When did the Stalinist repressions begin? Why was Stalin's terror necessary?

landscaping 25.09.2019
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After the end of the Great Patriotic War, Joseph Stalin was not just the leader of the country, but the real savior of the fatherland. They practically did not call him otherwise than the leader, and the cult of personality in postwar period reached its climax. It seemed that it was impossible to shake the authority of such a scale, but Stalin himself had a hand in this.

A series of inconsistent reforms and repressions gave rise to the term post-war Stalinism, which is also actively used by modern historians.

Brief analysis of Stalin's reforms

Reforms and state actions of Stalin

The essence of the reforms and their consequences

December 1947 - currency reform

The implementation of the monetary reform shocked the population of the country. After a fierce war, all funds were confiscated from ordinary people and exchanged at the rate of 10 old rubles for 1 new ruble. Such reforms helped to patch up gaps in the state budget, but for ordinary people they caused the loss of their last savings.

August 1945 - a special committee headed by Beria is created, which subsequently developed atomic weapons.

At a meeting with President Truman, Stalin learned that Western countries already well prepared in terms of atomic weapons. It was on August 20, 1945 that Stalin laid the foundation for the future arms race that nearly led to the Third World War in the middle of the 20th century.

1946-1948 - ideological campaigns led by Zhdanov to restore order in the field of art and journalism

As the cult of Stalin became more and more intrusive and visible, almost immediately after the end of the Great Patriotic War, Stalin instructed Zhdanov to conduct an ideological struggle against those who spoke out against Soviet power. After a short break, new purges and repressions began in the country.

1947-1950 - agricultural reforms.

The war showed Stalin how important the agricultural sector was in the development. That is why, until his death, the Secretary General carried out numerous agricultural reforms. In particular, the country has moved to new system irrigation, and new hydroelectric power plants were built throughout the USSR.

Repressions of the post-war period and the tightening of the cult of Stalin

It has already been mentioned above that Stalinism in the post-war years only grew stronger, and among the people the General Secretary was considered the main hero of the Fatherland. The planting of such an image of Stalin was facilitated both by excellent ideological support and cultural innovations. All films being made and books being published glorified the current regime and praised Stalin. Gradually, the number of repressions and the volume of censorship increased, but no one seemed to notice this.

Stalinist repressions became a real problem for the country in the mid-30s, and after the end of the Great Patriotic War, they gained new strength. So, in 1948, the famous "Leningrad case" received publicity, during which many politicians holding key positions in the party were arrested and shot. So, for example, the chairman of the State Planning Commission Voznesensky was shot, as well as the secretary of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks Kuznetsov. Stalin was losing confidence in his own close associates, and therefore those who yesterday were still considered the main friend and associate of the General Secretary were under attack.

Stalinism in the post-war years increasingly took the form of a dictatorship. Despite the fact that the people literally idolized Stalin, the monetary reform and the re-emergence of repression made people doubt the authority of the general secretary. The first to oppose the existing regime were representatives of the intelligentsia, and therefore, led by Zhdanov, purges among writers, artists and journalists began in 1946.

Stalin himself brought to the fore the development of the country's military power. Development of a plan for the first atomic bomb allowed the USSR to consolidate its status as a superpower. All over the world, the USSR was afraid, believing that Stalin was able to start the Third world war. The Iron Curtain covered the Soviet Union more and more, and the people resignedly waited for changes.

Changes, albeit not the best, came suddenly when the leader and hero of the whole country died in 1953. Stalin's death marked the beginning of a completely new stage for the Soviet Union.

Stalin's repressions occupy one of the central places in the study of the history of the Soviet period.

Briefly describing this period, we can say that it was a cruel time, accompanied by mass repressions and dispossession.

What is repression - definition

Repression is a punitive measure that was used by the authorities state power in relation to people trying to "undermine" the formed regime. To a greater extent, it is a method of political violence.

During the Stalinist repressions, even those who had nothing to do with politics or political structure. All those who were objectionable to the ruler were punished.

Lists of the repressed in the 30s

The period of 1937-1938 was the peak of repression. Historians called it the "Great Terror". Regardless of their origin, sphere of activity, during the 1930s, a huge number of people were arrested, deported, shot, and their property was confiscated in favor of the state.

