Kolarz-Russia Colonies PDF
Kolarz-Russia Colonies PDF
Kolarz-Russia Colonies PDF
BY
WALTER KOLARZ
ARCHON BOOKS,
1967
L I B R A R Yo F C o N G R E S S
C A , T A L o GC a n n N u u n r n : 6 7 - T ) 9 2 6
PntNreo rN THE UNITED STATESoF AMERICA
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PREFACE
PREFACB
CONTENTS
PREFACE
page \
C h A P I Ct TR U S S I A N C O L O N I Z A T I O N A N D
SOVIET NATIONALITIES POLICY
The essenceof Russian exPansion
Russia'stwo histories
Russian anti-racialism
The Russian character of the October Revolution
The Russian character of the Bolshevik Party
Russiancolonizationunder the Sovietr6gime
Local nationalism
C'Jnstitutional federalism
Soviet BudgetarYcentralism
The 'soviet of Nationalities'
Fallacies of Soviet statistics
Chaptertr INNER RUSSIA
Borderland Russia and Inner Russia
3l
32
4l
46
IV 'Frr.tNIsnRussr.q,'
Mordvinians: sevencenturiesof Russification
Mari: national-religious resistance
'capital' versusa people
Udmurts: a
Komi - the northern coal rePublic
48
CONTENTS
PEOPLES
I THp RussraNGEnrraaNs
The origin of the Volga Germans
Germansof South Russia
The Germansin the SovietUnion
The 'liquidation' of the RussianGermans
II TgE CnrureN Tlnr,lns
Emigration of the CrimeanTartars: 1j}4-191j
Crimean Tartar nationalism
The Crimean Province
III Knluucxs
Under the Czaristr6gime
Under Sovietrule
C h a p t e rM H E
NORTH-WESTERN BORDER
I Cslr,i-rNcr ro ScANDTNAvTA
Challengeof history
The missionof St. Petersburg
The Murmansk railway
Kola peninsulaand Murmansk
Petsamo
The Lapp issue
II KlnElrl - Ttrr ScaNnrNAvrAN
Sovrrr RrpusLrc
Russificationof the Karelian A.S.S.R_
The Stalin Canal
The Karelian Isthmus - a new Russian orovince
The 'annexation'of Kalevala
III Tur Baluc SovrEr Rrpunr-rcs
Two Russianmethods
The Baltic diasporain the U.S.S.R.
Baltic in form - Russianin essence
Liquidation of minorities in the Baltic States
SovietEstonia
SovietLatvia
Lithuania: both ally and victim
Russian Koenigsberg
59
67
68
76
8l
88
88
97
104
CONTENTS
C h a p t e rV T H E W E S T E R N B O R D E R L A N D S
I TnP UrurNr
'Little Russia'and'New Russia'
Ukrainian diasporain the U'S'S'R'
Russian diasPorain the Ukraine
Stalinist centralism versusUkrainian autonomy
policy
Communist irredenta and'Ukrainization'
The first Purges
The SkryPnik affair
'Great Purge'
The
Comintern and'Western Ukraine'
TranscarPathianUkraine
Communists an<lanti-communistsin the Western
Ukraine
Russian policy and the Uniate Church
Ukrainian nationalism in the post-war period
The Ukraine as a factor in Soviet'world politics'
National minorities in the Ukraine
'Polish
The
PolicY' of the Ukraine
II Sovrsr MolPnvra
Moldavia as A.S.S'R'
Moldavia as Soviet Republic
III BYELoRUssIA
Soviet policy in Eastern Byelorussia
Kolas and Kupala - Byelorussianleaders
'Greater BYelorussia'
ChaprerVI THE JEWS - A PEOPLE OF THE
SOVIET UNION
Jews in the Communist PartY
Political and religious persecutionof Soviet Jewry
Soviet Jewry in the war and post-war period
The social transformation of Soviet Jewry
The eastwardmigration of Soviet Jews
Jewish agricultural colonies
'Soviet
The choice of Birobidzhan as prospective
Jewish State'
Kalinin Declaration versusBalfour Declaration
Jewish colonization in Birobidzhan
Birobidzhan - successor failure?
C h a p t e \r T I T H E N O R T H C A U C A S U S P E O P L E S
Russia and the Caucasus
The first exodus of the mountaineers
The administrative chaos in the Soviet Caucasus
rr
123
r23
t49
153
163
181
CONTENTS
xu
208
Zl2
223
237
247
CONTENTS
ChapterX
255
262
270
III Uzsrrrsrlx
Samarkand and Tashkent
Soviet cotton PolicY
Industrialization and Russification
Uzbek culture under tutelage
Mir Alishir Navoi - Soviet national hero
274
fV TlozntrrstlN
Tadzhikistan versus Afghanistan
Tadzhikistan and Persia
Tadzhikistan and India
Tadzhik national oPPosition
)R)
v rutrneNrsuN
Turkmenistan's crucial problem - irrigation
Greater Turkmenistan
Political and linguistic opposition
Post-war oPPosition
29o
296
C h a p t eX
r SOVIET NATIONALITIES POLICY AS A
303
woRLD PROBLEM
Soviet nationalities policy in Eastern Europe
Soviet nationalities policy and British colonial policy
The future of the PeoPlesof Russia
321
INDEX
xru
MAPS
SovietCentral Asia and its neighbours
Caucasus,Transcaucasiaand Turkey
The Western Marchlands of the Soviet Union
Autonomous Territories liquidated 1941146
Autonomous Territories of European Russia
Front enclpaper
Front endpaper
Back endpaper
Back endpaper
page 3e
I
RUSSIAN COLONIZATION AND SOVIET
NATIONALITIES POLICY
THE ESSENCE OF RUSSIAN EXPANSION
COLONIZATION
AND
NATIONALITIES
coLo
'Christianmission'is no
In the SovietUnion, it is true, the idea of a
longerpopular,but the attitudetowardsthe historic Russianexpansion
as such remainspositive.The formation of the RussianFmpire, the
of land in the world, is viewedin Commost immenseagglomeration
munist Moscow primarily as the outcome of the gigantic collective
efforts of the Russianpeople.
There is, indeed, much evidencefor the thesis that the Russian
Empire is chieflyan unconsciouscreationdue to the sufferingsbut also
to the enterprisingspirit of a vanguard of the Russian people. The
Rrlssianpeasantsleft their homesto shakeoff the fettersof autocracy
and bondage,and to gain freedomthey werereadyto walk barefoot
to the end of the world. This urge towardsnew land,born of despair,
hunger and oppression,eventually gave rise to a kind of Russian
people'simperialism.
COLONIZATION
AND
NATIONALITIES
COLONIZATION
AND NATIONALITIES
)NIZATION
AND NATIONALITIES
COLONIZATION
AND
NATIONALITIES
COLONIZATION
AND
NATIONALITIES
numericar,-0",,;:.
ffi;"
."J'r'l,n",n,",uesthese
figures were of little importance since they showed only the number of
the rank and file communists belonging to a given nationality, without
disclosingtheir real political weight.
In this respect statistics on the ethnical composition of party congressesare much more revealing since the congressdelegatesare, for
the most part, leading officials of the party. At the Thirteenth Congress,
held in May 1924, only I per cent of the delegatesrepresented the
Turko-Tartar peoples who were then almost 11 per cent of the entire
population of the Soviet Union. The Russianshad 60.8 per cent of all
delegates;11'3 per cent wereJews,7 per cent Latvians and 4'7 per cent
Ukrainians.
At the Fifteenth Party Congress,held in December 1927,whenthe important decisionson the collectivization of agriculture were taken, the
non-Europeannationalitieswere again without adequaterepresentation.
The Turko-Tartar group had but 1.6 per cent of all delegates. The
percentageof Russianshad gone up to 62 per cent ; Jews and Latvians
still sent fairly large delegations,although their percentageshad gone
down to 7 per cent and 4.7 per cent. The relative strength of the
Ukrainianshadincreasedto 9.8 per cent, i.e. almost double, and the
number of Byelorussiandelegateshad goneup from 1.2 to 2.9 per cent.
The delegations of a number of non-Slav nationalities, however,
decreasedslightly compared witt' 1924.5
Throughout its existencethe Communist Party of the Soviet Union
has remained a predominantly Russian and Slav body. The number of
non-Russian party members, it is true, increasedboth absolutely and
relatively, but this statistical increase was not accompanied by a
corresponding increase of their influence in the party and siate
machinery. Attempts have been made to shake Russian predominance
and to establish both a greater degree of national equality within the
Communist Party and a genuine federation within the Soviet Union.
But these were foiled by Stalin and his associatesduring the big purge
of 1936/38.
There is no doubt that Stalin upheld the Russian character of the
October Revolution while his opponents wanted to broaden the basis
of the Soviet r6gime by giving greater weight to the non-Russian
nationalities.Both the left-wing and the right-wing opposition to Stalin
agreedon that point for opposite reasons.For the extremeleft, Russian
predominancewas incompatible with the idea of the world revolution,
The right-wing opposition around Bukharin and Rykov was guided
in its hostility to centralism by its generaliy more liberal approach to
Soviet internal politics. Both groups were able to quote in support of
their standpoints the works of Lenin, who in various proclamations
and appeals to non-Russian peopies had shown great understanding
COLONIZATION
AND
NATIONALITIES
COLONIZATION
AND
NATION,
COLONIZATION
AND
NATIONALITIES
t2
COLONIZATION
AND NATIONALITIES
The Soviet leaders realized that the power and size of the Russian
Empire were due to successfully conducted colonization and that the
Soviet Union too could not do without a colonization policy' The form
and methods of Russian colonization, but not its essence,changed to a
certain desreeunder the Soviet r6gime.
In the fiist years after the Octobe*rRevolution the pace of colonization
declined owing to the general confusion and the hostility of the nonRussianpeoplestowards new Russian colonists. Moreover, agricultural
colonization had lost a gteat deal of its previous attraction becausethe
best land had already been occupiedby Russian settlers,and more land
could be made available only at the price of investing considerable
sums in irrigation and improvements. Land conditions in Asiatic
Russia were such that Siberia and Central Asia combined could not
absorb more than 200,000 to 250,000 agricultural settlers a year.
Despite the existence of vast empty spaces in Russian Asia, the
colonization movement at the beginning of the First World War was
headins towards an impasse.s
Not-only the Soviet rdgime but any other Russian r6gime taking over
in 1917 would have had to alter the methods of colonization policy.
The Soviet Government, particularly since 1928, the beginning of the
planning period, continued to encourage agricultural colonization on
i modeiate scale, but the emphasis was clearly shifted to industrial
colonization. To industrialize RussianAsia, to exploit its great national
riches, in short, to carry out the Five-Year Plans, it was imperative to
draw on the reservesof population of European Russia and to transfer
them beyond the Urals. In the twelve years between the end of 1926 and
the beginning of 1939 alone, 3,000,000people migrated from Central
and Western Russiainto the new industrial centresof the Urals, Siberia
and the Russian Far East. In addition, 1,700,000new settlerscame into
the Central Asiatic Soviet Republics.
The migration towards the East constituted,however, only one aspect
of a general industrialization and urbanization processwhich also led
to a migration of 4,800,000people into the provinces of Moscow and
l3
ALITIES
l5
COLONIZATION
AND
NATIONALITIES
NATIONALISM
The Soviet nationalities policy is thus largely identical with the promotion of colonization and industrialization in the non-Russianterritories
of the U.S.S.R. It can also be defined in other ways; it dependson the
standpoint from which the definition is formulated. From the point
of view of Soviet Russia's neighbours the Soviet nationalities policy is
an instrument of Soviet diolomacv. The Bolshevik 'Old Guard' considered the nationalities policy ai an abstract policy of encouraging
the cultural and economic development of the peoples of Russia. For
the non-Russian peoples of the Soviet Union itself the nationalities
policy and the fight against local nationalism are identical notions.
