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Voluntary Sports Societies of the Soviet Union

The Voluntary Sports Societies (VSS) of the USSR (Russian: Добровольные спортивные общества (ДСО) СССР, Dobrobolvolnye Sportivye Obshestva SSSR (DSO SSSR)) were the main structural parts of the universal sports and physical education (fitness) system, that existed in the USSR between 1935 and 1991. The word "voluntary" in the Soviet system carried special meaning indicating that those societies were not "departmental" and had nothing to do with a free will. In the Soviet Union there was nothing that the Soviet government did not control.

The Departmental Sports Societies (DSS) of the USSR (DSS-USSR) (Russian: Ведомственное спортивное общество (BCO) CCCP, Vedomstvennoye Sportivnoye Obshchestvo SSSR (VSO SSSR)) were only very few:

  • Dinamo
  • Voluntary society in support of Army, Aviation, and Fleet (DOSAAF)
  • Armed Forces sports societies (CSKA, SKA, VO, DKA, DO, others).

A special sports society was "Spartak" that was controlled by the Communist Party of the Soviet Union through its youth wing Komsomol. The Spartak sports society was mimicking a voluntary sports society claiming its heritage from the trade unions of either "industrial cooperation" or food suppliers. Following the Soviet Union expansion and occupation of neighboring territories Spartak was one of the sports societies that were established instantaneously along with Dynamo.

The VSS united sporting people, offering hiking, mountaineering, boating, and various other sports. Their goals were to develop mass physical culture and sports and to provide facilities and conditions for sports training and improvement in athletes' skills. Most of the VSS were governed by trade Unions and often were closely associated with a certain ministry (aircraft industry, food workers, tractor industry, KGB, Red Army, Soviet Air Force), with industries being state-funded. Twenty five million athletes were members of such societies in 1970.

One of the most important features of VSS were Children and Youth Sport Schools (Russian: Детско-юношеские спортивные школы, ДЮСШ), which numbered 1,350 in the 1970s and 7,500 in 1987. Later some of them were reformed into more elite Olympic reserve schools. There were also specialized sport clubs, groups of improvement athletes' skills, etc. More than 50,000 trainers and instructors worked there in these institutions.

History edit

 
The 25th Anniversary of the Russian Gymnastics Society, 1908
 
The First Russian Gymnastics Society "Sokol"

Background edit

Already in the first half of 19th century sports schools, clubs, societies (sailing and rowing, fencing, swimming, ice skating, cycling, and others) appeared in Saint-Petersburg, Moscow, Kiev and other cities of the Russian Empire. The yacht clubs of Moscow and Saint-Petersburg figured among the first such societies. Along with the development of the sport societies, official sports competitions started. The Great Soviet Encyclopedia states that usually those sports clubs and unions were chartered and financed by representatives of the bourgeoisie and of the nobility, and that access to them for students and working youth "was extremely limited". At the end of the 19th and start of the 20th centuries there appeared workers' sports organizations across the cities of the Russian Empire. Prominent roles in the development of the Russian sport were played by the "Petersburg's Circle of Sports Enthusiasts" (established in 1889), the "Russian Gymnastics Society [ru]" also known as RGO Sokol (1883, Moscow), the "Petersburg Society of Skating Enthusiasts" (1877), the "Circle of Athletic Enthusiasts" (1885, Petersburg), and others.

In 1896 the founder of a scientific system of fitness education, Pyotr Lesgaft (1837–1909),[1] opened in Petersburg the courses of educators and leaders of physical education that eventually became a prototype of the higher-learning institutions in physical education established in the Soviet Union and abroad. In the beginning of the 20th century All-Russian unions on sports emerged and organized the first championships. In 1913 the First Russian Sporting Olympiad [ru] took place in Kiev where some 600 people - including females - participated. The Second Russian Sporting Olympiad [ru] followed the next year (1914) in Riga involving over 1,000 participants. The program of those Olympics consisted of light athletics, gymnastics, fencing, association football, tennis, heavy athletics, swimming, rowing, sailing, modern pentathlon, shooting, equestrian, and cycling.

In 1907 on decree of the Imperial Russian Prime Minister Pyotr Stolypin, the Russian Gymnastics Society was officially renamed as RGO Sokol and joined the Pan-Slavic Sokol movement (Sokolskoe dvizhennie). By 1910 it accounted for 60 cities in the Russian Empire that had their Sokol gymnastics societies.

