, translated by Whitney, Thomas P., Paris: Éditions du Seuil, ISBN 978-0-06-013914-8, OCLC 802879.
  14. ^ "On Mistakes in the Purge" (PDF). The Slavonic and East European Review. 16: 703–713. April 1938 JSTOR 4203435
  15. ^ Mcneal, Robert (October 1971). "The Decisions of the CPSU and the Great Purge" (PDF). Soviet Studies. 23: 177–185 JSTOR 150154
  16. ^ Michael, Reiman (2016). About Russia, Its Revolutions, Its Development and Its Present. New York: Peter Lang AG. p. 102. ISBN 9783631671368.
  17. ^ "BBC - GCSE Bitesize - Stalin - purges and praises". Retrieved 2018-01-29. In 1934, Kirov, the leader of the Leningrad Communist Party, was murdered, probably on Stalin's orders. Stalin used this episode to order massive purges by which anybody suspected of disloyalty was murdered, sent to prison camps, or put on public show trials at which they pleaded guilty to incredible crimes they could never have done. [...] The Communist leadership was purged - 93 of the 139 Central Committee members were put to death. The armed forces were purged - 81 of the 103 generals and admirals were executed. The Communist Party was purged - about a third of its 3 million members were killed.
  18. ^ "The Great Purge". History.
  19. ^ Grossman, Peter (March 1994). "The Dilemma of Prisoners: Choice during Stalin's Great Terror, 1936-38" (PDF). The Journal of Conflict Resolution. 38: 43–55 doi:10.1177/0022002794038001003 JSTOR 174400
  20. ^ Grossman, Peter (March 1994). "The Dilemma of Prisoners: Choice during Stalin's Great Terror". The Journal of Conflict Resolution. 38 (1): 43–55. doi:10.1177/0022002794038001003. JSTOR 174400. S2CID 144185359.
  21. ^ Maclean, Fitzroy. Escape to Adventure. Boston: Little, Brown, 1950. Print. p. 9.
  22. ^ Humphreys, Brendan (2018-07-03). "Ethnic and Religious Minorities in Stalin's Soviet Union: New Dimensions of Research". Scando-Slavica. 64 (2): 312–314. doi:10.1080/00806765.2018.1525320. ISSN 0080-6765.

Literature

  • Arzyutov, Dmitry. "Early Years of Visual Anthropology in the Soviet Arctic". tandfonline. tandfonline. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  • Ganin A.V. Everyday life of the General Staffists under Lenin and Trotsky. - M., 2016.
  • Ganin A.V. In the Shadow of "Spring." Former officers under repression of the early 1930s // Homeland. 2014. - No. 6. - S. 95-101.
  • Ganin A.V. Gambit Monighetti. The incredible adventures of the "Italian" in Russia // Homeland. 2011. - No. 10. - P. 122–125.
  • Ganin A.V. Archive and investigation of the military scientist A. A. Svechin. 1931-1932 // Bulletin of the archivist. 2014. - No. 2 (126). - S. 260–272; No. 3 (127). - S. 261–291.
  • Bliznichenko S. S., Lazarev S. E. “Anti-Soviet conspiracy” at the Naval Academy (1930-1932) // Bulletin of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The science. Society. Person. 2012. No. 3 (41). - S. 118–124.
  • Lazarev S.E. Military-political academy in the 1930s // Scientific reports of Belgorod State University. Series “History. Political science. Economy. Computer science". 2013. No. 8 (151). - Vol. 26. - S. 140–149.
  • Bliznichenko S. S., Lazarev S. E. Repression at the F.E.Dzerzhinsky Naval Engineering School in the 1930s. // Recent history of Russia. 2014. - No. 1 (09). - S. 124–139.

External links

  • В энциклопедии С-Петербурга
  • Ярослав Тинченко. Голгофа русского офицерства в СССР. 1930—1931 годы
  • З архівів ВУЧК, ГПУ, НКВД, КГБ. 2002 год, номер 1–2, изд-во «Сфера», Киев.