Each of thesedefinitions contains a certain amount of truth. but there
can be no doubt that the fight against local nationalism has been the
dominant element in the Soviet nationalities policv since the thirties.
l6
COLONIZATION
AND NATIONALITIES
COLONIZATION
AND
NATIONALITIES
COLONIZATION
AND
NATION
During and particularly after the Second World War official Soviet
ideology becameless hypocritical by openly proclaiming that the Russianswerethe'driving force'within the U.S.S.R.and not just one of the
'180 peoplesof the Soviet Union'.
On the very morrow of victory Stalin ordered that greater emphasis
should be given to the leading role of the Russian people in the Soviet
State. When addressingthe Red Army commanders at a great victory
celebration on May 24th, 1945,Stalin demonstrativelytoasted the Rus'most outstanding people of the
sian people whom he describedas the
'clear mind, steadfastcharacterand
to
the
U.S.S.Rj and he paid tribute
patience' of the Russians. This toast was not only a eulogy of the
Russians,but also an oblique censureintended for the other peoplesof
the Soviet Union, whose mind, character and patience from Stalin's
point of view had been less commendable during the Great Patriotic
War.
It seemsthat Stalin's subtly formulated reproach to the non-Russians
was justified. In the fatal years of 1941 and 1942in particular, the Russianshad borne the brunt ofthe battle. In October 1942Pravda dropped
all propagandistic pretence and stated flatly that the Russiansformed
'vast majority' of the army. This admission was very remarkable in
the
view of the fact that the Russiansconstitute less than half of the populationof the U.S.S.R.*
Stalin's toast to the Russian people was no toast in the ordinary sense
of the word. It was the ultimate logical conclusion to be drawn from
the Russian character of the October Revolution. It also supplied the
key for the understanding of the purges carried out after 1945 among
the non-Russian peoples of the Soviet Union. The aim of these purges
u'as to eliminate from the cultural life and the national traditions of the
non-Russianseverything that might possibly encourage among them
any kind of anti-Russian sentiments.
CONSTITUTIONAL FEDERALISM
In examining the essentialsof Soviet nationalitiespolicy we cannot overlook the laws, decreesand constitutionsof the U.S.S.R. and its constituent republics, but we must use them with care. Consideredin isolation they give no more than a clue to the propagandist aspectof Soviet
* The same Pravda arlicle which was quoted by Soviet Ilar Nerrs on October 16th, 1942'
also complained about the insufficient military training of the non-Russian soldiers.The
newspapersaid: 'Not all the reservesarriving at the front from the national republics and
provincesare equally well trained. Someyoung soldiersare insufficientlyfamiliar with mililary technique,particularly with their weapons.It is the duty ofmilitary training organizations to attend to this, to give the young fighters a complete idea ofmodern war weapons
and teach them how to use them. Political work has always been an important activity of
our army organizations. It is of particular importance among Red Army men of nonRussian nationality. . . .'
l9
COLONIZATION
AND
NATIONALITIES
nationalities policy, whilst the real position of the non-Russian nationalities of the Soviet Union can be judged only on the basis of the
application of the laws, i.e. in the light of facts. The constitutional
framework of the U.S.S.R.,though not a guide to the fundamentalsof
Soviet nationalitiespolicy, acquaintsus with the terminoiogy with which
the latter operates and introduces us to the various degreesof Soviet
territorial autonomy.
1 . s o v r e r R E p u B L r c s . T h e h i g h e s tf o r m o f S o v i e ta u t o n o m y i s e n joyed by the sixteenconstituent Soviet Republics. According to Soviet
legal theory these sixteen Republics are fully fledged sovereignStates,
with all the prerogativesof a State including a constitutionalright to
leave the Union should their respective parliaments, the Supreme
Soviets,so decide.
The sovereigntyof the Soviet Republics is, however, a mere constitutional fiction, becausein reality they have no say in questionsofinternal
security,high-leveleconomicplanning,tran sport,or hisher education,not
to speak of foreign policy and defence.Since February lst, 1944, the
Soviet Republics have possesseda nominal right to have foreign
ministers and defenceministers of their own, but the national foreign
ministers and foreign offices have a purely formal existence,while the
national defenceministries never came into being. It is dificult to see
what functions such defenceministries could have had, in vierv of the
centraiized and predominantiy Russian character of the Soviet armed
forces.Non-Russians,it is true, may rise to the highestposts in the Red
Army and Navy, but Russian is the official language of the Soviet
military apparatus. During the Second World War all military orders
ilere written in Russian.
Even from a merely legal point of view the constituent Soviet Republics do not own the natural richeson their soil. The coal of the Ukraine,
the oil of Azerbaidzhan,the copperof Kazakhstanbelongto the U.S.S.R.
rs a rvhole and not to the individuai republics. The sarneapplies to the
a_criculturalland of the Republics.
The 'sovereignty' of the Union Republics is also rendered fictitious
bv theexistenceof the'Prokuratura'.the stronsivcentralizedofficeof the
:. ,
('GeneralnyProkuror') which was founded
rLlI-Ur.rionAttorne,v-General
in 1933.The all-Union Attorney-Generalhilnselfappointsan AttorneyGcneral for each of the Union Republics and even the personnelof the
'Prokuratura'in the provincesand districtsof theserepublicsis under
hi,. supremecoinmand. Repubiican governmentscannot interfere in the
lclst *'ith the work of the 'Prokuratura' nor can they influence the
crrmpositionof its local staff. The Attorney-General has a dual function.
He acts as Public Prosecutor and he checks on the legality of measures
crrrricd out by the republican and local authorities. The AttorneyGeneral of a Union Reoublic. on instructions from the all-Union
COLONIZATION
AND
NATIONALITIES
Attorney-General,can rescind any local laws and decreesif they contra'revolutionary legality'.
dict the so-called
on which-thJ'Prokuratura' basesits work is in
svstem
The lesal
itself rigoiousiy centralized.There is no all-Union Penal Code, it is true,
tut the"penal"Codeof the R.S.F.S.R.is also in force in Kazakhstan,
Kirghizistan, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia and the Karelo-Finnish S.S.R.
Theifact that there are separatepenal codesfor the R'S'F'S'R', Ukraine'
Bvelorussia.the Transcaucasianand some of the Central Asian Soviet
Repurblicsis of little importance since their differencesin content are
insignificant. Moreover many articles in the individual penal codes
the
hav! been supersededby all-Union laws and decrees(particularly
'protection of socialist property' and on various 'state
decreeson the
*
,{
crimes').
'states' do not correspond t_oStates in the
often, the Soviet legal
'States' have not
senseof living organisris. In numerous instancesthese
been created"bytistorical development or by the wiil of their peoples,
features'
nor do they owe their existenceto someparLiculargeographica.l
leaders
by
the
taken
deciiion
to
a
simply
They owe"their origin
^soviet
such
of
Examples
only.
leader
Sbviet
sup-reme
by
the
Ju"n
o'.
-'States'
rvhich weie created by Soviet political opportunism are the KareloFinnish s.s.R., the Moldavian s.s.R. and the Soviet Republics of
central Asia. Republics which were taken into the Soviet union en bloc
as an outcom. of -ilitury operutions,such as Georgia, Estonia and
t u i u r . . O r i g i n a t i n gf r o m p o l i t i c a la n d e c o n o m i c
L a t v i aa r e o f a d i f f e r e n n
units gravitating around a centre, they possessthe characteristicsof
stateh6odin thJsenseofpolitical and economicgeography,evenifthe
Soviet central Government has considerably curtailed the exerciseof
their actual state functions.
Soviet legal theory, as taught in Soviet law schools, assertsthat a
territory hai to answlr three r6quirementsto becomea Soviet Republic,
namely: (a) the nationalitY giving its name to the,Republic must have
an aUsotutemajority in the territory concerned: (6) a Soviet Republic
must have a common border with at least one foreign State because
otherwiseit could not secedefrom the Union if it wished to do so, and
(c) a Soviet Republic must have at least 1,000,000inhabitants'l2
'conditions' too are only theory and are not fulfilled by all the
These
sixteenSoviet Republics. Thus the Kazakhs have no absolute majority
in Kazakhstan, nor have the Karelians and Finns combined in the
Karelo-Finnish Soviet Republic. Moreover, the last-mentionedrepublic
did not fulfil condition (c), since it had less than a million inhabitants
rvhen promoted to the status of a fully-fledged Soviet^Republic.As to
condition (b) it has become an illusion, since several Soviet Republics
adioin onlv Soviet satelliteStatesand Soviet-controlledterritories (Byeloiussia, Moldavia, Kazakhstan, Kirghizistan).
2l
2 . e u r o N o u o u s s o v r E r R E p u B L r c s . A c o n s i d e r a b l yl o w e r d e g r e e
of autonomy was grantedto the 'Autonomous SocialistSoviet Reniublics' (A.S.S.R.)but they are also oilicially describedas 'states'. out or
the sixteenAutonomous Republicstwelve are part of the Russian Soviet
FederativeSocialistRepublic (R.S.F.S.R.),one each belongsto Azerbaidzhanand uzbekistanand two to Georsia.An A.S.S.R.ii extremely
limited in-its_scope
of action and its autonomy is almostexclusivelyconirned to the linguistic sphere.Formally and ligaliy, however, things are
different,sinceeveryAutonomous Republic pbssesses
a constituti-onof
its own (althoughalmost identicalin r,rordineand contentin all sixteen
A.S.S.R.s),a'Council of Ministers' and a .SrJpreme
Soviet'.
3 . a u r o N o u o u s p R o v r N c r s . T h e n e x t g r o u p o f n a t i o n a lt e r r i t o r i a l
units, the Autonomous Provinces(Avtononlnyeobtastt) have lost much
of their importance b_ythe introduction of ftre tg3o constitution promoting the more populous Autonomous provinces to Autonomous
Republics. out of the nine still existing Autonomous provinces six
belongto the R.S.F.s.R. encl one each t6 ceorgia, Azerbaidzhanand
fadzhikistan
The difference betr.l'eenan 'Autonomous province' and an ordinary
province is that the former has rules of its own with resard to its official
;.inguages.
The 'Autonomous Province'has a special;statute' adopted
rv the provincial Soviet and confirmed by the Supreme Soviet of the
R*pubiic to which it belongs; it also has a specialripresentation in the
-province
'Soviet
of Nationalities'which the ordinarv
has not.
The 'Autonomous Provinces'of the n.s.p.s.n. are not placeddirectly
-,nderthe governmentof the RussianFederationbut uncleithe Executive
L ornmittee (Ispolkom) of a kind of super-province,,Kray,, which can
:-c translated as 'Territory'. Thus the Autonomous provinte of the cir-.1:siansbelongsto the stavropol rerritory, the Khakass Autonomous
Prorinceto the I(rasnoyarskTerritory, etc.
l . L O w E n F o R M S o F N A T T o N A L A U T o N o l . l y . y e t a n o t h e rf o r m o f
::-Ltional
autonomy was designedprimarily for the small nationalitiesof
:::r- Far North, the 'Nalional Areas' (Okrugi). There are ten such
' \.itional
Areas' altogether,four of which extend.along Russia'sArctic
-...r:t. The majority of the 'National Areas' cover hugi but almost un_
:'..pukited.spacesand even from the legal point ofviJw they enjoy only
., r ery limited auronomy.
'\ational
Districts' (Ra1,on.t')were devised for small but compact
:::iiroritieswedgedirrto alien surroundings.These 'National Districts'
-.'.:ist very often of five to ten villages only. Before the Secondworld
\\'.rr therehad beenasmany as 147'NationalDistricts,in the R.S.F.S.R.