All instructions on a single “crime” were given personally to I.V. Stalin. It was he who decided where a person was going and what he could take with him.

Until 1991, in Russia there was no information on the number of repressed and executed in full. But then the period of perestroika began, and this is the time when everything secret became clear. After the lists were declassified, after the historians did a lot of work in the archives and counted the data, truthful information was provided to the public - the numbers were simply frightening.

Do you know that: According to official statistics, more than 3 million people were repressed.

Thanks to the help of volunteers, lists of victims in 1937 were prepared. Only after that did the relatives find out where their family was. native person and what happened to him. But to a greater extent, they did not find anything comforting, since almost every life of the repressed ended in execution.

If you need to clarify information about a repressed relative, you can use the site http://lists.memo.ru/index2.htm. On it by name you can find all the information of interest. Almost all the repressed were rehabilitated posthumously, which has always been a great joy for their children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

The number of victims of Stalinist repressions according to official data

On February 1, 1954, a memorandum was prepared in the name of N. S. Khrushchev, in which the exact data of the dead and injured were spelled out. The number is simply shocking - 3,777,380 people.

The number of repressed and executed is striking in its scale. So there is officially confirmed data that was announced during " Khrushchev thaw». Article 58 was political, and about 700,000 people were sentenced to death under it alone.

And how many people died in the Gulag camps, where not only political prisoners were exiled, but also everyone who was not pleasing to Stalin's government.

In 1937-1938 alone, more than 1,200,000 people were sent to the Gulag (according to Academician Sakharov). And only about 50 thousand were able to return home during the “thaw”.

Victims of political repression - who are they?

Anyone could become a victim of political repression during Stalin's time.

The following categories of citizens were most often repressed:

  • Peasants. Those who were members of the "green movement" were especially punished. The kulaks who did not want to join the collective farms and who wanted to achieve everything on their own farms were sent into exile, while all the acquired farming was confiscated from them in full. And now the wealthy peasants were becoming poor.
  • The military is a separate layer of society. Ever since the Civil War, Stalin did not treat them very well. Fearing a military coup, the leader of the country repressed talented military leaders, thereby securing himself and his regime. But, despite the fact that he secured himself, Stalin quickly reduced the country's defense capability, depriving it of talented military personnel.
  • All the sentences were turned into reality by the NKVD officers. But their repression was not bypassed. Among the employees of the people's commissariat who followed all the instructions, there were those who were shot. Such people's commissars as Yezhov, Yagoda became one of the victims of Stalin's instructions.
  • Even those who had something to do with religion were subjected to repression. God did not exist at that time, and belief in him "shattered" the established regime.

In addition to the listed categories of citizens, residents living on the territory of the Union republics suffered. Entire nations were repressed. So, Chechens were simply put into freight cars and sent into exile. At the same time, no one thought about the safety of the family. The father could be planted in one place, the mother in another, and the children in a third. No one knew about his family and where they were.

Reasons for the repressions of the 30s

By the time Stalin came to power, a difficult economic situation had developed in the country.

The reasons for the start of repressions are considered to be:

  1. Savings at the national level, it was required to force the population to work for free. There was a lot of work, and there was nothing to pay for it.
  2. After Lenin was killed, the leader's seat was free. The people needed a leader, whom the population would follow unquestioningly.
  3. It was necessary to create a totalitarian society in which the word of the leader should be law. At the same time, the measures used by the leader were cruel, but they did not allow organizing a new revolution.

How were the repressions in the USSR

Stalin's repressions were a terrible time when everyone was ready to testify against a neighbor, even fictitious, if only nothing happened to his family.

The whole horror of the process is captured in the work of Alexander Solzhenitsyn "The Gulag Archipelago": “A sharp night call, a knock on the door, and several operatives enter the apartment. And behind them is a frightened neighbor who had to become understood. He sits all night, and only in the morning puts his painting under terrible and untrue testimony.

The procedure is terrible, treacherous, but thus understood, perhaps, it will save his family, but no, it was he who became the next to whom they would come to a new night.

Most often, all the testimony given by political prisoners was falsified. People were brutally beaten, thereby obtaining the information that was needed. At the same time, torture was personally sanctioned by Stalin.