purges, communist, party, soviet, union, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, sc. 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 Purges of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Purges of the Communist Party in the Soviet Union Russian Chistka partijnyh ryadov chistka partiynykh ryadov cleansing of the party ranks were Soviet political events especially during the 1920s 1 in which periodic reviews of members of the Communist Party were conducted by other members and the security organs to get rid of undesirables 2 Such reviews would start with a short autobiography from the reviewed person and then an interrogation of him or her by the purge commission as well as by the attending audience Although many people were victims of the purge throughout this decade the general Russian public was not aware of the purge until 1937 3 Although the term purge is largely associated with Stalinism because the greatest of the purges happened during Stalin s rule the Bolsheviks carried out their first major purge of the party ranks as early as 1921 Approximately 220 000 members were purged or left the party The Bolsheviks stated as justification the need to get rid of the members who had joined the party simply to be on the winning side The major criteria were social origins members of working classes were normally accepted without question and contributions to the revolutionary cause The first Party purge of the Joseph Stalin era took place in 1929 1930 in accordance with a resolution of the XVI Party Conference 4 Purges became deadly under Stalin More than 10 percent of the party members were purged At the same time a significant number of new industrial workers joined the Party Contents 1 Operation Spring 1 1 Business 1 2 Historiography 2 1932 to 1935 3 Great Purge 4 1950s 5 See also 6 References 7 Literature 8 External linksOperation Spring EditStalin ordered Operation Spring the repression arrest or execution of officers of the Red Army who had served previously in the Russian Imperial Army of civilians who had been sympathetic to the White movement or of other subversives rounded up by the OGPU 3 496 people were arrested and 130 were executed in several regions being accused of preparing uprisings in anticipation of intervention 5 6 Business Edit The organizer of the initiated case Spring was the leader of the OGPU Izrail Leplevsky With the support of the deputy chairman of the OGPU Genrikh Yagoda he inflated the scale of Spring to the scale of the case of the Industrial Party 7 In total according to some reports more than 3 000 people were arrested among them Andrei Snesarev A L Rodendorf Alexander Andreyevich Svechin Pavel Sytin F F Novitsky Aleksander Verkhovsky I Galkin Yu K Gravitsky Vladimir Olderogge V A Yablochkin Nikolai Sollogub Aleksandr Baltiysky Mikhail Dmitriyevich Bonch Bruyevich N A Morozov Aleksei Gutor A Kh Bazarevsky Mikhail Matiyasevich V F Rzhechitsky V N Gatovsky P M Sharangovich D D Zuev and others 8 9 10 11 Historiography Edit This case gained fame with the release in 2000 of the book of the Ukrainian historian Yaroslav Tinchenko The Calvary of Russian Officers which essentially raised this topic for the first time and made it accessible to the general reader Some documents relating to the operation Spring were published in the USSR in a two volume collection of documents From the archives of the Cheka OGPU NKVD dedicated to this operation 1932 to 1935 EditStalin ordered the next systematic party purge in the Soviet Union in December 1932 to be performed during 1933 During this period new memberships were suspended A joint resolution of the Party Central Committee and Central Revision Committee specified the criteria for purging and called for setting up special Purge Commissions to which every communist had to report Furthermore this purge concerned members of the Central Committee and of the Central Revision Committee who previously had been immune to purges because they were elected at Party Congresses In particular Nikolai Bukharin Alexei Ivanovich Rykov and Mikhail Tomsky were asked to defend themselves during this purge As the purges unfolded it became increasingly apparent that what had begun as an attempt to