.:.oru-.lr{ost of them were locatedin the Far North, yakutia, Buryato_
\ltrnsolio, EasternSiberiaand the Amur region
'\ational
village Soviets'(viltagecouncili) and'National collective
COLONIZATION
AND NATIONALITIES
CENTRALISM
T:: real importance, or rather the factual insignificance,ofthe autono:-.,rus units created by the Soviet constitution can best be shown by
:r-,mining the budgetary means at the disposal of both the central
: r,rernmentand the regional governmentsand Soviets.
The expenditure side of the Soviet budget is usualiy sub-divided into
' .r'eroups: (1) financingof national economy; (2) social and cuitural
rr..rsures;(3) administration; (4) defence,and (5) miscellaneousexpen: ::rre. Expenditure for national economy is covered by the central
--Jcet to the extent of 86'3 per cent. Only 6'3 per cent is derived
::.ri the budgetsof the Union Republics.The remainingT'4 per cent
'local
: rhe expenditurefor national economy comesfrom the so-called
provinces,
the
districts,
:.:Jqets' which include the budgets of the
'local' national
".-i
o
f
a
l
l
H
a
l
f
c
o
u
n
c
i
l
s
.
r
u
r
a
l
a
n
d
t
h
e
councils
iJtroorl) expenditure is spent by the town councils and only an in..::,ilrcant percentage - at any rate less than ten per cent - by- all
.\.S.S.R.s,Autonomous Provincesand National Areas put together.
l.reir combined sharein the whole national economy budget is lessthan
'-e per cent of the total. (A11theseand the following figures are based
-': rhe budget of 1941, the first full year in which the present sixteen
COLONIZATION
AND
NATIONALITIES
COLONIZATION
t:
AND NATIONALITIES
chase tax and the State's share in the profits of nationalized industry,
the two main sourcesof income of the Soviet budget, thus go mainly
into the central treasury and only comparatively small portions-are
diverted each year into the republican treasuriesand local budgets.l3
The centralistic direction of Soviet financial policy does not prevent,
of course, the application of heavy state investments in the nonRussian territoriel. On the contrary, Soviet statisticscould prove only
too easily that a comparatively greater proportion of the budgetary
appropriitions goesto non-Russian territories than_to many territories
irihabiled by Russian people. The fact remains that. the republican
sovernmentshave no financial autonomy, no real say in regard to the
i.on"y spenton their territory. Ifthe Soviet Republicsenjoyed-budgetary
autonomy the budgetswould undoubtedly look different and the interests
of the individual p-eoplesof the Soviet Union would not be sacrificedto
the interestsof the Union as a whole; instead a compromise would have
to be worked out betweenall-union requirementsand local aspirations.
THE
'sovIET oF NATIONALITIES'
The protagonistsof Soviet nationalities policy might argue that the nonRussiannationalitieshave a considerable,if not decisive,influenceonthe
preparation of the Soviet budget, through their predominant participation in the Soviet of Nationalities. At this p,ointwe again have to leave
Soviet reality as expressedin the budgetary figures and to revert to the
fiction of Soviet constitutional law.
The Soviet of Nationalities is the Second Chamber of the Soviet
oarliament. which until 1936was known as'Central ExecutiveCommitiee of the U.S.S.R.' (in Russian abbreviatedas Ts.I.K.) and which since
'Supreme Soviet' or 'Supreme Council'.
rhen has been officially called
The Soviet of Nationalities has equal rights with the First Chamber, the
Sovietofthe Union, and servesin theory as the constitutional safeguard
for the small nationalities, so as to check any preponderanceof the
Slavs.
Under the 1923constitution there was a very wide measureof equality
betweenlarge and small nations in the Soviet of Nationalities. Union
Republics and Autonomous Republics were placed on the same level
end had five representativeseach, Autonomous Provinces one eachThe new constitution greatly enlarged the Soviet of Nationalities but
discriminated between Union Republics and Autonomous Republics.
At present every Soviet Republic elects twenty-five members to the
Soviet of Nationalities, every Autonomous Republic eleven, every
Autonomous Province five, and every National Area one deputy.
Aithough the non-Russian Soviet Republics and the Autonomous
Republics and Provinces usually include Russians in their delegations to
25
COLONIZATION
AND NATIONALITIES
COLONIZATIONAND NATIONALITIES
Soviet propagandahas tried to conceal the basic truth about its nationalities irolic/not only behind a fictitious legal construction but also
behind a densesmokescreenof statistics.
This propaganda makes belief that Soviet nationalities policy is
the sum'totil"of all the figures referring to the cultural and economic
advancementof the peoplesof Russia in the last thirty years.It is quite
immaterial whether the Soviet statisticsare accurateor not; they cannot
reflect the successor failure of Soviet Russia'shandling of the nationalities problem, becausethey refer solely to quantity and not to quality.
STATTSTICS.Sovietcultural statistics,for instance,rel. CUrrunel
of literacy among the non-Russian peoples,but
growth
a
fantastic
veal
they do not say-what end the literacy serves.Does it smooth the path
for the beginning of a national cultural life of the peoples concerned?
'Russification'?Or is it designedto fabricate
for final
Is it a prepiaratio-n
.Soviet culture" national in form but Bolshevik in substance?
a uniform
Moreover, Russianand western conceptsneverfully tally. words like
literacy and iuiteracy have a different melning in the.Soviet Union and
'100 per cent liquidation of illiteracy'
in western Europe. The slogan of
in a siven ureu oi the Soviet Union does not mean that any number of
p"opi" approaching this percentagecan participate in cultural life even
in tire m&t primitive wiy. Afterthe formal liquidation_of_'illiteracy'
there still remains what Russianscall malogramotnosl,which means a
low degree of literacy implying a technical knowledge of the alphabet
rvithoui the ability to make practical use of it'
Or let us take ihe impresiive number of books published since 1917
in the national languages. At the first glance these figu-rescan tell us
nothing about the dultural development of the peoples for whom they
are priited. These statisticswill reflect reaiity only as soon as we break
them up and find out how many books !n 1 given language are simplytranslaiions of the works of Lenin and Stalin, of the Short History oJ
the All-Union Communist Pafty, or propaganda pamphlets, and how
many books constitute genuine contributions towards the cultural enrichment of the nationalily for which they are printed. There is no doubt
that this last figure will be in every singlecasediscouraginglysmall'
of
Even less relevantfor any assessment
STATTSTICS.
2. BCONOTTITC
Soviet nationalities policy are economic statistics.Thesewill tell us the
percentual increasebf industrial production in any national minority
ierritory of the Soviet Union, but the figures themselveswill not answer
the queition how far this increaseguaranteesor endangersthe survival
of the non-Russiansof the U.S.S.R. This is a reproach not to Soviet
reality but to soviet propaganda,which is trying to conceala most logical
COLONIZATION
AND NATIONALITIES
and natural fact; that the theory of the Soviet nationalitiespolicy has to
be sacrificed to the Five-Year Plans, since the contrary would be
Utopian. Practice has shown that every new factory, every new coalmine, every new oil-well in a non-Russian territory of the U.S.S.R. is
not primarily an assetfor the people of that territory but rather for the
Great Russians,who alone have a sufficient manpower reserveto staff
thenewenterprises.
3. rHa NUMBERoF sovrET NArroNAlrrlrs. Finally, the most fundamental figure of the Soviet nationalitiespolicy - the number of peoples
in the Soviet Union - is also an arithmetical illusion if not Turiher
elucidated. The number of the peoples of the U.S.S.R. is usually
B!v9n as 180, although there are other estimates,slightly higher ani
slightly lower. A scientific analysis based on the 1926censusgave the
number of nationalitiesin the U.S.S.R. as 169,sub-dividedinto twelve
basic groups. According to this analysis Russia included 47 Turkic,
39 Japhetic (Caucasian),27 Ugro-Finnish, 17 Iranian, 9 palae-asiatic,
8 Indo-European, 5 Semite, and other nationalities.ta Such figures,
accurate as they may be from the point of view of the ethnog.iph.r,
have no practical value and exaggeratethe real scopeof Soviei nalionalities policy, which is big enough without any exaggeration.
At least half of the 180 peoplescannot be reckoned as nationalities in
a cultural or political sense,evenif the most generouscriterion is applied.
The Soviet cultural worker and communist propagandistmust therefore
operate with a figure considerablylower than 180. Alexander Fadeyev,
the well-known Soviet writer and member of the Communist Central
Committee, addressingthe PeaceCongressin Paris in 1949,said there
were'about seventynationalities'inthe SovietUnion. This is nearerthe
truth in so far as nationalitieswhich have arrived at a minimum desree
of cultural or even linguistic self-expressionare concerned. There-are
indeed newspapersin eighty languagesof the Soviet Union. political
and literary journals exist in fifty languages.15
The rdgime can reckon with thirty to forty-five nationalities in the
actual sphere of Soviet 'home politics'. Thus forty-four nationalities
were_represented
among the delegatesof the first post-war congressof
the Communist Youth Leaguel6and thirty-two nationalities among the
delegatesto the Tenth Congressof the Soviet Trade Unions in 1949.1?
Even the existenceof thirty to forty nationalities which count politically
is sufficientto make the tasks of the Soviet nationalities policy, with its
narrow pattern and rigid principles, extremely complicated. How the
Soviet rdgime has tried to solvethe multitude of political, economic and
cultural problems which are inherent in Russia'smulti-national character, can be shown only by examining the application of Soviet nationalities policy in detail, nationality by nationality, republic by republic,
province by province.
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL
NOTES TO CHAPTER
ONE
29
VII
THE NORTH CAUCASUSPEOPLES
rhisRepubReoubric
"eereeatinJlffi"lj,]l;,ffi;]o,,un*.
Mountain SocialistSovietRepublic'lic I officiaiii ca"lled'-Autonomous
(Gorskaya A.S.S.R.) - was formed by a decreeof January 20th, 1920'
its capiial was the city of Vladikavkaz. The Republic comprised no
fewerihan sevendifferent Caucasianpeoples:Kabardinians, Chechens,
Circassians(Cherkess),Ingush, Ossetins,Balkars and Karachay'
In its original form the Mountain Republic remainedin being fol o{Y
about tweity months. The Russian c-ommunistrulers apparently felt
that the promotion of unity among the North caucasus peopleswas not
in the inierest of Sovietceniralism-andthat it was saferto have them split
up again into severalsingle units. The disintegralion-.ofthe Mountain
nep,iu[c started in September1921when the Kabardinians were given
a special Autonomoui Province. In January 1922 three more peoples
,."id.d from the Republic. The Balkars were made to join the Kabardinian Autonomous Province and the Karachay and the Cherkesswere
given a joint Autonomous Province. In December 1922 the chechens
ilere indlced to set up an Autonomous Province of their own, which left
in-the Mountain Republic' In.Julyonly the Ossetinsarrd the Ingush,
-endowed
with separateterritorial lnits of
were
tSi+ both thesepeoples
North CaucasusRepublic was
a
united
of
6xperiment
The
own.
their
thus finally terminited. Administrative changesin the Northern Caucasus continued even after the end of the Mountain Republic. In April
1926 the Karachay-CherkessAutonomous Province was divided into
two provincer; und in January 1934the Ingush merged with the Chechens into a singie Autonomous Province'
The auton5my which the Northern Caucasuspeoples had enjoyed
existed very largely on paper' In reality thgl yele administered up
to 1934from Rostov, thetapital of the huge North caucasus Territory,
which was almost as large as Great Britain and Eire combined. The
Executive committee of ihe North caucasus Territory (Krayispolkom)
was entitled to overrule any decisionstaken by the various Autonomous
Provinces. In 1934 the Soviet bureaucracy administering the multinational parts of the North Caucasusreglon moved from Rostov to
Vladikavkaz. Only in December 1936 did the mountaineers gain a
greater say in the management of their affairs through_thetransformation
6f thr." Autonomous-Provinces into Republics (Kabardinian-Balkar
A.S.S.R.and Northern OssetinA'S'S'R')'
A.S.S.R.,Chechen-Ingush
The repeated shifting of the Northern caucasus peoples from one
territoriai unit to anothir had left untouched the real problem: how to
make the mountaineersinto reliable soviet citizensand how to associate
them with the socialisttransformation of society.The continual changes
in the administrative boundaries had hindered rather than encouraged
these tasks. They had rendered particularly difficult the recruiting of
administrative personnel from among the local peoples and the intro183
duction
of their;;;;:;::ffi:"
;^"*,
words.the
Sovier
r85
MOSLEM OPPOSITION
rhey at ;"
chechens.