The Russian Empire figured among the 12 countries, representatives of which, at the first international Olympic Congress in Paris in 1894, decided to revive the Olympics and established the International Olympic Committee. Sportsmen of the Russian Empire participated in the 1908 Olympics (5 members) and in the 1912 Olympics (174 members). In 1914 the Russian Empire had 1,200 sports unions involving some 45,000 participants out of some 332 cities and other settlements.

Soviet sport edit

After the October Revolution of late 1917 state oversight of the workers' physical training was assigned to the Main Department of Vsevobuch (Universal Military Training) in 1918, following this Supreme Council of Fitness Culture [ru] (VSFK) (Russian: Высший совет физической культуры)was established in 1920. In 1923 such VSFKs were set up for every Executive Committee of each Soviet region. In 1936 the council was reformed into the All-Union committee for fitness culture and sports affairs for the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR (Russian: Всесоюзный комитет по делам физической культуры и спорта при СНК СССР).

VSS Spartak, the first of the future Union-wide national sports societies, dates from 1935. The society united the workers of local industries, communal economy, culture, automobile transportation, civil aviation, and others. In the following years numerous other sport societies were set up throughout the Soviet Union. Some societies were closely associated with a single industry; others had associations with a combination of several. For example, athletes from factory schools and vocational schools were united into VSS Trudovye Rezervy in 1943. The formation of the kernel of the system was complete in the 1950s, when village VSS were established in all 16 of the then Soviet republics (including the Karelo-Finnish SSR until 1956).

Structure edit

The main structural units of VSS were physical culture collectives by the enterprises, public-service institutions, collective farms (kolkhoz), state farms (sovkhoz), educational institutions, etc. These collectives were primary organizations of VSS and numbered 114 thousands (including 105 thousands under Trade Unions), united into 36 VSS (29 of them were of Trade Unions) as of 1971. There were six All-Union VSS (Russian: Всесоюзное добровольное спортивное общество, ВДСО) and 30 republican VSS – 15 united physical culture collectives of industrial enterprises and other 15 united rural collectives. Those were the standard societies. In 1982 all republican societies merged under the two Russian republican societies.

The Dynamo Sports Club, founded in 1923 by Felix Dzerzhinsky, represented the security services of the USSR, and were sponsored by them. The society had a special status. Another sports society was the "Sports club of the Armed Forces" (usually abbreviated as SKA - Sports Club of the Army). Like Dynamo, SKA also carried a special status, as they represented the athletes in their military service duty in the Soviet Armed Forces.

Beside those, there were also numerous other sport societies that preceded the above mentioned or were less represented such as Vympel (River transportation) and Moryak (Sea transportation) combined into Vodnik, Stakhanovets (Mining industry) changed into Shakhter, and others. There even was a society of DOSAAF which was a volunteer society in cooperation with the Army, Air Force, and Navy (notice the combination of the last three letters) and a sister club to the SKA organization.

All-Union VSS edit

Name Foundation Industry
Burevestnik 1957 Higher Education
Vodnik 1938 Waterways communication
Zenit 1936 Defense Industry (weapons)
Lokomotiv 1936 Railways communication
Spartak 1935 Others
Trudovye Rezervy 1943 Professional Education

Republican VSS of industrial enterprises edit

Name/Translit/Meaning
Republic Foundation
Труд (Trud, Labour) Russian SFSR 1957
Авангард (Avanhard, Advance Guard) Ukrainian SSR 1958
Чырвоны сцяг (Сhervony stsyah, Red Banner) Byelorussian SSR 1958
Мехнат (Mekhnat, Labour) Uzbek SSR 1958
Енбек (Enbek, Labour) Kazakh SSR 1958
განთიადი (Gantiadi, Dawn) Georgian SSR 1958
Нефтчи (Neftçi, Petrolman) Azerbaijan SSR 1958
Žalgiris (after the Battle of Žalgiris) Lithuanian SSR 1944
Молдова (Moldova) Moldavian SSR 1958
Daugava (after the Daugava River) Latvian SSR 1944
Алга (Alga, Forward) Kyrgyz SSR 1958
Тоҷикистон (Tajikistan) Tajik SSR 1958
Աշխատանք (Ashkhatank, Labour) Armenian SSR 1958
Захмет (Zakhmet, Labour) Turkmen SSR 1958
Kalev (after Kalev) Estonian SSR 1944