The most famous cases, about which there is a huge amount of information:

  • Pulkovo case. In the summer of 1936, there should have been solar eclipse. The observatory offered to use foreign equipment in order to capture a natural phenomenon. As a result, all members of the Pulkovo Observatory were accused of having links with foreigners. Until now, data on the victims and repressed are classified.
  • The case of the industrial party - the Soviet bourgeoisie received the accusation. They were accused of disrupting industrialization processes.
  • Doctors business. Charges were received by doctors who allegedly killed Soviet leaders.

The actions taken by the government were brutal. No one understood guilt. If a person was included in the list, then he was guilty and no evidence was required for this.

The results of Stalin's repressions

Stalinism and its repressions are probably one of the most terrible pages in the history of our state. The repressions lasted for almost 20 years, and during this time a huge number of innocent people suffered. Even after the Second World War, repressive measures did not stop.

Stalinist repressions did not benefit society, but only helped the authorities to establish totalitarian regime from which our country could not get rid of for a long time. And the residents were afraid to express their opinion. There wasn't anyone who didn't like it. I liked everything - even to work for the good of the country practically for free.

The totalitarian regime made it possible to build such facilities as: BAM, the construction of which was carried out by the forces of the GULAG.

A terrible time, but it cannot be deleted from history, since it was during these years that the country withstood the Second World War and was able to restore the destroyed cities.

Brief description of the myth

Massive political repressions are unique property Russian state, especially in Soviet period. "Stalin's mass repressions" 1921-1953 accompanied by violations of the law, they suffered tens, and even hundreds of millions of citizens of the USSR. Slave labor of prisoners of the Gulag - the main labor resource Soviet modernization of the 30s.

Meaning

First of all: the very word "repression" in translation from late Latin literally means "suppression". Encyclopedic dictionaries interpret it as "a punitive measure, a punishment applied by state bodies" (" Modern Encyclopedia”, “Law Dictionary”) or “punitive measure emanating from state bodies” (“ Dictionary Ozhegova").

Here and criminal repressions, ie. the use of coercive measures, including imprisonment and even life. Here and moral repression, ie. creation in society of a climate of intolerance in relation to some forms of behavior that are undesirable from the point of view of the state. Let's say, "dandies" in the USSR were not subjected to criminal repressions, but they were subjected to moral repressions, and very serious ones: from cartoons and feuilletons to exclusion from the Komsomol, which in those conditions entailed a sharp reduction in social opportunities.

As a recent foreign example of repression, one can cite the current mass-spread North America the custom is not to allow speeches in universities of those lecturers whose views the students are dissatisfied with, or even to completely dismiss them from teaching. This applies specifically to repression, and not only moral - because in this case there is the possibility of depriving a person and a source of existence.

The practice of repression has existed and exists among all peoples and at all times - simply because society is forced to defend itself against destabilizing factors the more actively, the stronger the possible destabilization.

This is the theoretical part.

In today's political circulation, the word "repressions" is used in a very specific sense - they mean "Stalinist repressions", "mass repressions in the USSR of 1921-1953. This concept, regardless of its dictionary meaning, is a kind of "ideological marker". This word itself is a ready-made argument in a political discussion; it does not seem to need definition and content.

However, even in this usage it is useful to know what is actually meant.

Court verdicts

"Stalin's repressions" were elevated to the rank of "marker words" by N.S. Khrushchev exactly 60 years ago. In his famous report at the plenum of the Central Committee, elected by the XX Congress of the CPSU, he significantly overestimated the scope of these repressions. And he overestimated it as follows: he announced quite accurately information about the total number of convictions under the articles "treason" and "banditry" handed down from the end of 1921 (when the Civil War ended in the European part of the country) and until March 5, 1953, the day of death, - but he structured this part of his report in such a way that the impression was created that he was talking only about condemned communists. And since the communists were not most of the population of the country, then, naturally, the illusion of some incredible total volume of repression arose.

This total volume different people evaluated differently - again, guided by considerations not scientific and historical, but political.

Meanwhile, data on repressions are not secret and are determined by specific official figures, which are considered to be more or less accurate. They are indicated in the certificate drawn up on behalf of N.S. Khrushchev in February 1954 by the Prosecutor General of the USSR V. Rudenko, the Minister of Internal Affairs S. Kruglov and the Minister of Justice K. Gorshenin.

