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Ukaz 493

Decree No. 493 "On citizens of Tatar nationality, formerly living in the Crimea" (Russian: Указ № 493 «О гражданах татарской национальности, проживавших в Крыму») was issued by the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet on 5 September 1967 proclaiming that "Citizens of Tatar nationality formerly living in the Crimea" [sic] were officially legally rehabilitated and had "taken root" in places of residence. For many years the government claimed that the decree "settled" the "Tatar problem", despite the fact that it did not restore the rights of Crimean Tatars and formally made clear that they were no longer recognized as a distinct ethnic group.[1][2]

History edit

While other deported peoples such as the Chechens, Ingush, Kalmyks, Karachays, and Balkars had long since been permitted to return to their native lands and their republics were restored in addition to other forms of political rehabilitation as recognized peoples,[3] the very same decree of 24 November 1956 “On the restoration of national autonomies of the Kalmyk, Karachay, Chechen and Ingush peoples” («О восстановлении национальных автономий калмыцкого, карачаевского, чеченского и ингушского народов») that rehabilitated those peoples in 1956[4][5] took on a genocidal tone towards internally deported Crimean Tatars, offering "national reunification" in the Tatar ASSR belonging to the distinct but similarly named Volga Tatars in lieu of restoration of the Crimean ASSR for Crimean Tatars who sought a national autonomy, despite the fact that Crimean Tatar activists did not seek a "return" to Tatarstan.[6][7][a] As result, Crimean Tatars organized petitions and delegations to Moscow demand their rehabilitation.[12]

The decree was issued roughly two months after a Crimean Tatar delegation met with senior government officials in Moscow,[13] requesting to be rehabilitated in the same manner as the other deported peoples that had been rehabilitated in 1956.[14] Besides Andropov, Georgadze, Shchelokov, and Rudenko were present at the meeting. On 21 July 1967, Yuri Andropov promised the Crimean Tatars that they would be rehabilitated, however, the decree was not issued until 5 September that year.[15]

Much to the aghast of Crimean Tatar activists, the decree not only failed to allow them to return to Crimea en masse[13] but also revealed that the government did not see them as a distinct ethnic group, only as "people of Tatar nationality formerly living in Crimea"[16] and claimed that they had already "taken root" in Central Asia.[17][18]

Implementation and response edit

Unlike what leaders in Moscow had promised, the decree was only published locally in areas where Crimean Tatars lived.[19]

Many Crimean Tatars living in exile who saw the decree mistakenly thought that it meant they were allowed to return to Crimea, and the odd wording of the decree resulted in considerable confusion among Crimean Tatars. As result, many Crimean Tatar families traveled to Crimea in the expectation that they would be allowed to live in Crimea and would be seen as a rehabilitated people.[20] However, most of them were redeported,[21] and very few Crimean Tatars were allowed to return to Crimea in the following years, most under an organized labor recruitment scheme that let in very few Crimean Tatars.[22] For many years, Crimean Tatars continued to be re-deported from Crimea, and it was not until 1989 that they were allowed to return en masse.[5]

Hero of the Soviet Union Abdraim Reshidov was among the first Crimean Tatars who tried to return to Crimea upon seeing the decree, but unlike many others he was able to get a residence permit, albeit only after resorting to threatening self-immolation.[23]