cleanse the party of unequipped and defecting members would culminate in nothing less than a cleansing of integral party members of all ranks This included many prominent leading party members that had ruled the regime for over a decade 12 At this time of 1 9 million members approximately 18 percent were purged i e expelled from the party Until 1933 those purged totaling 800 000 were not usually arrested The few that were became the first waves of the gulag forced labor system 13 But from 1934 onwards during the Great Purge the connotations of the term changed because being expelled from the party came with the possibility of arrest with long imprisonment or execution following 13 The Party Central Committee would later state that the careless methodology used resulted in serious errors and perversions which hindered the work of cleansing the party from its real enemies 14 Great Purge EditMain article Great Purge The most prolific period of executions occurred during the Great Purge from 1936 to 1938 The Central Committee Plenum passed a resolution in 1935 declaring an end to the purges of 1933 15 Sergey Kirov leader of the Leningrad section of the Communist party was murdered in 1934 16 In response Stalin s Great Purge saw one third of the Communist party executed or sentenced to work in labor camps 17 18 Stalin induced terror among his own party and justified it with Marxist principles 19 Victims of the Great Purge were placed in a losing scenario regardless of what view they took They were required to confess their transgressions towards the party and name accomplices Although most were innocent many chose to name accomplices either in hopes of gaining freedom or just to stop their torture by interrogators which was ubiquitous at the time The prisoner most often was still punished the same whether they denied their crimes admitted them and provided no accomplices or admitted them and provided accomplices It made little difference as to their fate This can be described as a one shot n person prisoner s dilemma 20 The punishment remained the same regardless of the terms of confession The Great Purge was no less perilous for those few foreigners who attempted to assimilate into Soviet culture In one piece of literature the author recalls a Soviet general describing the Great Purges as difficult years to understand for citizens and foreigners alike 21 These foreigners were treated much the same as Soviet ethnic minorities and they were thought to be potential threats in the impending war Germans Poles Finns and other westerners were shown the same fate the bourgeoisie had been dealt following the end of NEP Punishments ranged from eviction and relocation to summary execution 22 1950s EditFollowing Stalin s death in 1953 purges as systematic campaigns of expulsion from the party ended thereafter the center s political control was exerted instead mainly through loss of party membership and its attendant nomenklatura privileges which effectively downgraded one s opportunities in society see Trade unions in the Soviet Union Role in the Soviet class system chekism and party rule Recalcitrant cases could be reduced to nonpersons via involuntary commitment to a psychiatric institution citation needed See also EditBibliography of Stalinism and the Soviet Union Case of Trotskyist Anti Soviet Military Organization Moscow Trials Political repression in the Soviet Union Purge of the Red Army in 1941 Racism in the Soviet UnionReferences Edit Fitzpatrick S Everyday Stalinism Oxford University Press New York 1999 page 20 ISBN 0195050010 Alex Inkeles and Raymond A Bauer The Soviet Citizen Daily Life in a Totalitarian Society New York 1968 1st published in 1959 Siegel Ada January 1954 The Soviet Purge System PDF Challenge 2 54 59 JSTOR 40716727 Gregor Richard editor Resolutions and Decisions of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union Volume 2 The Early Soviet Period 1917 1929 University of Toronto Press 1974 JSTOR 10 3138 j ctt1vxmdr5 Jaroslav Tinchenko 2000 Calvary Russian officers in the USSR 1930 1931 years in Russian Moscow Moscow Public Science Foundation ISBN 978 5 89554 195 1 Velikanova Olga 2013 Popular Perceptions of Soviet Politics in the 1920s Disenchantment