Republican rural VSS edit

Name/Translit/Meaning
Republic Foundation
Урожай (Urozhai, Harvest) Russian SFSR 1956
Колос (Kolos, Grain ear) Ukrainian SSR 1956
Ураджай (Uradzhai, Harvest) Byelorussian SSR 1956
Пахтакор (Pakhtakor, Cotton farmer) Uzbek SSR 1956
Қайрат (Kairat, Strength) Kazakh SSR 1956
კოლმეურნე (Kolmeurne, Kolkhoznik) Georgian SSR 1956
Мәһсул (Mekhsul, Harvest) Azerbaijan SSR 1956
Nemunas (Nemunas River) Lithuanian SSR 1956
Колхозникул (Colhoznicul, The Kolkhoznik) Moldavian SSR 1956
Vārpa (Grain ear) Latvian SSR 1956
Колхозчу (Kolkhozchu, Kolkhoznik) Kyrgyz SSR 1958
Хосилот (Khosilot, Harvest) Tajik SSR 1956
Սևանա (Sevan, Lake Sevan) Armenian SSR 1956
Колхозчы (Kolkhozchi, Kolkhoznik) Turkmen SSR 1956
Jõud (Strength) Estonian SSR 1946

Reorganization in the 1980s edit

In 1982 the Presidium of the VTsSPS reorganized 33 Trade Unions' VSS. None were abolished, just the governing organization of most of them was changed from VTsSPS to another one. The eight largest Trade Unions' VSS remained under VTsSPS leadership: Burevestnik, Vodnik, Zenit, Lokomotiv, Spartak, Trud, Urozhai, FiS (Russian: ФиС - физкультура и спорт; English: fitness and sports). According to Soviet sources (which are questionable), these eight VSS united 48.365 million members.[2] VSS that did not belong to the Trade Unions were not reorganized. Two national societies from athletes from all the Union Republics had already been formed on the basis of the 15 societies in 1982.

In February 1987 all remaining VSS were abolished by the VTsSPS.[3][4] On the basis of eight Trade Unions' VSS, one All-Union Volunteer Fitness and Sports Society of Trade Unions (Russian: Всесоюзное добровольное физкультурно-спортивное общество профсоюзов, ВДФСО профсоюзов, Vsesoyuznoe Dobrobolvolne Fiykultura-Sportivne Obshestvo Profsoyzhov, VDFSO Profsoyzhov) was created to serve as a unified organization encompassing athletes countrywide. Trud and Urozhai societies remained independent of the new organization.

Other important VSSs edit

  • Torpedo (automobile and truck manufacture industries)
  • Traktor (Tractor manufacture industry)
  • Strela (Subway workers of the Moscow Metro)
  • Neftyanik (Oil industry)
  • Energia (energy and power industries)
  • Stroitel (building industries)
  • Start (transport drivers)
  • Khimik (Chemical Industries)
  • Metallurg (metals industries)
  • Krasnaya Zvezda (Armed Forces)
  • Shakhter (Mining industry)
  • Krilya Sovietov (Aircraft production factories)
  • Samolet (civil aviation)
  • Chernomorets (Merchant marine and port workers)
  • Sudostroitel (Ship manufacture and construction)
  • Pishchevik (Food distribution and tobacco)
  • Stalinets (Electrical machines)
  • Zapolyarnik
  • Tekstilschik (Textiles and clothing production)
  • Krasnoe Znamya (Cotton industry)
  • Monolit (Painters and paint manufacturers)
  • Medik (Medical profession)
  • Rekord (State-owned enterprises)
  • Iskusstvo (visual and performing arts)

Governing body and its functions edit

The governing body of Trade Unions' VSS was the All-Union Council of Trade Unions' VSS (Russian: Всесоюзный совет ДСО профсоюзов, Vsesoyuznyi Sovet DSO Profsoyzhov), established and governed by VTsSPS since 1957.

The Council's main activities were:

  • to hold competitions between VSS, Spartakiads of Trade Unions, to arrange sports and fitness holidays
  • to support the participation of VSS in All-Union and international competitions
  • to control functioning of Children and Youth Sport Schools and other institutions
  • to lead construction of sports facilities
  • to award the best physical culture collectives the title Sport Club
  • to maintain relations with foreign workers' and students' sports unions

Reporting under the Council were federations of various sports disciplines, Coach Councils, and Judging Boards which functioned to assist its duties.