;;ff";",rrip
Uzun
Sheikh
gf t_h,e
Hadii who proclaimed himseli Imam and Emir of the Northern Caucai u . . t n . E m i r w a s t h e a l l y o f t h e c o m m u n i s t si n t h e s t r u g g l ea g a i n s t h e
*hit" Cuu.ds of Geneial Denikin. Having vanquished the White
armies,the Bolsheviksdropped the Imam, but they were unable to cope
of all
with Cirechennationalism. itre Ctrechensdemandedthe expulsion'living
Russianswho in the course of the last century had settledin their
,ou.".. Pending a positive answer to this request Chechen nationalist
b'andsterrorize? thi Russian population of the area beyond endurance.
In the early trventiesthe Russian settlersin Checheniasent a complaint
to Moscow on account of the endlessraids and murders perpetratedby
Chechenbands, and petitioned that they be disarmed. Mikhail Kalinin
went personallyto the Caucasusand attempted-to calm.down both
Russiansand ihechens. With carefully chosenwords he tried to persuade
them to live together in peace,to intermarry and to respecteach other's
customs.6
Whilst in consequenceof Kalinin's personal intervention banditry
stopped in chechenia, it would seem that Moslem opposition to the
Soiiirt r6gime was never quite suppressed.In 1931the little country still
34
had 2,6i3 mosques and Arab iChools, as rvell as 1,250 mullahs,
powerful
were
who
mullahs
The
elders.
,fr.iptt and 25b re[gious
opponents of the Sovi-etr6gime even managed to keep alive the illegal
Siliriah courts which were camouflagedas'reconciliation commissions'.
The hostile attitude of the Cheihens towards the Soviet Russian
r6gime was often manifestedin the readinessto credit the most fantastic
an"ti-Russianrumours. Thus, in the early thirties, there existed a widespreadbelief that Kunta Hadji the head of a popular Y.ot1:- sectwho
tiad died at the end of the nineteenth century was stili alive and was
found a State based on
would
he
where
soon to return to chechenia,
did not differentiate
chechens
the
Apparently
law.
religious
Moslem
between Cza"ristancl Bolslivik Russia in their hopes that Kunta Hadji
would appear as Messiah, for it was he who lead led them in the risings
bzarism in 1864 and 1877,for which he was exiled to Novgorod.
asainst
'ih.
Ingrrrh, whose fate Soviet policy had co-upledwith that of the
who
no iess loyal to Islam. A delega_te
Chechenf showed themselves
'second All-Union Conferenceof Godless
representedIngushetia at the
pJdagogists'iritg:t, stated that the influenceof the Moslem clergy_was
-strong
among the Ingush that-.children refused to learn from
stiil Jo
Loots wnlcfr ihey beiGveclto 6e anti-religious.Whenevera teachertried
to introduce anti-religiouspropagandahe encountereda hostile attitude
amons schooi childrJn and there-werecasesin which teachershad even
to ieaie the school for having criticized Islam. The work of the secular
Soviet schools,where the children were taught in the winter, was counteracted by the Moslem schools where the young Ingush would learn
187
during the summer holidavs all that the Soviet authorities wished
them
to disregard' A number of Ingush party and communist youth
League
members,insteadof working againit ttr-einfluenceof reiigion, ,r.Jir,.-_
seivesto go to the mosquesto pray.?
The difficultiesexisting between-theSoviet authorities and the
chech_
ens.and Ingush were not exclusi'ely due to the Borshevik failuie
-oi to
understand the importance of the ieligious factor in the tife
ttre
mountaineers.There were also extraord-inarydifficulties or u i."nni.ut
nature, due to the fact that the directives ofthe centrar administration
were issued in the Rr.rssianlanguage and therefore did not ,.u"r,
tn"
chechen-Ingush masses.Being unable fully to understand the orders
received, the local Soviet organs either could not carry them
out, o.
falsified the decisionsof the party and of the administraiion.s
c R O Z n - y_ T H E O I L C I T y
It was the tremendousdead weight of the predominantly Russian
capital
of Checheniathat prevented.thelmplementationof any genuine
crr"irr"o
an^dfinally speiledthe doom of the Chechen'pEopre.
The actual
.1utglory
liquidation of the chechens would probably not have'occurredhaj
not
th^elargesttown in their homelandbecome an oil city, ana indeed,
one
of the most important oil centresof the U.S.S.R.
This oil city had-developed out of the littie fortress of Grozny.
Al.
though Grozny oilfierdshad beendiscoveredas early as ts::.iheiwere
hardly_exploited at all in the nineteenth century.'rn Di,
troi".u".,
they^already supplied r1'5 per cent of the entire'Russian oil.
n.t*""n
1913and 1917this_figure
had risen to
p-r,cent,and in the following
four yla1s to. near.ly25 per cenr. By .*^l
1937the proportion of Grozny oil
to total-Russianoil production had fallen to 9-.25-percent, but
in tJrms
of absolL'*efigures this output representedan increase
per-iint,
c_omparedto that before the First world war. The devetop'meni
"r'zzi
or
Grozny as an oil centre made for an increaseof the populutifn
on uo
'o,obo
'American
scale'.In 18.90^t!:place had no more than
inhabiiants,
against 34,067 in 1913, 97,095 in 1926 and 172,468in 1939.lf
ne"o hardly be added that the Chechensand Ingush, peoples consiJne
or
shepherdsand peasants,could not contribui. o"ytt ing,"o.rr, ,n.nii"onin_gto the rise of the town which was styled, arm'ostr.ini.urrv,
Cpitur
of the Chechen-IngushA.s.s.R.'. Among the oilwork.r, 6i
G;;ry
th"T:-y:1" probably at no time more thai one-tenth of .nativesl
and
until 1936therewere but 9.7 per cent.
U n l i k e . s om a n y c i t i e si.n t h e S o v i e tU n i o n , G r o z n y n e v e rc h a n g e d
its
name underthe Soviet169ime,despitethe imperialistichistory
c"iri."t.a
witlr it. As a matter of fact, it was the Sovi'etoit citv of ciornv
*r.,i.r-,
spelled the doom of the chechens and not the liitle rort..rJ
*rrr.r,
188
of Februaryl0tht
ctaternent
TheCentralCommittoe
of theCaucasus.
r89
PROVINCE
190
' c o o D ' P E o P L E- T H E o S S E T I N S
r91
OF THE KABARDINIANS
achieved
aduar
r,;:
l:;ffi#:;,r"
Balkars
it served
as a warning for the Kabardinians, who from then on hastenedto expresstheir loyalty towards soviet Russia in a very demonstrative.eyen
effusive.wav.
After the war the Soviet authorities found it advisableto provide for
the Kabardinians, as a means of strengtheningtheir alregiince to the
Soviet state, a clear concep,tion of history which would u-nequivocally
show that the Russianshad always been the protectors of the Kabardinian people_.The task of formulating the details of this conception was
assignedto the 'Kabardinian ResearchInstitute', whose heabquarters
are in Nalchik, the capital of the Kabardinian A.S.S.R. The new conception-implied the 'official recognition' of Temryuk Idarovich as the
national hero of Kabarda. Kabardinian children are expectedto look
up to Temryuk with the sameawe as Russianboys and giils to peter the
Great or Suvorov. According to the new official the-sisTemryuk. a
K a b a r d i n i a np r i l c e _ w h ol i v e d a r o u n d 1 5 5 0 , ' e n d e a v o u r et d
o uuila-up
a strong centralized state able to resist Turkish and crimean Tartar
oppressors'.-Temryukhad realizedthat the Kabardinians were incapable
of rvithstanding their enemiesif they were to rely on their own fbrces
only; establishmentof close contacts with MuscoW was therefore the
only wise Kabardinian policy.l5
is the sam-estory nutri.tt il told with some variation to all the peoples
^Ii
of the Soviet Union in all their many languages.Thereis alwaysa grain of
truth in the story, but never the entire truth,iince history is not so-simple
and so clear-cutthat it would fit the purposesofa one-sidedpropaganda.
It is a historical fact that Temryut aitea Ivan the Terrible for pioiection
and even gave him his daughter for wife. Originally, in thi days of
greater internationalism, Soviet historians failed to stiess this fact. and
laid more emphasison the slavetrade in which the Kabardinian feudal
lords had engagedwith the crimean Tartar Khanate. However. since
events_had
pr9v9d the necessityof increasingthe attachment and loyalty
of the Kabardinians to the Russiansand th6 Soviet State,Temrwl: had
to be brought to the forefront of Kabardinian history.
Kabardinian post-war literature also pursued the iim of re-educating
.
the Kabardinian people. The central theme of the first Kabardinian
literary almanac consisted-in showing that it was 'the friendship with
the Russian people that led the Kabardinians towards a better hfb.,10
wlfle a great deal was done for 're-education' in the senserequired
by the Russians,education as such had been neglectedduring th'e first
post-war years, at least as far as the Kabardinian language was concerned. The so-called 'national' schools in the KabarOiniin A.S.S.R.
were Kabardinian in the first four forms only; from the fifth form on_
wards teaching was in the Russian language exclusively.The central
committee of the All-union communist party issued in l94g a state194
EAST POLICY
For the benefit of the remnants of the Circassian people the Soviet
Government set up two Autonomous Provincesin the western part of
the North Caucasusarea; the CherkessProvince in the Caucasusfoothills and the Adyge Province in the Kuban plain.
Surrounded as they are on all sidesby Russian territories these two
national units have little chance of long-term survival. This applies in
particular to the Adyge Province, whose capital - Maikop - used to be
the third largest Russian oil centre alter Baku and Grozny, before the
'second Baku' betweenthe Volga and'the Urals.
developmeniof the
Originally, Maikop was not included in the Adyge Province, which
had a small Adyge majority in its initial stage (55'7 per cent various
branches of Adyge, 42'7 per cent Russians and Ukrainians, and the
rest made un of other Eurooeansand Armenians). The size of the Province was inireased, however, before the war and the Adyge thus found
themselvesin the position of a minority. In 1930 the Adyge Province
'fame' owing to its extraordinarily high percentageof
won doubtful
disfranchizedpeople. This was due to the arbitrary action of the local
Soviet authorities, who had indiscriminately interpreted the terms of
'kulak', 'capitalist'
'reactionary' with the result that I2 per cent of the
and
195
entireadultpopulationof theProvinceweredeprivedoftheircivicrishts.
The Circassian(Cherkess)AutonomousFrovinceis inhabitei by
threesmallNorthernCaucasus
peoples- the Cherkess,
the Nogai Tartars and the Abazintsy,apart from Slav colonists.In 1933tlie three
indigenouspeopleshad a narrowaggregate
majorityover the Russians
and Ukrainians.
as a people,have no political future in
_ Although the Circassians,
SovietRussiaitself,theymay still be of serviceto the Sovietdiplomacy.