The decree was widely rebuked by people in the Crimean Tatar civil rights movement as being a "fraud", "Another step towards the liquidation of the Crimean Tatar people as a nation" (Очередной шаг в направлении ликвидации крымскотатарского народа как нации),[24] and was ridiculed by the Tashkent Ten defendants as farce.[18][20][25]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ The Crimean Tatars are not closely related to the Tatars proper of Tatarstan, who are a Bulgar people with origins in Kazan.[8][9] Many other ethnic groups not part of the Volga Tatars (who are now just called Tatars) have historically been called Tatar, such as the Azerbaijanis, formerly called Caucasian Tatars.[10] After the deportation of the Crimean Tatars, the Soviet Union did not recognize Crimean Tatars as a distinct ethnic group and frequently suggested Crimean Tatars "return" to Tatarstan despite the fact that Crimean Tatars have no ancestral roots in Tatarstan or common ancestor with the Volga Tatars.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ Эмель (in Russian). Фонд "Крым". 1977. p. 50. При этом официальные "толкователи" Указа , уполномоченные ЦК, заявили, что этот Указ выражает окончательное решение крымскотатарского национального вопроса. Естественно, крымскотатарский народ не мог удовлетворить- ся таким " решением " своего национального вопроса. В своих документах он заклеймил позором такой указ , вскрыв его ан- тинародную сущность . Указ сыграл коварную роль в судьбе национального движе- ния . Вскрыв и правильно оценив сущность Указа , республикан- ское совещание инициаторов выработало неверные тактические задачи движения после 1967 г.
  2. ^ Dagdzi 2008, p. 175 "Практически полстолетия крымские татары были лишены права этнической самоидентифи- кации — этноним «крымские татары» был изъят из переписей населения, научного и правового использования, культурного обихола." (For almost half a century, the Crimean Tatars were deprived of the right of ethnic self-identification - the ethnonym “Crimean Tatars” was removed from population censuses, scientific and legal use, and cultural life.)
  3. ^ Fisher 2014, p. 258-259 "Finally, and perhaps most ominously, the decree was not published widely and loudly as originally promised by Andropov; it was published selectively, in those regions of the USSR where the Tatars had "taken root." For the vast majority of Soviet citizens, nothing had changed, and the views about the Tatars with which they had been indoctrinated for twenty-three years remained unrevised. In the years that followed, this fact caused the Tatars untold harm, for they were unable to persuade many non-Tatar Soviet citizens of the justness of their cause. "
  4. ^ Постановление Центрального Комитета КПСС от 24 ноября 1956 года
  5. ^ a b Andrew, Wilson (2014-11-18). Ukraine Crisis: What It Means for the West. Yale University Press. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-300-21292-1. After Khrushchev's 'secret speech' in 1956, in which he denounced Stalin, many other deported peoples were allowed to return home — even the Chechens. But not the Crimean Tatars. A decree in 1967 withdrew the charges of collabo-ration, but this was given little publicity outside Central Asia and stopped well short of full rehabilitation. The Crimean Tatars were only able to return to Crimea in the very late Soviet period, after 1989. Ironically, an assistance programme was drawn up in Moscow in 1989, but remained largely unimplemented at the time of Soviet collapse. By 2014, just under 270,000 had returned to Crimea, with perhaps another 100,000 left in Central Asia, plus several million of Crimean Tatar descent in the diaspora, mainly Turkey.
  6. ^ Fisher 2014, p. 258 "Prior to 1967, when making their demands for redress of grievances, the Crimean Tatar leadership had concentrated on three areas: (1) complete rehabilitation of their nationality, to be officially announced by government authorities; (2) restoration of property illegally seized at the time of the deportation; and (3) the right to return to their homeland in the Crimea, with the re-creation of the Crimean ASSR. In their euphoria just after the issuance of the decree in September, the Tatars temporarily forgot these demands. But not for long. It did not take a high degree of sophistication to realize that the wording of the "rehabilitation" left two of their demands completely unanswered and only partially dealt with the third."
  7. ^ Bekirova 2004, p. 168.
  8. ^ Rorlich, Azade-Ayse (2017-09-01). The Volga Tatars: A Profile in National Resilience. Hoover Press. ISBN 978-0-8179-8393-2.
  9. ^ Williams 2021, p. 92.