of the Dreamers Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9781137030757 Retrieved 2018 01 28 Operation Spring in 1930 31 targeted the former officers and generals of the Tsarist army serving in the Red Army According to incomplete data 3496 officers were arrested and 130 were executed in the Ukraine Voronezh and Leningrad regions being accused of preparing uprisings in anticipation of intervention Publikaciya Yaroslav Tinchenko Golgofa russkogo oficerstva v SSSR 1930 1931 gody Sluzhili dva oficera O knige Ya Tinchenko Z arhiviv VUChK GPU NKVD KGB 2002 god nomer 1 2 izd vo Sfera Kiev A A Zdanovich Organy gosudarstvennoj bezopasnosti i Krasnaya Armiya glava posvyashennaya delu Genshtabisty i operacii Vesna Unger A L January 1969 Stalin s Renewal of the Leading Stratum A Note on the Great Purge PDF Soviet Studies 20 321 330 JSTOR 149486 a b Solzhenitsyn Aleksandr 1974 The Gulag Archipelago Arhipela g GULA G vol 1 translated by Whitney Thomas P Paris Editions du Seuil ISBN 978 0 06 013914 8 OCLC 802879 On Mistakes in the Purge PDF The Slavonic and East European Review 16 703 713 April 1938 JSTOR 4203435 Mcneal Robert October 1971 The Decisions of the CPSU and the Great Purge PDF Soviet Studies 23 177 185 JSTOR 150154 Michael Reiman 2016 About Russia Its Revolutions Its Development and Its Present New York Peter Lang AG p 102 ISBN 9783631671368 BBC GCSE Bitesize Stalin purges and praises Retrieved 2018 01 29 In 1934 Kirov the leader of the Leningrad Communist Party was murdered probably on Stalin s orders Stalin used this episode to order massive purges by which anybody suspected of disloyalty was murdered sent to prison camps or put on public show trials at which they pleaded guilty to incredible crimes they could never have done The Communist leadership was purged 93 of the 139 Central Committee members were put to death The armed forces were purged 81 of the 103 generals and admirals were executed The Communist Party was purged about a third of its 3 million members were killed The Great Purge History Grossman Peter March 1994 The Dilemma of Prisoners Choice during Stalin s Great Terror 1936 38 PDF The Journal of Conflict Resolution 38 43 55 doi 10 1177 0022002794038001003 JSTOR 174400 Grossman Peter March 1994 The Dilemma of Prisoners Choice during Stalin s Great Terror The Journal of Conflict Resolution 38 1 43 55 doi 10 1177 0022002794038001003 JSTOR 174400 S2CID 144185359 Maclean Fitzroy Escape to Adventure Boston Little Brown 1950 Print p 9 Humphreys Brendan 2018 07 03 Ethnic and Religious Minorities in Stalin s Soviet Union New Dimensions of Research Scando Slavica 64 2 312 314 doi 10 1080 00806765 2018 1525320 ISSN 0080 6765 Literature EditArzyutov Dmitry Early Years of Visual Anthropology in the Soviet Arctic tandfonline tandfonline Retrieved 2019 01 29 Ganin A V Everyday life of the General Staffists under Lenin and Trotsky M 2016 Ganin A V In the Shadow of Spring Former officers under repression of the early 1930s Homeland 2014 No 6 S 95 101 Ganin A V Gambit Monighetti The incredible adventures of the Italian in Russia Homeland 2011 No 10 P 122 125 Ganin A V Archive and investigation of the military scientist A A Svechin 1931 1932 Bulletin of the archivist 2014 No 2 126 S 260 272 No 3 127 S 261 291 Bliznichenko S S Lazarev S E Anti Soviet conspiracy at the Naval Academy 1930 1932 Bulletin of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences The science Society Person 2012 No 3 41 S 118 124 Lazarev S E Military political academy in the 1930s Scientific reports of Belgorod State University Series History Political science Economy Computer science 2013 No 8 151 Vol 26 S 140 149 Bliznichenko S S Lazarev S E Repression at the F E Dzerzhinsky Naval Engineering School in the 1930s Recent history of Russia 2014 No 1 09 S 124 139 External links EditV enciklopedii S Peterburga Yaroslav Tinchenko Golgofa russkogo oficerstva v SSSR 1930 1931 gody Z arhiviv VUChK GPU NKVD KGB 2002 god nomer 1 2 izd vo Sfera Kiev Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Purges of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union amp oldid 1128091200, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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