There are Circassians
living in Turkey,Palestine,
Syria and Tranijordan. They are all descendants
of the very Circasiianswhom the
Czaristauthoritiesforcedto leaveRussiain the sixtiesof the nineteenth
century.In Turkey the Circassians
havelargelybecomeone with the
Turkishpeople,but in the Arab countriesthey still form distinctcommunities.In Palestine
theyhavekeptto theirown customsandlanguage,
and do not inter-marrywith the Arabs. The SyrianArabs dislikethe
Circassians,
of whom both Turks and Frenchhad madeuseasainstthe
indigenouspopulationof the country.In Transjordan,too, tlie Circassianminorityhaspreserved
its individuality.r8
The survivalof circassiannationalsentiments
in Syria.palestineand
Transjordanmay tempt the SovietUnion to createa .Circassian
problem'. Sovietpropagandamay try at a givenmomentto arouseinierest
for the 'old country'amongthe Circassians
in the Arab world. It should
not be too difficultfor Russiato spreadamongthe Middle EasternCircassians
the storyof therebirthof the Circassian
peoplein the U.S.S.R.,
and of the existenceof 'CircassianStates'therein.Havine done this
preparatorywork Russiamay eitherencourageCircassianie-immigra-one
tion into the Caucasus
or shemay usethe Circassian
on the spotas
of severaltrump cards Russianimperialismholds in reseivein the
Middle East.
RUSSIA'S MOST POLYGLOT
COLONY:
DAGHESTAN
196
leavesto every people the full right to administer itself on the basis of
its own laws and customs. The Soviet Government considers the
Shariah as customary law of the same standing as that in force among
other peoples living in Russia. If it is the desire of the people of
Daghestan their laws and customs shall be preserved'.1e
Stalin's statementon the respectwhich the Soviet rdsime intended to
show towards the Shariah reasiured many mountaineeis as to the good
intentions of the new rdgime. Considered retrospectively this credulity
is not surprising. At a later stage similar pledges which the Soviet
Government gave in various instancesas to the preservationof foreisn
institutions arid non-interferencein national customshave blinded oth-er
more advancednations and their statesmen.
The Daghestani,of course,did not know that a month before his visit
to Temir-Khan-Shura Stalin had already defined his Daghestan policy
to a Russian communist public in a different way. Writing in the
newspaperPrayda on October l0th, 1920, Stalin recommended with
'the
regard to Daghestan that
direct method of combating religious
prejudices must be replaced by indirect and more cautious methods'.
'Cavalry raids' with the object immediately
Instead of
of
communizing
the backward massesof the Daghestani peoples, Stalin added, 'there
must be a cautious and well-conceived policy of gradually drawing
thesemassesinto the generalstream of Soviet development'.2o
Thus Stalin wanted to give Daghestanonly a short respite,but there
was no question of Soviet Russia observing genuine tolerance for any
length of time. As Stalin's real motives were not known to Daghestan
his-proclamation of Daghestan autonomy in Temir-Khan-Shuia bore
fruit and weakened the Moslem resistancemovement led by Imam
Nazhmuddin Gotsinsky who had raised the old banner of Shamil. By
January 1922,the anti-Sovietrevolt had completely peteredout and the
'rebels' had reconciled
themselvesto the Soviet rdgime, which at that
early stage seemedto adhere to thp promise to respect the religious
'People's
customs of the local population. ,rr
Commissariat for the
Shariah' ('Narkomshariat') was set up in 1921 under the old Sheikh,
Ali-Hadji Akushinsky.
At the time of the establishmentof Sovietpower Dashestanhad about
'.iergy'
40,000peoplewho could be describedus
in t[e widest senseof
the word Mullahs, Kadis, Sheikhs,etc. It would have been unwise to
antagonize such an important group of Daghestan's population. The
Communist Party decided, therefore, to bring about a split in thc
religious front and encouragedthe establishmentof a 'progressive'proSoviet Moslem group advocating the revision of the Shariah. Quite a
number of Moslem ecclesiasticdignitaries walked into the communist
trap. In 1923 a congressof over seventy Sheikhs and Mullahs met in
the locality of Kakhib and sent a messageof allegianceto Lenin and
198
199
PROBLEM
rhedifficurty
"t;;.ffi;ffi:
nes
intheractthat
there is no local languagein the country which can in any way claim
priority over others. Even the most widespreadof the local languagesthe Avar - is spoken by only 158,000people,just 22 per cent of the total
population. The other more important nationalities of Daghestan are
Kumyks (95,000), Darghinians (107,000), Lezghians (100,000) and
Lakians (40,000).
The local Communist Party leadership was at first highly sceptical
about encouraging literacy in the languages of the Daghestani
mountaineers. The party felt that a more highly developed language
should be introduced instead, to take the place of Arabic. The question
arose whether Daghestan's new lingua franca and official language
was to be Russian, which the Czarist r6gime had tried to impose,
unsuccessfully,or Turkic. The Soviet authorities consideredthat Turkic
was for many reasons a more suitable choice. First, Turkic, unlike
Russian, was not a languageof 'Unbelievers', but one spoken by Moslem peoples,and had thus a better chanceto oust Arabic. The selection
of Turkic was furthermore a tribute to the culturally most advanced
nationality of Daghestan, the Kumyks, a Turkic people, the only
ethnical group of Daghestan who had produced a national literature,
in Czarist times. Finally, the communist leadersindulged in considerable
illusions about the role which Daghestan might be able to play in
revolutionizing the East, provided that it adopted the Turkic language.
This is what the party secretary,Samursky, wrote about this aspect
of the Daghestani languageproblem, at a time when he fully reflected
the official point of view: 'If one takes the interests of the World
Revolution as the departing point one must recognize that education
in the Turkic languagecan render in Daghestan a much greater service
than education in Russian.Daghestan,on the one hand, is a land of the
Orient which has so far kept up contact with all (Oriental) countries
in the vicinity. On the other hand, Daghestanhas come within the orbit
of the Proietarian Revolution. Daghestancan and must serve as a link
between the U.S.S.R. and the Orient better than all other parts of the
Soviet Union and it must become a channel of communist ideas in the
Near East. The Near East either speaksthe Turkic languageor understands it. The Turkic language gives the Daghestani the possibility of
contact with all nationalities in the Near East and this contact will
introduce a revolutionary current into the oppressedcolonial and semicolonial countries'.2e
The Communist Party leadershipsoon found out that the hopes which
it had pinned on the introduction of Turkic as Daghestan'slingua franca
could not materialize. Daghestan was a bulwark of Oriental ideas in
the Soviet Union and could never becomea bulwark of Soviet ideas in
the East with or without the Turkic lansuase. The Daehestani Com-
munist Party was a tiny and weak body. In 1927it had only 651 members from the local nationalities and they were unable to convert their
own peoples to Bolshevism,let alone to become missionariesof communism in other Oriental countries.
In 1927-28 a special language commission of the Daghestan Committee of the Communist Party reconsideredthe languageproblem and
recommended that more attention should be devoted to the local
languages.On the basis of this recommendationa languagereform was
decreedproviding for elementaryeducation in eight languages.A basic
political terminology was worked out for all of them. The recognized
languageswere originally those of the Avars, Darghinians, Lezghians,
Lakians, Kumyks, Tabasarans,Nogai Tartars and the Taty.* Later on
recognition was withdrawn from the language of the Nogai Tartars,3o
most of whom lived in the territory separatedfrom Daghestanin 1938.
Even after the languagereform higher education was basedon Turkic
and Russian. Finally, however, Russian dominated the field at the
expenseof both Turkic and Arabic. It was authoritatively stated as
'diverting
early as 1930 that Turkic had already fulfilled its mission of
the attention of the massesfrom the Arab language'.3z
The triumph of the Russian languagein Daghestanwas not only due
to the need of a lingua franca in a multi-national territory; it was also
a tribute to the outstandingrole which the Russiansplayed in the central
administrationof the DaghestanA.S.S.R. In the inter-war period the
recruitment of Daghestani mountaineers into administrative jobs had
hardly made any progressat all. In 1927the percentageof the Dighestani
employed at the headquarters of the Daghestan Government was
2 l . 6 p e r c e n t ; i n 1 9 2 9i t w a s 2 5 . 3 p e r c e n t a n d i n 1 9 3 6 , 2 0 p e r c e n t
only.33It is not altogether the fault of the rdgime if it failed to recruit
civii servantsfrom among the mountain people.The mountaineerswere
more interestedin exercisingself-governmentover their villages than in
going to the towns of the plain to administer their villages from there.
The two most important towns of Daghestan,Makhach Kala (previously
* The Taty speak an Iranian language.In Daghestan they are largely identical with the
s o - c a l l e d ' M o u n t a i nJ e w s ' .A c c o r d i n g t o t h e 1 9 2 6c e n s u st h e r ew e r e 1 1 , 4 8 4o f s u c h' M o u n tain Jews'in Daghestanand 10,270inAzerbaidzhan. The returns are hardlycorrect as far
as Daghestan is concerned,where the censustook place at a time when the 'Mountain
Jews'were exposedto activepersecution.In the year of the censusthe Jewssenta delegation
to Moscow to complain about thejr plight. The Presidium of the Central Executive Committee dispatched an 'instructor' to investigate the situation. He reported to Moscow:
(l) anti-semiteexcesses,
even murders, were not punished by the administration; (2) the
cultural and medical servicesof the Taty were neglectedand the central Government
deceivedby wrong information; (3) national minority rights of the Taty were not observed
in the local Soviets; (4) Taty were not accepted as workers in state enterprises;and
(5) lower administrative organs were rude in their behaviour towards the Taty. The
situation did not improve after the instructor had lelt Daghestan and the conditions in
which the Taty found themselvesremained for a while what a Jewish communist author
d e s c r i b e da s a ' p o l i t i c a l s c a n d a l ' . 3 1
203
f,PLES
works existed. His poems were taken down by people among the
audiencewhile he recited them. Maxim Gorky took Stalsky under his
'Homer of the twentieth century'.35This wellwing and describedhim a
meaning but somewhat exaggerated tribute was often quoted in the
Soviet Union, particularly by the Daghestani themselves,among whom
it provoked a certain nationalist conceit. If we have produced a Homer,
the young Daghestani Soviet intellectuals argued, we have made an
outstanding contdbution towards Soviet literature and are entitled to
the respectof the Russiansthemselves.Finally, the Daghestani had to
be told that their pride was based on a misunderstanding,since Gorky
did not mean to put Homer and Stalsky on the same level, but his
comparison only referred to the way in which Stalsky's works were
produced.36Stalsky'sworks are still reprinted in Russia, although some
of his poems in which he denounced the Russian conquest of the
Caucasirs are no longer in harmony with the new Soviet patriotic
ideology.
Both Stalsky and Tsadasa are poets of the past even if the subjects
of their poetry are Stalin and the Five Year Plans.The poet of the future
is Effendi Kapiyev. He belongsto the young generationof Daghestan,is
a product of the Sovietschool, and no longer believesin the romanticism
of the aul. His homeland is no longer Daghestanbut the whole Soviet
Union and his language no longer a Daghestani idiom but Russian.
The effectsof Sovieteducation on Kaoivev can be satheredfrom his own
words in praise of the Russian laneuiei which ard included in his novel
" ;
The Poet:
'Oh thou, great Russian tongue, I kneel before thee. Adopt me and
give me thy blessing . . . I belong to a very small people lost in the
mountains but I find thee and I am no more an orphan. Without thee
there was and is no future, with thee we are truly omnipotent'.37
These words represent an extreme example of the spirit which the
Soviet r6gime is trying to implant into all non-Russian territories of
the U.S.S.R.
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL
pp.3esl3e6.
20. I. V. Steltw, Sochineniya- (Complete)Works, vol. 4, Moscow 1947,
P. 362.
21. Revolyutsiya
i Natsionalnosti,
Nr.2, June1930,p. 38.
22. N. Sarr,runsry,Krasny Dagestal,'- The Red Daghestanin Revolyutsiyai
Natsionalnosti,
Nr.65, July 1935,pp. alla2.
- Church and Espionage,Moscow
23. BonrsKeNDroov,Tserkovi Shpionazh
1 9 3 8p, . 9 5 .