  10. ^ Gasimov, Zaur (2017). Historical Dictionary of Azerbaijan. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-5381-1042-3. The largest group of Russian Muslims on the eve of Moscow's conquest of Caucasia and Central Asia consisted of Tatars in the Volga region. Following this logic, Russians called the Muslim population in the Caucasus who spoke Turkic "Tatars of the Caucasus" (tatary Kavkaza) or "(Trans-)Caucasian Tatars" ([za]kavkazskie tatary)
  11. ^ Markina, Nadezhda; Agdzhoyan, Anastasiya (14 December 2016). "У татар не нашли общей родины" [The Tatars did not find a common homeland]. gazeta.ru (in Russian). «Генетические портреты» трех групп татар — крымских, поволжских и сибирских, — созданные по результатам исследования их Y-хромосомы, оказались очень разными. Это не подтверждает гипотезу ученых об общем происхождении всех татар из единой средневековой популяции. ("Genetic portraits" of three groups of Tatars - Crimean, Volga and Siberian - created based on the results of a study of their Y-chromosome, turned out to be very different. This does not confirm the scientists' hypothesis about the common origin of all Tatars from a single medieval population.)
  12. ^ Fisher 2014, p. 254.
  13. ^ a b Allworth 1988, p. 195.
  14. ^ Fisher 2014, p. 258 "Prior to 1967, when making their demands for redress of grievances, the Crimean Tatar leadership had concentrated on three areas: (1) complete rehabilitation of their nationality, to be officially announced by government authorities; (2) restoration of property illegally seized at the time of the deportation; and (3) the right to return to their homeland in the Crimea, with the re-creation of the Crimean ASSR. In their euphoria just after the issuance of the decree in September, the Tatars temporarily forgot these demands. But not for long. It did not take a high degree of sophistication to realize that the wording of the "rehabilitation" left two of their demands completely unanswered and only partially dealt with the third."
  15. ^ Gubernsky, Bogdan (6 September 2015). ""Это был самый лживый, самый лицемерный указ..."" [“This was the most deceitful, most hypocritical decree...”]. Крым.Реалии (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-10-03.
  16. ^ Williams 2021, p. 421-422.
  17. ^ Fisher 2014, p. 258-259 "Finally, and perhaps most ominously, the decree was not published widely and loudly as originally promised by Andropov; it was published selectively, in those regions of the USSR where the Tatars had "taken root." For the vast majority of Soviet citizens, nothing had changed, and the views about the Tatars with which they had been indoctrinated for twenty-three years remained unrevised. In the years that followed, this fact caused the Tatars untold harm, for they were unable to persuade many non-Tatar Soviet citizens of the justness of their cause. "
  18. ^ a b Bekirova, Gulnara; Gromenko, Sergey (16 September 2018). "Псевдореабилитация крымских татар". Крым.Реалии (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-10-03.
  19. ^ Fisher 2014, p. 258-259 "Finally, and perhaps most ominously, the decree was not published widely and loudly as originally promised by Andropov; it was published selectively, in those regions of the USSR where the Tatars had "taken root." For the vast majority of Soviet citizens, nothing had changed, and the views about the Tatars with which they had been indoctrinated for twenty-three years remained unrevised. In the years that followed, this fact caused the Tatars untold harm, for they were unable to persuade many non-Tatar Soviet citizens of the justness of their cause. "
  20. ^ a b "Началась формальная амнистия крымских татар". Gazeta.ua (in Russian). 2020-09-05. Retrieved 2021-10-03.
  21. ^ Aydın 2021, p. 106-108.
  22. ^ Report. The Group. 1970. p. 16. It is true that a few hundred Crimean Tatar families have returned to the Crimea under the organized labour recruitment scheme. But firstly, only farm labour is recruited. Secondly, the families have to stay permanently on the farm for which they were recruited or leave the Crimea. Thirdly, the families are settled in ones or twos, or at best in fives to tens, which makes it difficult for them to preserve their language and cultural identity. Fourthly, their children have been denied higher or further education in the Crimea. And finally, the number of Crimean Tatars recruited is a mere fraction of the total Crimean Tatar population.
  23. ^ Ablyazov, Emir (13 March 2015). "Герой добился права жить и умереть на Родине". goloskrimanew.ru. Retrieved 2019-10-09.
  24. ^ Bekirova 2005, p. 204.
  25. ^ Ташкентский процесс: Суд над десятью представителями крымскотатарского народа (1 июля – 5 августа 1969 г.): Сборник документов с иллюстрациями. – Амстердам: Фонд имени Герцена, 1976. – 854 с., [4] л. ил.: портр., факс. – (Серия «Библиотека Самиздата»; № 7)