The total number of guilty verdicts - 3,770,380. At the same time, the actual number of convicts is less, since quite a few were convicted for various elements of the crime, then covered by the concept of "Treason to the Motherland", several times. The total number of people affected by these repressions for 31 years, according to various estimates, is about three million people.

Of the 3,770,380 sentences mentioned 2 369 220 provided for serving sentences in prisons and camps, 765,180 - exile and expulsion, 642 980 - capital punishment ( death penalty) . Taking into account sentences under other articles and according to later studies, they give another figure - about 800,000 death sentences, of which 700 thousand were executed.

It should be taken into account that everyone who, in one form or another, collaborated with the German occupiers during the Great Patriotic war. In addition, this number also included thieves in law - for refusing to work in the camps: the camp administration qualified the refusal to work as sabotage, and sabotage was then included in the number various forms betrayal of the motherland. Consequently, among the repressed there are several tens of thousands of thieves in law.

I can add another purely household option: let's say you stole a sheet of iron from a factory to block your barn. This, of course, qualifies as embezzlement of state property under a purely criminal article. But if the plant where you work is a defense plant, then this may be considered not just theft, but an attempt to undermine the defense capability of the state, and this is already one of the offenses provided for in the article “Treason to the Motherland”.

During the period while L.P. Beria acted as People's Commissar of Internal Affairs, the practice of issuing criminal cases for politics and "political appendages" in purely criminal cases ceased. But on December 15, 1945, he left this post, and under his successor, this practice was resumed.

Here's the thing. The then criminal code, adopted in 1922 and finalized in 1926, proceeded from the concept of "external conditionality of crimes" - they say, soviet man breaks the law only under pressure from some external circumstances, incorrect upbringing or "the heavy legacy of tsarism." Hence, the inappropriately mild punishments provided for by the Criminal Code under serious criminal articles, for the “weighting” of which political articles were added.

Thus, it can be judged that, at least from the guilty verdicts under the article “treason against the Motherland”, handed down under N.I. Yezhov, about half of the sentences were unfounded(We pay special attention to what happened under N.I. Yezhov, since it was during this period that the peak of repressions of 1937-1938 fell.). How far this conclusion can be extrapolated to the entire period 1921-1953 is an open question.

Estimates of the number of victims of Stalin's repressions differ dramatically. Some call numbers in the tens of millions of people, others are limited to hundreds of thousands. Which of them is closer to the truth?

Who is guilty?

Today our society is almost equally divided into Stalinists and anti-Stalinists. The former pay attention to the positive transformations that have taken place in the country in Stalin era, the latter urge not to forget about huge quantities victims of the repressions of the Stalinist regime.
However, almost all Stalinists recognize the fact of repressions, however, they note their limited nature and even justify them with political necessity. Moreover, they often do not associate repressions with the name of Stalin.
Historian Nikolay Kopesov writes that in the majority of investigative cases on those repressed in 1937-1938 there were no resolutions of Stalin - everywhere there were sentences of Yagoda, Yezhov and Beria. According to the Stalinists, this is evidence that the heads of the punitive organs were engaged in arbitrariness and, in confirmation, they quote Yezhov: “Who we want, we execute, whom we want, we have mercy.”
For that part of the Russian public that sees Stalin as the ideologist of repression, these are just particulars that confirm the rule. Yagoda, Yezhov and many other arbiters of human destinies themselves became victims of terror. Who but Stalin was behind all this? they ask rhetorically.
Doctor of Historical Sciences, Chief Specialist Oleg Khlevnyuk of the State Archives of the Russian Federation notes that despite the fact that Stalin's signature was not on many execution lists, it was he who sanctioned almost all mass political repressions.

Who got hurt?

Even more significant in the controversy surrounding the Stalinist repressions was the question of the victims. Who and in what capacity suffered during the period of Stalinism? Many researchers note that the very concept of “victims of repression” is rather vague. Historiography has not worked out clear definitions on this matter.
Undoubtedly, convicts, imprisoned in prisons and camps, shot, deported, deprived of property should be counted among the victims of the actions of the authorities. But what about, for example, those who were subjected to "hard interrogations" and then released? Should there be a separation between criminal and political prisoners? In what category should we classify the “nonsense” caught in petty single thefts and equated with state criminals?
The deportees deserve special attention. To what category do they belong - repressed or administratively deported? It is even more difficult to decide on those who fled without waiting for dispossession or deportation. They were sometimes caught, but someone was lucky enough to start a new life.