24. Fnrorron NaNsnN,Throughthe Caucasusto the Volga, London 1931,
p.111.
- Historyof the U.S.S.R.,vol.2,Moscow
25. PaNrnarov^,Istorila S.S.,S.-R.
1944,pp.155/158.
26. VoprosyIstorii, Nr. 11,November1947,pp. 1341140.
27. VoprosyIstorii, Nr.9, September1950,pp. 12113.
28.Pravda,May l4th and 16th, 1950.
29. Samursky,Dagestan,Moscow 1925,p. 118.
30.NarodnoyeObrazovanie,
Nr.3, March 1950,p. 60.
31. LanrN, Yevreii antisemitismv,S.S.S.R.- Jewsand antisemitismin the
U.S.S.R.,Moscow-Leningrad
1929,p. 131.
32. Revolyutsiya
i Natsionalnosti,
Nr.2, June 1930,p. 75.
33. Sovetskoye
Stroitelstvo,Nr. 123,October1936,p. 65.
206
207
X
S O V I E . TN A T I O N A L I T I E S P O L I C Y A S A
WORLD PROBLEM
SOVIET NATIONALITIES
POLICY
The value of Soviet nationalities policy for the outside world has been
greatly reduced,not only by its failure at home, but also by its inability
304
AS A WORLD
PROBLEM
AS A WORLD
PROBLEM
OVIET NATIONALITIES
POLICY
AS A WORLD
PROBLBM
e.g. Burma or India, and at the other end such territories as Northern
Rhodesia or Nyasaland, where the indigenouspeopleshave acquired no
more than a token representationon the Legislative Council. Between
these two extremesthere is a wide range of intermediary stages.This
system is so flexible that there are hardly two colonies in the British
Empire with a fully identical administrative and constitutional set-up.
It means little to say that a Dominion like Ceylon or a self-governing
colony like Malta have incomparably greater political powers than any
constituent republic of the Soviet Union. The so-calledsovereignrights
of the Soviet Republics lag far behind even those rvhich the Queen
and Legislative Council of Tonga, a British island Protectorate in
the Pacific, are exercising.African chiefs, like the Emir of Kano, the
Oni of Ife, or the Kabaka of Bu-uanda,with their traditional African
councils, are, in their spheres,less dependent on the British administration than the governmentsof the non-Russian Soviet Republics are
on the Kremlin.
3 . o r s r N r B c R A T r o N A N D F E D E R A L T s MT. h e t e r r i t o r i e so f t h e B r i tish Colonial Empire are either geographical entities like the British
throughout the world, or were created as a result
island-possessions
of British conquest,like Nigeria, the Gold Coast, British Honduras, etc.,
and have subsequentlydevelopedinto economic and even political units.
The national-territorial sub-divisionsof the U.S.S.R. are in most cases
of an artificial nature. Soviet nationalities policy has been dominated
by the idea of creating a maximum number of small self-containedunits
regardlessofeconomic, geographicaland historical factors, and with the
'national
autonomy' idea
only purpose of giving formal satisfactionto a
without granting real home rule. With two or three exceptions, the
national-territorial units of the Soviet State were each formed for the
benefit of one specific nationality. Although in practice most of these
units are bi-national if not multi-national, Soviet nationalities policy
always distinguishesbetweenthe nationality after which a given autonomous territory is named and the national minorities.
British colonial policy, on the other hand, opposes the idea of
national isolation and tries to find a satisfactoryfederalist solution for
the problem of 'plural' societies.British colonial policy, as it emerges
froh the SecondWorld War, dislikes the idea of splitting up the plural
'partition'.
societies by
Britain accepted the partition of India only
reluctantly and never acceptedit in Palestine as long as that country
was a British responsibility. British policy is to induce peoples to stay
together within a given natural, historic or even geographic or only
economic unit; to find a common political platform and to arrive at a
common patriotic conception. This may often be diflicult, sometimes
even an illusion, but it is the only truly humanitarian approach to the
problem, for it expressesbelief in human progress,in sound reasoning,
309
AS A WORLD PROBLEM
impetus
to,.iu.rrity'"*i"il"']iolnoi]j]n""
.r" British.
Four
of the five central Asian Republics have not only got universities but
even 'Academiesof Sciences'.In the U.S.S.R. the ierms ,university, and
'acaderny'
are used in a rather loose way. A Soviet .university' may be
what the British would call a 'universiiy Colleee' or even u 'coli.n"'
(the Fourah Bay College in Freetown, for instaice)
'Academies'
and 'universitjes' in the non-Russian republics and
particularly in the Asiatic republicsof the SovietUnion are nbt supposed
to servethe national interestsof the peoplesfor whorn they are aliegedly
founded. Unlike the university colleges of Ibadan and Aihimota';hich
have only African students the universities of Stalinabad, Ashkhabad,
Baku, Samarkand, Alma Ata and rashkent are half European institutions. As to the so-called'Academiesof Sciences'they have two assignments. First, they are to help in the implementation of econoilic
schemeswhich are carried out in the territory of a given Republic in
the all-Union interest,and secondlythey must watch over the ideological
orthodoxy of the local intelligentsia, their writings on history, i=heir
poetry, music and theatrical art. The existenceof the .academies;makes
it easy for the-rdgime to put into effect new directives governing the
lntellectual and artistic life of a non-Russian nationalitylnd to
iurge
'nationalist'
artists, writers and historians. If 'academies'with similir
functions existed in the British colonies the local intellectuals would
rightly consider them as redoubtableimperialistic instruments directed
t o w a r d ss p i r i t u a lo p p r e s s i o n .
/. THE coloNrzATroN pRoBLEu. The most important common
problem which both the Russianand the British Empires have to face is
that of Furopean colonization in non-European teiritories. Lenin explained imperialism as the 'export of capitalt 6 Manpower investments,
however, are a much safer basis for imperialist activities than capital
investments. It has happened that colonists have been expelled from
former colonial countries, but as a rule European manpower in the
colonies is lessendangeredby political changesthan European capital,
mines and factories are. Russial imperial poficy was almost everywhere
built on the solid basisof colonization by Russianworkers and peasants.
Thus one essentialbasisof Russianimp-eriaiismremained untouched by
the October Revolution.
The manpower export which is the rule as far as the Russian colonies
are concerned is an exception in the British colonies. The territories
which were originally colonized by the British, like the United Statesof
America, Canada, Australia and New Zealand are no longer oart of
the British colonial Empire. No British masscolonization ha"sevir been
carried out in Burma, India, British west Africa and the west Indies.
Something like a mass immigration of Europeans took place only in
East Africa, in the two Rhodesias,in Kenya and Taneanvika. In tirese
312
AS A WORLD PROBLEM
western
atternative,"
rj;#,i.,
il]in
,.-rnuoins
relarions
the peoplesof Russia and the peoplestluing l,nO., indirect Soviet rule
will not be sufficient,in the long run, to conceal the truth about what is
good and progressiyein the West and about such epocir-makingchanges
as the granting of freedom to India. In the long run it will be impossi6le
to hide from the peoples of Soviet Russia and her satellite countries,
that'something has changed'in the 'imperialist world'. The first doubts
as to whether Bolshevismhas discoveredthe universal medicine against
the evils ol our time and whether Russiaholds a monopoly of pro-gress,
have already emerged among the satellites and have even crepf into
Russiaitself.
To speak of changes for the better, outside the Soviet sphere of
influence,is in itself a heresyfor every Russian communist and few can
be expectedto admit their ixistence.'The aged Hungarian-born Soviet
economist,ProfessorE. S. Varga, is the only Soviet personality, so far,
to come out with a timidly formulated statementchallengingthe official
thesis that olly communist countries are on the way to progresswhile
the rest of the world is declining. He said: 'The fact that a processof
p o l i t i c a tl i b e r a t i o ni s g o i n g o n i n t h e c o l o n i e st,h e f a c t t h a t I n d i a h a sa n
ambassadorin our country and we have one in India, is after all somelhing new. One cannot simply say that this does not mean anything,.?
In making this statement,for which he incurred the displeasureof the
Kremlin, Varga showedthat the facts which are giving the lie to Soviet
theory and propaganda are becoming so strong that even Soviet communists can no longer ignore them.
The Kremlin is haunted by the fear that the Lenin prophecy will come
true, according to which Russiawill ceaseto be the model and will again
becomethe backward country.s Russia is backward already in mlny
ways - its lack of freedom is in itself extreme backwardness- but th-e
backwardnessis still hidden under the veneerof technical prosress and
propaganda slogansabout the fraternity and equality of the pEoples.It
is up to the free nations to make the Russiansmore consciousof their
backwardnessby showing them through deeds that there are better,
juster ways of solving many problems than those adopted in Soviet territories. The British Commonwealth, as the largest federal orsanization in the world, has a specialmission in this rejpect; it can ser"veas a
living examplethat Russiatoo can becomea Commonu'eaith,that something like the 'United Statesof Russia' is not a Utopia but a practical,
political possibility.
THE FUTURE OF THE PEOPLES OF RUSSIA
31s
SOVIET NATIONALITIBS
POLICY
AS A WORLD
PROBLEM
of the peoplesof Russia as little as the collapseof Austria-Hungary safeguarded the interestsof the peoplesof the Danubian monarc[y.-What
both the interestsof the peoplesof Russia and the maintenanceof world
peacereally require is the transformation of the mock federation, which
is the U.S.S.R., into a genuinefederal union. This does not mean that a
new Russia will necessarilyremain in possessionof all territories over
which the soviet Government to-day extendsits domination, nor doesit
mean that the internal divisions of the u.s.s.R. into Reoubiics and
Autonomous Republics, etc., will remain as they are now. Numerous
ldjustments will undoubtedly be necessary.Thus ihere is no justification
for the maintenance of such creations of Soviet propaganda as the
Karelo-Finnish Republic, or the Moldavian Repubiic; no-rwould it be
plopgr fo_ra democratic Russian Federation to leep 'strategiccolonies'
like the Kurile Islands or the Petsamoregion, the islands ofthe Gulf of
Finland and other territories which the Sbviet Government has wrested
from the Finns.
It would be in Russia's own interest to give the members of the
federation the maximum of freedom so as tolncrease the attraction of
joining it. Such a genuine federation might comprise, as a minimum
rather than as a maximum, the UkrainE, Byeloiussia, Armenia and
Georgia-together with-Russia ploper including all nationalities living
within the habitat of the Great Russian people. We have shown how
Russians,Ukrainians and Byelorussiansaie intertwined with each other
ald no further lengthy_explanationis, therefore,necessaryhere to prove
that a federal union ofthe three Slav peoplesis reasonableand feasible
if there is full respect for each otheis peculiarities. The inclusion of
Armenians and Georgians in the federation could be warranted by the
positive character, in the past, of relations between the two chriitian
caucasian peoples and the Russians. Moreover, the fact that a large
number of Armenians live intermingled with Russiansin the Northein
caucasusreion and elsewherein the Russian Empire, would have to be
consideredin any future settlement,as well as the interdependenceof
Russian-Georgianeconomic relations.
The Baltic nations, on the other hand, cannot be expected to join
a federal union with the Russians.A new democratic Russia will onlv
gradually gain the confidence of Latvians, Estonians and Lithuaniani
and thesethree_smallpeoplesmight prefer to enter a regional federation
centred in the Baltic Sea.
_.The problem of Russia's Moslem border republics will be the most
difficult to solve, but political reason demands^thatthev should not be
separatedaltogether from the Russian body. The .ur"'fo, the presenr
Soviet Central Asia remaining within the framework of a ltussian
federation is at least as strong as the French case for the retention of
Algeria within the French Union.