Works cited edit

  • Allworth, Edward (1988). Tatars of the Crimea: Their Struggle for Survival : Original Studies from North America, Unofficial and Official Documents from Czarist and Soviet Sources. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-0758-7.
  • Aydın, Filiz Tutku (2021). Émigré, Exile, Diaspora, and Transnational Movements of the Crimean Tatars: Preserving the Eternal Flame of Crimea. Springer Nature. ISBN 978-3-030-74124-2.
  • Bekirova, Gulnara (2004). Крымскотатарская проблема в СССР: 1944-1991 [Crimean Tatar problem in the USSR: 1944-1991] (in Russian). Simferopol: Odzhak Publishing House. ISBN 978-966-8535-06-2.
  • Bekirova, Gulnara (2005). Крым и крымские татары в XIX-XX веках: сборник статей [Crimea and Crimean Tatars in the 19th-20th centuries: a collection of articles] (in Russian). Moscow.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Dagdzhi, Timur (2008). Сталинский геноцид и этноцид крымскотатарского народа: документы, факты, комментарии [Stalin's genocide and ethnocide of the Crimean Tatar people: documents, facts, comments] (in Russian). Simferopol city printing house.
  • Fisher, Alan (2014). The Crimean Tatars. Hoover Press. ISBN 978-0-8179-6663-8.
  • Guboglo, Mikhail; Chervonnaya, Svetlana (1992). Крымскотатарское национальное движение: Документы, материалы, хроника [Crimean Tatar national movement: Documents, materials, chronicle] (in Russian). Russian Academy of Sciences.
  • Williams, Brian (2021). The Crimean Tatars: The Diaspora Experience and the Forging of a Nation. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-49128-1.

External links edit

  • Text of the decree (in Russian)