The SKA and Dynamo associations, which were manned by athletes in uniformed service in the armed forces and police, and the volunteer DOSAAF organization were under the direct supervision of the Ministries of Defense and Internal Affairs and were thus independent from the unions' sports societies.

Financing, facilities and symbols edit

VSS were financed mostly by trade unions and state (e.g. 355 million roubles in 1970). There were a lot of sports facilities constructed throughout the country using this means by 1970: 2,490 stadiums, 59,000 football grounds, 14,400 complex sports grounds, 10,200 artistic gymnastics halls, 950 artificial swimming pools, 270,000 grounds for sport games.

Each VSS had its own flag, emblem, sports uniform and pin. Societies, which were awarded orders (e.g. VSS Spartak - Order of Lenin) had their images on the flag and other symbols.

VSS at the Olympics edit

The most represented VSS at the Olympics usually were Spartak, Burevestnik, Trud, Zenit, Avangard. For example, from 409 competitors for the USSR at the 1976 Summer Olympics 58 were from Spartak, 48 from Burevestnik, 28 from Trud, 13 from Zenit and 11 from Avangard.

Controversy edit

According to the Olympic rules of the 20th century, only amateur athletes were eligible to participate. Top Soviet athletes were funded by the state and trained full-time but were listed in different VSS what allowed them to retain their amateur status.[5][6] That created a disbalance in the international sports,[7][8] and the IOC was prompted to drop outdated amateur rules and open the Olympics to all athletes, regardless of their status.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lesgaft at the Great Soviet Encyclopedia
  2. ^ Yearbook of the Great Soviet Encyclopedia (in Russian). Moscow: Sovetskaya Enciklopediya. 1983. p. 17.
  3. ^ (in Ukrainian) Interview of the chairman of the Ukrainian Voluntary Society
  4. ^ (in Ukrainian) History of the Ukrainian Spartak Society
  5. ^ Benjamin, Daniel (27 July 1992). . Time. Archived from the original on September 2, 2009. Retrieved 18 March 2009.
  6. ^ Schantz, Otto. (PDF). Comité International Pierre De Coubertin. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 13 September 2008.
  7. ^ IIHF (2008). "PROTESTING AMATEUR RULES, CANADA LEAVES INTERNATIONAL HOCKEY". IIHF.com. Retrieved 2017-08-25.
  8. ^ Coffey, p. 59

External links edit

  • Sport flags of the Soviet Union
  • (in Russian) Sport Flags of the USSR
  • (in Russian) History of VSS Spartak
  • (in Russian) Fitness culture and sport (USSR) in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1969-1978)