3t7
Anypolitica,
,""',", Jilil";:
orRussia,s
Mosrem
AS A WORLD PROBLEtvt
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL
NOTES TO CHAPTER
TEN
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL
320
INDEX
Abashidze,Grigol, 234-5
Abazintsy, 196
Abbas the Great, Shah. 212
Abdul Hamid, Sultan.215
Abdurakhmanov,Yuiup, 272
Abkhazian A.S.S.R..23'6-7
Abkhazians,236-7,248
Abo, Treaty of, 89
Abramson.S..274
Academiesof Sciences:
AII-Union, Institute of Historv.
-- 92.
200;Polar Commission,57
Armenia.223
Azerbaidzhan, 244
Functions,312
Kazakhstan,297
Kirghiz Branch,274
Tadzhikistan,288
Ukrainian, 129, 131,143
Adyge, 182.195-6
Adyge Autonomous Province, 195-6
Adzhar A.S.S.R.,235
Adzharians, 236
Afghanistan:
Herat, 281.284
Kabul, 284
K-adaghan-Badakhshanprovince, 2g4
Maimana Province. 28u,
Mazir i Sharif Province. 284
Sovietpolicy, ?58-9, 281-5, 292-3, 306
Tadzhiks in,259.284
Turkmenians in, 259, 284
Uzbeks in.259.284
Africa:
British colonial policy comparedwith
policy, 309-14
_ Soviet,nationalities'
East.312-13
South racial policy. 304
Aibek, Tashmukhamedbv,260
Aitakov, Nederby,294
Ak Mechet: seeKzyl Orda
Akhay, Akhmet. 80
Akhmed Kh-an,Emir of Afghanistan,2g4
Akhundov, Mirza Fathali, 34,244-5
Akhverdov, A.,245
Aklavik. 64
Aksakov,S. T.,5-6
Akushinsky, Sheik Ali-Hadji, 198
Aland archipelago, 89
Alash Orda, 7, 263
Albania.306
Albaniairsin Ukraine, 145-7
Alexanderl, Czar, 119,zZ+s
Alexander III, Czar. 105
Alexander of Kakhetia, prince,224
Alexander of Macedonia. 286
Alexandrovsk. 94
321
I N D PX
Australia.l. 312
Austria, 305
,dvars,37, 202-3
Avdal. Amin. 252
Ayuka, Khan, 82
Azadi. Davlet Mamedi. 293
Azerbaidzhan,Persian:seePersia:
Azerbaidzhan
Azerbaidzhan, Soviet, 7-8, 20, 128,
200-1, 203, 209, 211, 216-7, 229,
23748.2s1.273
Azerbaidzhani Turks, 8-9, 217, 227,
23942,244-7
Azizbekov,Meshadi-Bek,239
Bagirov,M. D., 11, 200-1,242-3
Bagramyan,Ivan Khristofor ovich,222
Bagrationovsk(formerly Eulau), 119
Bakhchisaray,8l
Bakhmurov,P. M., 80
Bakikhanovfam|ly,245
Baku, 200, 211, 226, 235-7, 244, 246-7,
307,3r2
Balkars,183,185,189,193
Balkh, 285
Balkash,267
Balkash,Lake,255-6
Baltic Sea,89-90, 104
Baltic States, 104-21, 3l'7
Baltic-White Sea Canal (Stalin Canal),
100*1
Baltiisk (formerly Pillau), 119
Baluchis,296, 298-9
Bandera,Stephen,142
Banderovtsy(Ukrainian Insurgent
Army), i42-3
Bashkiria,32-3, 41-6, 265
Bashkirs,5-6, 32-3, 41-6, 81
Basmachimovement,274-5, 285
Batu. Mekhmed Maksud. 279
Batum, 235-6, 238
Batyrov Sh. 8., 295
Batyrsha,Aliev, 42
Bazhan,Mikola, 142,246
Belgiancolonial policy, 314
Belinsky,V. G., 319
Berdzhenishvili.N.. 234
Berg,L. S., 152
Beriya,Laventy, 12, 231, 239, 243
Berlin, Treaty of, 214
Bernshtam.Prof. A.. 2'74
Bessarabia.150-1.214
Bialystok, 159
Biarmia. State of. 56
Biriya, Muhammed,247
BirobidzhanCity, 175, 177-8
BirobidzhanProvince,173-9
Birofeld, 175
Bobruisk Province,120
Bogoly'ubov,Nikolay Semonovich,273
1)')
Caucasus,
North, 8, 31, 182-205,229,3 l7
Census,(1926),28, 53, 73, 99, 127, 147,
154, 170-1,203,271;(1939),14, 49,
170-1,185,249,268,291
Central Asia, Soviet,8, 10-11, 14, 21,
1 2 3 ,l 7 t , 2 0 8 , 2 5 5 - 3 0 03, 0 7 , 3 1 6 - 7
Central Asiatic Economic Council.
liquidation,260
Central ResettlementBoard, 14-15
Ceylon, 212, 300,309, 312
Chagata|279
Chainikov, K., 54
INDEX
A.S.S.R.,67, 183,185
Chechen-Ingush
C h e c h e n si 8, 3 , 1 8 5 - 9 ,1 9 1 ,1 9 3 ,2 0 1
Chelyabinsk,46, 241
Cheremiss:seelvlari
Cherkess(Circassian)Autonomous
Province,22,195,196
Chernayev,
Gen. M" G.,256
Chernigov,126
Chernishevsky,
N. G., 192
Chernovitsy,139
Chernyakhovsk(formerly Insterburg),
45,1r9
Chernyakhovsky,Gen. Ivan, 119
Chervyakov, Alexander Grigoryevich,
156
Chiaturi manganesemines,229, 23|
China:
Armeniansin,212,218
Kazakhs in.259.298
Kirghiz in, 259,27|
Soviet policy, 258-9, 29'7-8
Uigurs in, 297
Chinese,91,174
ChineseTurkestan,81, 259
Chirchik, 278
Chkalov (formerly Orenburg), 74, 255,
2634
Chkalov, Yalery,255
Chubar, Vlas Y., 134
Chukchi. 59
Chuvash,3'l, 43,4G8
Chuvashia.46-8
Circassians,
182-3,185,195-6
Civil War, 8, 3l, 72, 107,244,256;Latvians' part in, 107; Volga Cermans'
part in, alleged,T2
Coalmining:
Donets,41,125
Georgra,2Sl
Kazakhstan.263.267
Komi Republic,57-8
KuznetskBasin,41
Ukraine, 20, 41, 123, 125
Uzbekistan,278
Coatsof arms, Baltic States,109;
Byelorussia,157; Annenia, 217
Collectivization:
Abkhazia.237
Estonia.112
Kazakhstan,265-6
Kirghizistan,2T2
Latvia, 115
National Collective Farms, 22-6, 106,
296-7
Resistance
to,1'7,41, 55,61,132,192,
272,2'.77-8
Ukraine. 132
Volga German Republic, 74
Colonization, early Soviet policy, 3;
change in policy from agricultural to
INDEX
TranscarpathianUkraine membership,
139
Turkmenistan. 260
Ukraine, Western.139
Uzbekistan,260
^ Volga German membership, 72
Communist Youth Leazue:
Assyrians, 249
Congress,first post-war,
28
Function.308
Ingush members,188
Ukraine, 135
Co_ns^tit$ion,-(
1923),25, I28; (1936),23
128,231,294
Cossacks,4,6, 124-5, l4l-2,237
Cotton-growin g, Azerbaidzhan, 243;
Uzbekistan.276-8.282
Crimea, 76-81
CrimeanTartars, 67-8. 7G8l
CrimeanWar (1853-6),j7, 81, 244
Culture, Sovietmeasuresagaiist
national:
Armenians, 222-3
Assyrians, 249-50
Azerbaidzhani
, 243-6.273
Balticpeoples,108-9.'ll3
Bashkirs. 43-4
Byelorussians,
155-8.160-l
Caucasus,Northern.'I 80-90
Central Asia. 260-2
Daghestani, 197-205
Far North, 6l-3
Finns. 102-4
Jews,165-8
Kabardinians. 194-5
Kazakhs, 268-70
KirgYtz,2724
Kurds. 252
Moldavians,152
Tadzhiks. 285-7
Tartars, 38-40. 79-81
Turkmenians, 293-5
Ukrainians, l4l-4
Uzbeks,279-82
Cyprus, 218,313
Czechoslovakia,
129, 139.305
Czechs.77.146-7
DaghestanA.S.S.R..196-205
Danilevsky,G. P., 70-l
Daniyalov,A. D.. 200-1
Darghinians, 202-3
Dashava,137
Dashkesan,241
Dashnaks,7, 216
Denikin, Gen., 187
Denmark,colonial policy. 314
Derbent. 197
Derzhavin,Prof.. N. S.. 89
Dimanshtein,semyon f,4.,,72,z5g
324
INDEX
Evenki, 60-3,174
Evenki, National Area oi 60, 63
Executions: seeTrials and purges
Fadeyev,Alexander 28 286-j
Far East, 13, 31, 126
Far North, 22, 59-64,91-6
Farkhad Hydro-Electric Station, 281
Farms. National Collective: seeCollectivization: National Collective Farms
Feffer. Itzik. 167
Feodosia,214
Fergana, 289
Fet. A. A.. 55
Finland:
Arctic Highway, 95
Communist exiles.Provisional Finnish
Peoples'Government, 101
Karelia, Western, 97-8
Petsamo,inter-war development,95
St. Petersburg,effect offoundation of,
90
Sovietpolicy:
Karelian Isthmus, annexation of,
101-2
Petsamo,annexation of, 94-5
Viborg (Viipuri), annexation of,
101-2
W a r , ( 1 9 3 9 )1, 0 1 ;( 1 9 4 1 ) , 1 0 2 ;
armistice(1944),95
Finnish peoples,21, 37, 43,48-58, 90-1,
93,99, 102-3
Finnmarken : seeNorway: Finnmarken
Fioletov, Ivan,239
Firdausi, 286
Five-Year Plans,14-16,934,236-7, 241,
267-8,276-8
Forced labour:
Murmansk railway line, on, 9l
Komi Republic industrialization, 57
Peter the Great, under, 90
Stalin Canal, on, 100-l
France,Armenians in, 218; colonial
policy,314,317
Francis JosephLand, 64
Fraydorf National District, 172
Friedland: seePravdinsk
Frontiers, changesin national territories,
2 3 , 4 ' 1 , 1 0 r , 1 8 3 ,1 9 6 ,2 5 7 ,2 6 4 ;N o r wegian-Sovietfrontier established,94
Frumkin. A. N.. 179
Frunze,27l,297
Frunze, Mikhail Vasilyevich, 8, 27l-2
Fyodor, Czar,224
Gafurov, BobozhdanG., 285-6
Gagauz, 152
Gagry,237
Galicia, Eastern, 137, 13940
Gammal Svenskby,ll0
Gandzha:seeKirovabad
Gasprinsky,Ismail Bey, 78
Geller (Birobidzhancommunist),177
Genocide:seeLiquidation of nationalities and autonomousterritories
Georgia,21-2, 74, 128, 190-1, 193,209,
211,223-37, 248
Georgians,37, 123,190,208-9,211,
223-37, 247,260, 317
Germans,Azerbaidzhan,in, 248; Baku,
in, 240; Baltic States, repatriation
from, 110;Black Seaareas,in, 71, 75;
Georgia, in, 74, 248; Kaliningrad
Province, in, 120, 313; Ukraine, in,
146; Volga Germans:seeVolga Germans
Germany, anti-Soviet carnpaign, 74;
recognitionof Soviet claim to Baltic
States,110
Gibraltar,313
Gikalo. N. F.. 156
Ginzburg, Baron, 175
Gipsies,175,306
Glavsevmorput,
60, 64, 9l
Glazov,54
Gogol, N. V., 124, 134-5
Gold Coast, 307, 309, 312
Goloded, Nikolay Matveyich, 156