ukaz, decree, citizens, tatar, nationality, formerly, living, crimea, russian, Указ, гражданах, татарской, национальности, проживавших, Крыму, issued, presidium, supreme, soviet, september, 1967, proclaiming, that, citizens, tatar, nationality, formerly, livin. Decree No 493 On citizens of Tatar nationality formerly living in the Crimea Russian Ukaz 493 O grazhdanah tatarskoj nacionalnosti prozhivavshih v Krymu was issued by the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet on 5 September 1967 proclaiming that Citizens of Tatar nationality formerly living in the Crimea sic were officially legally rehabilitated and had taken root in places of residence For many years the government claimed that the decree settled the Tatar problem despite the fact that it did not restore the rights of Crimean Tatars and formally made clear that they were no longer recognized as a distinct ethnic group 1 2 Contents 1 History 2 Implementation and response 3 Footnotes 4 References 4 1 Works cited 5 External linksHistory editWhile other deported peoples such as the Chechens Ingush Kalmyks Karachays and Balkars had long since been permitted to return to their native lands and their republics were restored in addition to other forms of political rehabilitation as recognized peoples 3 the very same decree of 24 November 1956 On the restoration of national autonomies of the Kalmyk Karachay Chechen and Ingush peoples O vosstanovlenii nacionalnyh avtonomij kalmyckogo karachaevskogo chechenskogo i ingushskogo narodov that rehabilitated those peoples in 1956 4 5 took on a genocidal tone towards internally deported Crimean Tatars offering national reunification in the Tatar ASSR belonging to the distinct but similarly named Volga Tatars in lieu of restoration of the Crimean ASSR for Crimean Tatars who sought a national autonomy despite the fact that Crimean Tatar activists did not seek a return to Tatarstan 6 7 a As result Crimean Tatars organized petitions and delegations to Moscow demand their rehabilitation 12 The decree was issued roughly two months after a Crimean Tatar delegation met with senior government officials in Moscow 13 requesting to be rehabilitated in the same manner as the other deported peoples that had been rehabilitated in 1956 14 Besides Andropov Georgadze Shchelokov and Rudenko were present at the meeting On 21 July 1967 Yuri Andropov promised the Crimean Tatars that they would be rehabilitated however the decree was not issued until 5 September that year 15 Much to the aghast of Crimean Tatar activists the decree not only failed to allow them to return to Crimea en masse 13 but also revealed that the government did not see them as a distinct ethnic group only as people of Tatar nationality formerly living in Crimea 16 and claimed that they had already taken root in Central Asia 17 18 Implementation and response editUnlike what leaders in Moscow had promised the decree was only published locally in areas where Crimean Tatars lived 19 Many Crimean Tatars living in exile who saw the decree mistakenly thought that it meant they were allowed to return to Crimea and the odd wording of the decree resulted in considerable confusion among Crimean Tatars As result many Crimean Tatar families traveled to Crimea in the expectation that they would be allowed to live in Crimea and would be seen as a rehabilitated people 20 However most of them were redeported 21 and very few Crimean Tatars were allowed to return to Crimea in the following years most under an organized labor recruitment scheme that let in very few Crimean Tatars 22 For many years Crimean Tatars continued to be re deported from Crimea and it was not until 1989 that they were allowed to return en masse 5 Hero of the Soviet Union Abdraim Reshidov was among the first Crimean Tatars who tried to return to Crimea upon seeing the decree but unlike many others he was able to get a residence permit albeit only after resorting to threatening self immolation 23 The decree was widely rebuked by people in the Crimean Tatar civil rights movement as being a fraud Another step towards the liquidation of the Crimean Tatar people as a nation Ocherednoj shag v napravlenii likvidacii krymskotatarskogo naroda kak nacii 24 and was ridiculed by the Tashkent Ten defendants as farce 18 20 25 Footnotes edit The Crimean Tatars are not closely related to the Tatars proper of Tatarstan who are a Bulgar people with origins in Kazan 8 9 Many other ethnic groups not part of the Volga Tatars who are now just called Tatars have historically been called Tatar such as the Azerbaijanis formerly called Caucasian Tatars 10 After the deportation of the Crimean Tatars the Soviet Union did not recognize Crimean Tatars as a distinct ethnic group and frequently suggested Crimean Tatars return to Tatarstan despite the fact that Crimean Tatars have no ancestral roots in