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The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message The Voluntary Sports Societies VSS of the USSR Russian Dobrovolnye sportivnye obshestva DSO SSSR Dobrobolvolnye Sportivye Obshestva SSSR DSO SSSR were the main structural parts of the universal sports and physical education fitness system that existed in the USSR between 1935 and 1991 The word voluntary in the Soviet system carried special meaning indicating that those societies were not departmental and had nothing to do with a free will In the Soviet Union there was nothing that the Soviet government did not control The Departmental Sports Societies DSS of the USSR DSS USSR Russian Vedomstvennoe sportivnoe obshestvo BCO CCCP Vedomstvennoye Sportivnoye Obshchestvo SSSR VSO SSSR were only very few Dinamo Voluntary society in support of Army Aviation and Fleet DOSAAF Armed Forces sports societies CSKA SKA VO DKA DO others A special sports society was Spartak that was controlled by the Communist Party of the Soviet Union through its youth wing Komsomol The Spartak sports society was mimicking a voluntary sports society claiming its heritage from the trade unions of either industrial cooperation or food suppliers Following the Soviet Union expansion and occupation of neighboring territories Spartak was one of the sports societies that were established instantaneously along with Dynamo The VSS united sporting people offering hiking mountaineering boating and various other sports Their goals were to develop mass physical culture and sports and to provide facilities and conditions for sports training and improvement in athletes skills Most of the VSS were governed by trade Unions and often were closely associated with a certain ministry aircraft industry food workers tractor industry KGB Red Army Soviet Air Force with industries being state funded Twenty five million athletes were members of such societies in 1970 One of the most important features of VSS were Children and Youth Sport Schools Russian Detsko yunosheskie sportivnye shkoly DYuSSh which numbered 1 350 in the 1970s and 7 500 in 1987 Later some of them were reformed into more elite Olympic reserve schools There were also specialized sport clubs groups of improvement athletes skills etc More than 50 000 trainers and instructors worked there in these institutions Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Soviet sport 2 Structure 2 1 All Union VSS 2 2 Republican VSS of industrial enterprises 2 3 Republican rural VSS 2 4 Reorganization in the 1980s 2 5 Other important VSSs 3 Governing body and its functions 4 Financing facilities and symbols 5 VSS at the Olympics 6 Controversy 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory edit nbsp The 25th Anniversary of the Russian Gymnastics Society 1908 nbsp The First Russian Gymnastics Society Sokol Background edit Already in the first half of 19th century sports schools clubs societies sailing and rowing fencing swimming ice skating cycling and others appeared in Saint Petersburg Moscow Kiev and other cities of the Russian Empire The yacht clubs of Moscow and Saint Petersburg figured among the first such societies Along with the development of the sport societies official sports competitions started The Great Soviet Encyclopedia states that usually those sports clubs and unions were chartered and financed by representatives of the bourgeoisie and of the nobility and that access to them for students and working youth was extremely limited At the end of the 19th and start of the 20th centuries there appeared workers sports organizations across the cities of the Russian Empire Prominent roles in the development of the Russian sport were played by the Petersburg s Circle of Sports Enthusiasts established in 1889 the Russian Gymnastics Society ru also known as RGO Sokol 1883 Moscow the Petersburg Society of Skating Enthusiasts 1877 the Circle of Athletic Enthusiasts 1885 Petersburg and others In 1896 the founder of a scientific system of fitness education Pyotr Lesgaft 1837 1909 1 opened in Petersburg the courses of educators and leaders of physical education that eventually became a prototype of the higher learning institutions in physical education established in the Soviet Union and abroad In the beginning of the 20th century All Russian unions on sports emerged and organized the first championships In 1913 the First Russian Sporting Olympiad ru took place in Kiev where some 600 people including females participated The Second Russian Sporting Olympiad ru followed the next year 1914 in Riga involving over 1 000 participants The program of those Olympics consisted of light athletics gymnastics fencing association football tennis heavy athletics swimming rowing sailing modern pentathlon shooting equestrian and cycling In 1907 on decree of the Imperial Russian Prime Minister Pyotr Stolypin the Russian Gymnastics Society was officially renamed as RGO Sokol and joined the Pan Slavic Sokol movement Sokolskoe dvizhennie By 1910 it accounted for 60 cities in the Russian Empire that had their Sokol gymnastics societies The Russian Empire figured among the 12 countries representatives of which at the first international Olympic Congress in Paris in 1894 decided to revive the Olympics and established the International Olympic Committee Sportsmen of the Russian Empire participated in the 1908 Olympics 5 members and in the 