Such different numbers

Uncertainty in the issue of who is responsible for the repressions, in identifying the categories of victims and the period for which the victims of repressions should be counted lead to completely different figures. The most impressive figures came from the economist Ivan Kurganov (referenced by Solzhenitsyn in his novel The Gulag Archipelago), who estimated that between 1917 and 1959, 110 million people became victims of the internal war of the Soviet regime against its own people.
This number of mounds includes victims of famine, collectivization, peasant exile, camps, executions, civil war, as well as the "disdainful and sloppy conduct of World War II".
Even if such calculations are correct, can these figures be considered a reflection of Stalin's repressions? The economist, in fact, answers this question himself, using the expression "victims of the internal war of the Soviet regime." It is worth noting that Kurganov counted only the dead. It is difficult to imagine what figure could have appeared if the economist had taken into account all the victims of the Soviet regime in the specified period.
The figures cited by the head of the human rights society "Memorial" Arseniy Roginsky are more realistic. He writes: “On a scale of the entire Soviet Union, 12.5 million people are considered victims of political repression,” but he adds that in broad sense up to 30 million people can be considered repressed.
The leaders of the Yabloko movement, Elena Kriven and Oleg Naumov, counted all categories of victims of the Stalinist regime, including those who died in the camps from diseases and harsh working conditions, the dispossessed, the victims of hunger, those who suffered from unjustifiably cruel decrees and received excessively severe punishment for minor offenses in the force of the repressive nature of the legislation. The final figure is 39 million.
The researcher Ivan Gladilin notes on this occasion that if the count of the victims of repression has been carried out since 1921, this means that it is not Stalin who is responsible for a significant part of the crimes, but the “Leninist Guard”, which immediately after October revolution launched terror against the White Guards, clergy and kulaks.

How to count?

Estimates of the number of victims of repression vary greatly depending on the method of counting. If we take into account those convicted only on political articles, then according to the data of the regional departments of the KGB of the USSR, given in 1988, the Soviet authorities (VChK, GPU, OGPU, NKVD, NKGB, MGB) arrested 4,308,487 people, of which 835,194 were shot.
Employees of the "Memorial" society, when counting the victims of political trials, are close to these figures, although their figures are still noticeably higher - 4.5-4.8 million were convicted, of which 1.1 million were shot. If we consider everyone who went through the Gulag system as victims of the Stalinist regime, then this figure, according to various estimates, will range from 15 to 18 million people.
Very often, Stalinist repressions are associated exclusively with the concept of the "Great Terror", which peaked in 1937-1938. According to the commission headed by academician Pyotr Pospelov to establish the causes of mass repressions, the following figures were announced: 1,548,366 people were arrested on charges of anti-Soviet activities, of which 681,692 thousand were sentenced to capital punishment.
One of the most authoritative experts on the demographic aspects of political repression in the USSR, historian Viktor Zemskov, names a smaller number of those convicted during the years of the Great Terror - 1,344,923 people, although his data coincides with the figure of those executed.
If the dispossessed kulaks are included in the number of those subjected to repressions in Stalin's time, then the figure will grow by at least 4 million people. Such a number of dispossessed is given by the same Zemskov. The Yabloko party agrees with this, noting that about 600,000 of them died in exile.
The victims of Stalinist repressions were also representatives of some peoples who were subjected to forcible deportation - Germans, Poles, Finns, Karachays, Kalmyks, Armenians, Chechens, Ingush, Balkars, Crimean Tatars. Many historians agree that total number about 6 million people were deported, while about 1.2 million people did not live to see the end of the journey.

Trust or not?