Tatarstan or common ancestor with the Volga Tatars 11 References edit Emel in Russian Fond Krym 1977 p 50 Pri etom oficialnye tolkovateli Ukaza upolnomochennye CK zayavili chto etot Ukaz vyrazhaet okonchatelnoe reshenie krymskotatarskogo nacionalnogo voprosa Estestvenno krymskotatarskij narod ne mog udovletvorit sya takim resheniem svoego nacionalnogo voprosa V svoih dokumentah on zaklejmil pozorom takoj ukaz vskryv ego an tinarodnuyu sushnost Ukaz sygral kovarnuyu rol v sudbe nacionalnogo dvizhe niya Vskryv i pravilno oceniv sushnost Ukaza respublikan skoe soveshanie iniciatorov vyrabotalo nevernye takticheskie zadachi dvizheniya posle 1967 g Dagdzi 2008 p 175harvnb error no target CITEREFDagdzi2008 help Prakticheski polstoletiya krymskie tatary byli lisheny prava etnicheskoj samoidentifi kacii etnonim krymskie tatary byl izyat iz perepisej naseleniya nauchnogo i pravovogo ispolzovaniya kulturnogo obihola For almost half a century the Crimean Tatars were deprived of the right of ethnic self identification the ethnonym Crimean Tatars was removed from population censuses scientific and legal use and cultural life Fisher 2014 p 258 259 Finally and perhaps most ominously the decree was not published widely and loudly as originally promised by Andropov it was published selectively in those regions of the USSR where the Tatars had taken root For the vast majority of Soviet citizens nothing had changed and the views about the Tatars with which they had been indoctrinated for twenty three years remained unrevised In the years that followed this fact caused the Tatars untold harm for they were unable to persuade many non Tatar Soviet citizens of the justness of their cause Postanovlenie Centralnogo Komiteta KPSS ot 24 noyabrya 1956 goda a b Andrew Wilson 2014 11 18 Ukraine Crisis What It Means for the West Yale University Press p 104 ISBN 978 0 300 21292 1 After Khrushchev s secret speech in 1956 in which he denounced Stalin many other deported peoples were allowed to return home even the Chechens But not the Crimean Tatars A decree in 1967 withdrew the charges of collabo ration but this was given little publicity outside Central Asia and stopped well short of full rehabilitation The Crimean Tatars were only able to return to Crimea in the very late Soviet period after 1989 Ironically an assistance programme was drawn up in Moscow in 1989 but remained largely unimplemented at the time of Soviet collapse By 2014 just under 270 000 had returned to Crimea with perhaps another 100 000 left in Central Asia plus several million of Crimean Tatar descent in the diaspora mainly Turkey Fisher 2014 p 258 Prior to 1967 when making their demands for redress of grievances the Crimean Tatar leadership had concentrated on three areas 1 complete rehabilitation of their nationality to be officially announced by government authorities 2 restoration of property illegally seized at the time of the deportation and 3 the right to return to their homeland in the Crimea with the re creation of the Crimean ASSR In their euphoria just after the issuance of the decree in September the Tatars temporarily forgot these demands But not for long It did not take a high degree of sophistication to realize that the wording of the rehabilitation left two of their demands completely unanswered and only partially dealt with the third Bekirova 2004 p 168 Rorlich Azade Ayse 2017 09 01 The Volga Tatars A Profile in National Resilience Hoover Press ISBN 978 0 8179 8393 2 Williams 2021 p 92 Gasimov Zaur 2017 Historical Dictionary of Azerbaijan Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 5381 1042 3 The largest group of Russian Muslims on the eve of Moscow s conquest of Caucasia and Central Asia consisted of Tatars in the Volga region Following this logic Russians called the Muslim population in the Caucasus who spoke Turkic Tatars of the Caucasus tatary Kavkaza or Trans Caucasian Tatars za kavkazskie tatary Markina Nadezhda Agdzhoyan Anastasiya 14 December 2016 U tatar ne nashli obshej rodiny The Tatars did not find a common homeland gazeta ru in Russian Geneticheskie portrety treh grupp tatar krymskih povolzhskih i sibirskih sozdannye po rezultatam issledovaniya ih Y hromosomy okazalis ochen raznymi Eto ne podtverzhdaet gipotezu uchenyh ob obshem proishozhdenii vseh tatar iz edinoj srednevekovoj populyacii Genetic portraits of three groups of Tatars Crimean Volga and Siberian created based on the results of a study of their Y chromosome turned out to be very different This does not confirm the scientists hypothesis about the common origin of all Tatars from a single medieval population Fisher 2014 p 254 a b Allworth 1988 p 195 Fisher 2014 p 258 Prior to 1967 when making their demands for redress of grievances the Crimean Tatar leadership had concentrated on three areas 1 complete rehabilitation of their nationality to