1912 Olympics 174 members In 1914 the Russian Empire had 1 200 sports unions involving some 45 000 participants out of some 332 cities and other settlements Soviet sport edit After the October Revolution of late 1917 state oversight of the workers physical training was assigned to the Main Department of Vsevobuch Universal Military Training in 1918 following this Supreme Council of Fitness Culture ru VSFK Russian Vysshij sovet fizicheskoj kultury was established in 1920 In 1923 such VSFKs were set up for every Executive Committee of each Soviet region In 1936 the council was reformed into the All Union committee for fitness culture and sports affairs for the Council of People s Commissars of the USSR Russian Vsesoyuznyj komitet po delam fizicheskoj kultury i sporta pri SNK SSSR VSS Spartak the first of the future Union wide national sports societies dates from 1935 The society united the workers of local industries communal economy culture automobile transportation civil aviation and others In the following years numerous other sport societies were set up throughout the Soviet Union Some societies were closely associated with a single industry others had associations with a combination of several For example athletes from factory schools and vocational schools were united into VSS Trudovye Rezervy in 1943 The formation of the kernel of the system was complete in the 1950s when village VSS were established in all 16 of the then Soviet republics including the Karelo Finnish SSR until 1956 Structure editThe main structural units of VSS were physical culture collectives by the enterprises public service institutions collective farms kolkhoz state farms sovkhoz educational institutions etc These collectives were primary organizations of VSS and numbered 114 thousands including 105 thousands under Trade Unions united into 36 VSS 29 of them were of Trade Unions as of 1971 There were six All Union VSS Russian Vsesoyuznoe dobrovolnoe sportivnoe obshestvo VDSO and 30 republican VSS 15 united physical culture collectives of industrial enterprises and other 15 united rural collectives Those were the standard societies In 1982 all republican societies merged under the two Russian republican societies The Dynamo Sports Club founded in 1923 by Felix Dzerzhinsky represented the security services of the USSR and were sponsored by them The society had a special status Another sports society was the Sports club of the Armed Forces usually abbreviated as SKA Sports Club of the Army Like Dynamo SKA also carried a special status as they represented the athletes in their military service duty in the Soviet Armed Forces Beside those there were also numerous other sport societies that preceded the above mentioned or were less represented such as Vympel River transportation and Moryak Sea transportation combined into Vodnik Stakhanovets Mining industry changed into Shakhter and others There even was a society of DOSAAF which was a volunteer society in cooperation with the Army Air Force and Navy notice the combination of the last three letters and a sister club to the SKA organization All Union VSS edit Name Foundation Industry Burevestnik 1957 Higher Education Vodnik 1938 Waterways communication Zenit 1936 Defense Industry weapons Lokomotiv 1936 Railways communication Spartak 1935 Others Trudovye Rezervy 1943 Professional Education Republican VSS of industrial enterprises edit Name Translit Meaning Republic Foundation Trud Trud Labour Russian SFSR 1957 Avangard Avanhard Advance Guard Ukrainian SSR 1958 Chyrvony scyag Shervony stsyah Red Banner Byelorussian SSR 1958 Mehnat Mekhnat Labour Uzbek SSR 1958 Enbek Enbek Labour Kazakh SSR 1958 განთიადი Gantiadi Dawn Georgian SSR 1958 Neftchi Neftci Petrolman Azerbaijan SSR 1958 Zalgiris after the Battle of Zalgiris Lithuanian SSR 1944 Moldova Moldova Moldavian SSR 1958 Daugava after the Daugava River Latvian SSR 1944 Alga Alga Forward Kyrgyz SSR 1958 Toҷikiston Tajikistan Tajik SSR 1958 Աշխատանք Ashkhatank Labour Armenian SSR 1958 Zahmet Zakhmet Labour Turkmen SSR 1958 Kalev after Kalev Estonian SSR 1944 Republican rural VSS edit Name Translit Meaning Republic Foundation Urozhaj Urozhai Harvest Russian SFSR 1956 Kolos Kolos Grain ear Ukrainian SSR 1956 Uradzhaj Uradzhai Harvest Byelorussian SSR 1956 Pahtakor Pakhtakor Cotton farmer Uzbek SSR 1956 Қajrat Kairat Strength Kazakh SSR 1956 კოლმეურნე Kolmeurne Kolkhoznik Georgian SSR 1956 Mәһsul Mekhsul Harvest Azerbaijan SSR 1956 Nemunas Nemunas River Lithuanian SSR 1956 Kolhoznikul Colhoznicul The Kolkhoznik Moldavian SSR 1956 Varpa Grain ear Latvian SSR 1956 Kolhozchu Kolkhozchu Kolkhoznik Kyrgyz SSR 1958 Hosilot Khosilot Harvest Tajik SSR 1956 Սևանա Sevan Lake Sevan Armenian SSR 1956 Kolhozchy Kolkhozchi Kolkhoznik Turkmen SSR 1956 Joud Strength Estonian SSR 1946 Reorganization in the 1980s edit In 1982 the Presidium of the VTsSPS reorganized 33 Trade Unions VSS None were abolished just the governing organization of most of them was changed from VTsSPS to another one The eight largest Trade Unions VSS remained under VTsSPS leadership Burevestnik Vodnik Zenit Lokomotiv Spartak Trud Urozhai FiS Russian FiS fizkultura i sport English fitness and sports According to Soviet sources which are questionable these eight VSS united 48 365 million members 2 VSS that did not belong to the Trade Unions were not reorganized Two national societies from athletes from all the Union