Goloshchokin, Filip Isayevich, 265-6
Golovanivsky,Sawa, 168
Gomel, 155
Gomel Province, 120
Gorky (formerly Nizhny Novgorod), 49
Gorky, Maxim,205
Gorky Province, 14, 120
Gorno-Badakshan, Autonomous Province of, 283,290
Gotsinky, Imam Nazhmuddin, 198
'Great Kara Kum Canal project,29l
Grechukha,M. S., 142
Greece,218,305
Greeks, Baku, in, 240i Georgia, in,248;
Ukraine, in, 146
Grinberg, A. A., 179
Grinko, Grigory Fyodorovich, 134
Grodno, 159
Grozny, 186,188
Gudauti,237
'Gummet',239
Guseinov, Geidar, 201
Gylling, Dr., 100
}{afi2.286
Heckert District, 74
Herzen.A.4.. 192
Hitler, Adolf,226
Honduras.British, 309
Hrubeshov.142
Hrushevsky,Prof. Mikhail, 129,131, 143
Hughes,John, 125
325
INDEX
326
INDEX
Karl LiebknechtDistrict, 74
Karsakpay.267
Kashka Darya Province,299
Kashmir, 306
Kaspiskoye(formerly Lagan),85-6
Katayama,Sen,265
Katherinenstadt:seeMarxstadt
Karrel,M. 4., 177
Kaunas(Kovno), lli, 2i 6
Kautsky, Karl,226
Kazakhs,8, 21,257,259-60,261-'11, 275,
278.291,296,29&,3r3
Kazaklrstan,'7, 20-1, 126, 257-8, 260,
262-10,296-7
Kazan,2, 255
Kazan Tartars: seeTartars
Kazem-bek,4.,245
Kenya.3l2-3
Kerbabayev,Berdy, 291
KhakassAutonomous Province,22
'Khanbudagovism',243
Khandzta,234
Khanti-Mansiinsk,
62
Khanty,61
Khanty-Mansi,Nationai Area of, 60, 63
I 35,139,241,276
Kharkov,106.129,133,
K h e r s o n , ' l l , 1 2 5 ,1 7 1
Khetagurov,Kosta, 192
Khibinogorsk (formerly Kirovsk), 93-4,
101
Khmelnitsky,Bogdan, 142
Khodzhayev,Faisulla,277-8, 280
Khodzhibayev,Abdurakhim, 288-9
Kholm, 142
Khorezm (formerly Khiva), 257,274
Khorezm Province,296
Khvylovy, Mikola, 130-l
'Khvylovy-ism',130,144
Kiev, 126-7,129,133,135,139,171, 213,
249,276
Armeniansin, 213
Assyriansin, 249
Capital of Ukraine, 135,276
Ethnical composition,127
Jewishpopulation, 171
Kiev, Stateof, 123
Kingisepp,Victor, 106
KingiseppDistrict, 106
Kirghiz, 8, 49, 189, 25'7,259-60,262,
2 7 1 4 , 2 9 6 , 2 9 83, 0 8 ,3 1 3
Kirghizistan,2l, 209, 257-8, 260-1,
270-82,296-7
Kirillov, I. K.,256
Kirov, SergeyMironovich (Kostrikov),
8, 91, 242-3
Kirov Province,120
Kirovabad(formerlyGandzha),239,241,
1A/
<
Kirovsk: seeKhibinogorsk
Kishinev, 152
Kizlyar.2l4
Klikhori, 190
Klaipeda(formerlyMemel),I17-8
Klyuchevsky,Vasily Osipovich,13
Koenigsberg:seeKaJiningrad
Kokand, Autonomous government of,
111
Kokhtla-Jdrve,111
Kola,92,94
Koia Peninsula,9Z-3, 96-7
Kolarov, Vasii, 147
Kolarov District, 147
Kolarovka, 147
Kolas, Yakub, 157-8
Komi, 37, 48, 53, 55-8
Komi A.S.S.R.,55-8
Komi-PermyakNational Area, 56
'Komzet' (Committeefor
the agricultural
settlementof Jewish toilers), 171*2,
t7 5-6
Kondopoga, 100
Koreans,in Birobidzhan, 174;in Central
Asia,296
K o r n e i c h u k4, , . Y . , 1 4 4
Koryaks, 59
Kosior, Stanislav,132-4
Kostomarov,Nikolay Ivanovich,89
Kostroma Province,120
Krasnodar,249
Krasnovodsk,291
Krasnoyarsk Territory, 22
Krumin, Y., 108
Krushchov,Nikiia Sergeyevich,
134-5
Kruus, Hans, 113
K r y l o v ,I . 4 . , 2 7 0
Kuli-zade,Mamed,245
Kulumbetov, U. D., 265
Kumyks,37,202-3
Kunanbayev,Abai,27O
Kunta, Hadji, 187
Kupala, Yanko, 157-8
Kupradze,V. D.,233
Kurbanov, 289
Kurganov, Grigory, 239
Kurdish Republic,251-2
Kurds, 250-2
Kurile Islands,15, 313, 317
Kursk, 126
Kursk Province,120
Kutuzov, Field-MarshalMikhail, 38
Kuusinen,Otto W., 101
Kuybishev,ValerianVladimirovich,8
KuybishevProvince,120
Kuznetsk Basin (Kuzbass),41
Kzyl Orda (formerly Ak Mechet), 25(
zo5-4
327
INDEX
328
INDEX
Literature:continued
Michael. Grand Duke. 221
Persian, Soviet interpretalion, 245-6. Middle East, Soviet policy, 196, 241,
286-'7
250-l
Tadzhikistan,286-7
Migration (seealso Colonization):
Turkmenistan, Soviet interpretation,
Abroad, ban on, 16
293-5
Asiatic territories.to. 13
Ukraine,l2+5,1434
Caucasianmountaineers'exodus,I 82,
Uzbeks,Sovietpolicy, 279
185
Lithuania, 104-l I, 116,ll8-20, 149
Crimean Tartars emigrationto
Lithuanians,37, 104-ll, 116, 118-9, 317
Turkey, 76-8
Livonian War (1558-82),104
Finns from Karelian Isthmus, 102
Loennrot, Elias, 103
German emigration,74
Luft (Volga German Premier), 74
Kalmuck emigration,82
Luxemburg District, 74
Kazakhsto Sinkiang,268
L v o v . 1 3 9 .1 4 1
Mass populations,transfersof, 6'l-8,
Lyubchenko,PanasPetrovich,133
75-6
Military vital areas,to, l5
Macedonia,306
Resettlementorganizations, l4-1 5, 99
Machine Tractor Stations,24, 120,291
Uzbeks,279
Madagascar,314
Mikhoels, Prof. Solomon, 167
Madatov,PrinceV. G.,222
Mikoyan,Anastas,8,12
Maikop, 195
Mikoyan Shakhar:seeKlikhori
'Milli
Maikov. A. N..270
Istiklal',279
'Main Turkmenian Canal', 291-2
Minchegaur,24l
Makeyevka,127
Minsk, 154,156,159
Makhach Kala (formerlyPetrovsk),197, Mirzoyan,C. I.,265
2034
Mitskevitch-Kansukas,
V. S., 108
Makharadze,Philip, 228-30
Mogilev, 126
Makhtumkuli (Turkmenianpoe0, 293
Mogilev Province,120
Maksum. Nasratullah.288-9
Moldavia, Soviet,21, 149-52,317
Malaya, 306
Molotov, V. M., as Prime Minister, 10;
Malta. 309.313
on incorporation of Western ByeloMalgobek,193
russia,l53
Manos,Soviet interpretation of , 272-3
Molotov-RibbentropPact, ll0, 149,159,
Manchurian border regions, coloniza166
t i o n ,1 5
Monchegorsk, 93-4
M a n s i . 6 G - 16. 3
Mongolia, Outer, 31
Manuilsky, Dimitry, 145
Mordvinian A.S.S.R.,48-50, 53
Mar Shimun,248-9
Mordvinians,37, 47-50,296
Marchlewsk (formerly Dovbysh), 148
Morocco,314,318
Marchlewsky,Julian, 148
Mosashvili,IIo, 235
MarchlewskyDistrict, 148
Moscow:
M a r i , 3 7 , 4 8 ,5 1 - 3
Assyriansin, 249
M a r i A . S . S . R .5, 1 - 3
Capital as, replaced by St. Petersburg
Mariupol (Zhdanov),125, 127, 146
(1703),90; reinstatedunder Soviet
Marr. N. Y..236
r6gime,91,276
Marshak. Samuel.179
CommunistParty members,12
Marxstadt (formerly Katherinenstadt),
J e w si n , 1 6 3 , 1 6 5 , 1 7 4
"12-3
Latviansin, 106
Maty.ushkin,Gen.,237
Mari belief re foundation. 52
Mazeppa,Hetman, 124, 153
Migration to, 13
Mdivani.Budu.228-30
Population, l2
Medvezhegorsk,100
Moscow Province,Tartar workers, 41;
Mekhti, Gusein,245
Kareliansin; population,99
Melitopol, 147
Moslems, 42-3, l8'7-8, 197-8, 2O0,202,
Memel: seeKlaipeda
235-6, 243, 264, 275, 296-300, 317-8
'Mountain Jews': see
Mensheviks,16+5, 22G7, 229
Jews: 'Mountain
Menshikov.Prince.77
Jews'
Merv, 290
Mountain Republic(Gorskaya),I 83, I 85
Mgaloblishvili,c., 230
Mozdok, 193,214
329
INDEX
330
INDEX
331
INDEX
Religion: continued
Lithuanians, 104
Local religions, Soviet campaign
against,17-18,33,37
Mari national religion, 51-2
Mordvinians' national religion revival
attempt, 50
Ukraine. Western. Soviet interference
with Uniate Church, 141
Resettlementorganizations, 14-15, 99
Rhodesia, Northern, 3O9,312-3
Rhodesia,Southern,312-3
Riga, l14
Riga, Peaceof, 153
Rilsky, Maxim, 144
Rizenkampff,Prof.,290
Rogri Island (Pakrisaared),evacuation
ofEstonian Swedes,110
Roman Catholic Church, Lithuanians,
104; WesternByelorussians,160;
Western Ukraine, 140, 141
Rostov,146,183,249
'Rot Front' District, 74
Rothschilds,238,240
Rovno, 139
Rudzutak, Yan Ernestovich,107
Rumania,129,137,139,150-1,218,
305-6
Runo Island (Ruhnu), evacuationof
EstonianSwedes,110
Rykov, Alexey Ivanovich,9-11, 18, 278
Ryskulov, Taras Ryskulovich, 272
Saadi(Persianpoet), 286
Saami(Lapps),95-6
SaamiNational District. 96
SaaremaaIsland, 89-90, 110, ll2
St. Petersburg:seeLeningrad
S a k h a l i n1. 5 . 3 1 3
Salekhard,62
Samarkand, 256, 2'15-6, 280, 289, 299,
307,312
Samoyeds:seeNentsy
Samursky,N., 199-200,202,204
Saratov.49. 74
Scandinavia,history, 88-9; Soviet ideology; Czarist r6gime, under, 89-92;
founding of St. Petersburg, 90-1;
building of Murmansk Railway, 91-2;
evolution of Murmansk Province,
93-5; Soviet policy towards Lapps,
95-6; significanceof Karelia, 97-102;
building ofStalin Canal, 100;annexation of Karelian Isthmus, 101-2
Scandinavianorigin of Russian State,
88-9
Sciences,Academy of: seeAcademy of
Sciences
Scythians,89
113
Semper,Johannes,
332
INDEX
Stalint continued
dignatories (1923), 199
Georgia,policy towards, 165,225-31,
23G7
Jews,policy towards, 165-6, L74,179
Kalmuck poem on 60th birthday, 83-5
Karelian poem on, 103
Mari letter. 52-3
'Marxism and the National
Question',
JJJ
INDEX
INDEX
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