be officially announced by government authorities 2 restoration of property illegally seized at the time of the deportation and 3 the right to return to their homeland in the Crimea with the re creation of the Crimean ASSR In their euphoria just after the issuance of the decree in September the Tatars temporarily forgot these demands But not for long It did not take a high degree of sophistication to realize that the wording of the rehabilitation left two of their demands completely unanswered and only partially dealt with the third Gubernsky Bogdan 6 September 2015 Eto byl samyj lzhivyj samyj licemernyj ukaz This was the most deceitful most hypocritical decree Krym Realii in Russian Retrieved 2021 10 03 Williams 2021 p 421 422 Fisher 2014 p 258 259 Finally and perhaps most ominously the decree was not published widely and loudly as originally promised by Andropov it was published selectively in those regions of the USSR where the Tatars had taken root For the vast majority of Soviet citizens nothing had changed and the views about the Tatars with which they had been indoctrinated for twenty three years remained unrevised In the years that followed this fact caused the Tatars untold harm for they were unable to persuade many non Tatar Soviet citizens of the justness of their cause a b Bekirova Gulnara Gromenko Sergey 16 September 2018 Psevdoreabilitaciya krymskih tatar Krym Realii in Russian Retrieved 2021 10 03 Fisher 2014 p 258 259 Finally and perhaps most ominously the decree was not published widely and loudly as originally promised by Andropov it was published selectively in those regions of the USSR where the Tatars had taken root For the vast majority of Soviet citizens nothing had changed and the views about the Tatars with which they had been indoctrinated for twenty three years remained unrevised In the years that followed this fact caused the Tatars untold harm for they were unable to persuade many non Tatar Soviet citizens of the justness of their cause a b Nachalas formalnaya amnistiya krymskih tatar Gazeta ua in Russian 2020 09 05 Retrieved 2021 10 03 Aydin 2021 p 106 108 Report The Group 1970 p 16 It is true that a few hundred Crimean Tatar families have returned to the Crimea under the organized labour recruitment scheme But firstly only farm labour is recruited Secondly the families have to stay permanently on the farm for which they were recruited or leave the Crimea Thirdly the families are settled in ones or twos or at best in fives to tens which makes it difficult for them to preserve their language and cultural identity Fourthly their children have been denied higher or further education in the Crimea And finally the number of Crimean Tatars recruited is a mere fraction of the total Crimean Tatar population Ablyazov Emir 13 March 2015 Geroj dobilsya prava zhit i umeret na Rodine goloskrimanew ru Retrieved 2019 10 09 Bekirova 2005 p 204 Tashkentskij process Sud nad desyatyu predstavitelyami krymskotatarskogo naroda 1 iyulya 5 avgusta 1969 g Sbornik dokumentov s illyustraciyami Amsterdam Fond imeni Gercena 1976 854 s 4 l il portr faks Seriya Biblioteka Samizdata 7 Works cited edit Allworth Edward 1988 Tatars of the Crimea Their Struggle for Survival Original Studies from North America Unofficial and Official Documents from Czarist and Soviet Sources Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 0758 7 Aydin Filiz Tutku 2021 Emigre Exile Diaspora and Transnational Movements of the Crimean Tatars Preserving the Eternal Flame of Crimea Springer Nature ISBN 978 3 030 74124 2 Bekirova Gulnara 2004 Krymskotatarskaya problema v SSSR 1944 1991 Crimean Tatar problem in the USSR 1944 1991 in Russian Simferopol Odzhak Publishing House ISBN 978 966 8535 06 2 Bekirova Gulnara 2005 Krym i krymskie tatary v XIX XX vekah sbornik statej Crimea and Crimean Tatars in the 19th 20th centuries a collection of articles in Russian Moscow a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Dagdzhi Timur 2008 Stalinskij genocid i etnocid krymskotatarskogo naroda dokumenty fakty kommentarii Stalin s genocide and ethnocide of the Crimean Tatar people documents facts comments in Russian Simferopol city printing house Fisher Alan 2014 The Crimean Tatars Hoover Press ISBN 978 0 8179 6663 8 Guboglo Mikhail Chervonnaya Svetlana 1992 Krymskotatarskoe nacionalnoe dvizhenie Dokumenty materialy hronika Crimean Tatar national movement Documents materials chronicle in Russian Russian Academy of Sciences Williams Brian 2021 The Crimean Tatars The Diaspora Experience and the Forging of a Nation BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 49128 1 External links editText of the decree in Russian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ukaz 493 amp oldid 1218379829, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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