Republics had already been formed on the basis of the 15 societies in 1982 In February 1987 all remaining VSS were abolished by the VTsSPS 3 4 On the basis of eight Trade Unions VSS one All Union Volunteer Fitness and Sports Society of Trade Unions Russian Vsesoyuznoe dobrovolnoe fizkulturno sportivnoe obshestvo profsoyuzov VDFSO profsoyuzov Vsesoyuznoe Dobrobolvolne Fiykultura Sportivne Obshestvo Profsoyzhov VDFSO Profsoyzhov was created to serve as a unified organization encompassing athletes countrywide Trud and Urozhai societies remained independent of the new organization Other important VSSs edit Torpedo automobile and truck manufacture industries Traktor Tractor manufacture industry Strela Subway workers of the Moscow Metro Neftyanik Oil industry Energia energy and power industries Stroitel building industries Start transport drivers Khimik Chemical Industries Metallurg metals industries Krasnaya Zvezda Armed Forces Shakhter Mining industry Krilya Sovietov Aircraft production factories Samolet civil aviation Chernomorets Merchant marine and port workers Sudostroitel Ship manufacture and construction Pishchevik Food distribution and tobacco Stalinets Electrical machines Zapolyarnik Tekstilschik Textiles and clothing production Krasnoe Znamya Cotton industry Monolit Painters and paint manufacturers Medik Medical profession Rekord State owned enterprises Iskusstvo visual and performing arts Governing body and its functions editThe governing body of Trade Unions VSS was the All Union Council of Trade Unions VSS Russian Vsesoyuznyj sovet DSO profsoyuzov Vsesoyuznyi Sovet DSO Profsoyzhov established and governed by VTsSPS since 1957 The Council s main activities were to hold competitions between VSS Spartakiads of Trade Unions to arrange sports and fitness holidays to support the participation of VSS in All Union and international competitions to control functioning of Children and Youth Sport Schools and other institutions to lead construction of sports facilities to award the best physical culture collectives the title Sport Club to maintain relations with foreign workers and students sports unions Reporting under the Council were federations of various sports disciplines Coach Councils and Judging Boards which functioned to assist its duties The SKA and Dynamo associations which were manned by athletes in uniformed service in the armed forces and police and the volunteer DOSAAF organization were under the direct supervision of the Ministries of Defense and Internal Affairs and were thus independent from the unions sports societies Financing facilities and symbols editVSS were financed mostly by trade unions and state e g 355 million roubles in 1970 There were a lot of sports facilities constructed throughout the country using this means by 1970 2 490 stadiums 59 000 football grounds 14 400 complex sports grounds 10 200 artistic gymnastics halls 950 artificial swimming pools 270 000 grounds for sport games Each VSS had its own flag emblem sports uniform and pin Societies which were awarded orders e g VSS Spartak Order of Lenin had their images on the flag and other symbols VSS at the Olympics editThe most represented VSS at the Olympics usually were Spartak Burevestnik Trud Zenit Avangard For example from 409 competitors for the USSR at the 1976 Summer Olympics 58 were from Spartak 48 from Burevestnik 28 from Trud 13 from Zenit and 11 from Avangard Controversy editMain article Olympic Games Amateurism and professionalism According to the Olympic rules of the 20th century only amateur athletes were eligible to participate Top Soviet athletes were funded by the state and trained full time but were listed in different VSS what allowed them to retain their amateur status 5 6 That created a disbalance in the international sports 7 8 and the IOC was prompted to drop outdated amateur rules and open the Olympics to all athletes regardless of their status See also editDynamo CSKA Ready for Labour and Defence of the USSR GTO Vsevobuch Sports clubReferences edit Lesgaft at the Great Soviet Encyclopedia Yearbook of the Great Soviet Encyclopedia in Russian Moscow Sovetskaya Enciklopediya 1983 p 17 in Ukrainian Interview of the chairman of the Ukrainian Voluntary Society in Ukrainian History of the Ukrainian Spartak Society Benjamin Daniel 27 July 1992 Traditions Pro Vs Amateur Time Archived from the original on September 2 2009 Retrieved 18 March 2009 Schantz Otto The Olympic Ideal and the Winter Games Attitudes Towards the Olympic Winter Games in Olympic Discourses from Coubertin to Samaranch PDF Comite International Pierre De Coubertin Archived from the original PDF on 5 May 2013 Retrieved 13 September 2008 IIHF 2008 PROTESTING AMATEUR RULES CANADA LEAVES INTERNATIONAL HOCKEY IIHF com Retrieved 2017 08 25 Coffey p 59 Great Soviet Encyclopedia in Russian 3rd ed Moscow Sovetskaya Enciklopediya 1972 vol 8 p 372 Boris Khavin 1979 All about Olympic Games in Russian 2nd ed Moscow Fizkultura i sport External links editSport flags of the Soviet Union in Russian Sport Flags of the USSR in Russian History of VSS Spartak in Russian Fitness culture and sport USSR in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia 1969 1978 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Voluntary Sports Societies of the Soviet Union amp oldid 1222525966, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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