The above figures are mostly based on the reports of the OGPU, NKVD, MGB. However, not all documents of the punitive departments have been preserved, many of them were purposefully destroyed, many are still in the public domain.
It should be recognized that historians are very dependent on statistics collected by various special agencies. But the difficulty is that even the available information reflects only the officially repressed, and therefore, by definition, cannot be complete. Moreover, it is possible to verify it from primary sources only in the rarest cases.
Acute lack of reliable and complete information often provoked both the Stalinists and their opponents to name radically different figures from each other in favor of their position. “If the “rights” exaggerated the scale of the repressions, then the “lefts”, partly from dubious youth, having found much more modest figures in the archives, were in a hurry to make them public and did not always ask themselves whether everything was reflected - and could be reflected - in the archives ", - notes the historian Nikolai Koposov.
It can be stated that estimates of the scale of Stalinist repressions based on the sources available to us can be very approximate. good help for modern researchers would be the documents stored in the federal archives, but many of them were subjected to re-classification. A country with such a history will jealously guard the secrets of its past.

Mass repressions in the USSR were carried out in the period 1927-1953. These repressions are directly associated with the name of Joseph Stalin, who during these years led the country. Social and political persecution in the USSR began after the end of the last stage of the civil war. These phenomena began to gain momentum in the second half of the 1930s and did not slow down during the Second World War, as well as after its end. Today we will talk about what social and political repressions were. Soviet Union, consider what phenomena underlie those events, as well as what consequences this led to.

They say: a whole people cannot be suppressed without end. Lie! Can! We see how our people have become devastated, run wild, and indifference descended on them not only to the fate of the country, not only to the fate of their neighbor, but even to their own fate and the fate of children. Indifference, the last saving reaction of the body, has become our defining feature . That is why the popularity of vodka is unprecedented even in Russia. This is a terrible indifference, when a person sees his life not punctured, not with a broken corner, but so hopelessly fragmented, so up and down filthy that only for the sake of alcoholic oblivion is it still worth living. Now, if vodka were banned, a revolution would immediately break out in our country.

Alexander Solzhenitsyn

Reasons for repression:

  • Forcing the population to work on a non-economic basis. A lot of work had to be done in the country, but there was not enough money for everything. The ideology formed new thinking and perception, and also had to motivate people to work practically for free.
  • Strengthening personal power. For the new ideology, an idol was needed, a person who was unquestioningly trusted. After the assassination of Lenin, this post was vacant. Stalin had to take this place.
  • Strengthening the exhaustion of a totalitarian society.

If you try to find the beginning of repression in the union, then the starting point, of course, should be 1927. This year was marked by the fact that mass executions began in the country, with the so-called pests, as well as saboteurs. The motive of these events should be sought in the relations between the USSR and Great Britain. So, at the beginning of 1927, the Soviet Union was involved in a major international scandal, when the country was openly accused of trying to transfer the seat of the Soviet revolution to London. In response to these events, Great Britain severed all relations with the USSR, both political and economic. Domestically, this step was presented as a preparation by London new wave interventions. At one of the party meetings, Stalin declared that the country "needs to destroy all remnants of imperialism and all supporters of the White Guard movement." Stalin had an excellent reason for this on June 7, 1927. On this day, the political representative of the USSR, Voikov, was killed in Poland.

As a result, terror began. For example, on the night of June 10, 20 people who contacted the empire were shot. They were representatives of ancient noble families. In total, in June 27, more than 9 thousand people were arrested, who were accused of treason, aiding imperialism and other things that sound menacing, but are very difficult to prove. Most of those arrested were sent to prison.

Pest control

After that, a number of major cases began in the USSR, which were aimed at combating sabotage and sabotage. The wave of these repressions was based on the fact that in most large companies that operated within the Soviet Union, senior positions were occupied by people from imperial Russia. Of course, most of these people did not feel sympathy for the new government. Therefore, the Soviet regime was looking for pretexts by which this intelligentsia could be removed from leadership positions and, if possible, destroyed. The problem was that it needed a weighty and legal basis. Such grounds were found in a number of lawsuits that swept through the Soviet Union in the 1920s.


Among the most striking examples of such cases are the following:

  • Shakhty business. In 1928, repressions in the USSR affected miners from Donbass. A show trial was staged from this case. The entire leadership of Donbass, as well as 53 engineers, were accused of espionage with an attempt to sabotage the new state. As a result of the trial, 3 people were shot, 4 were acquitted, the rest received prison terms from 1 to 10 years. It was a precedent - society enthusiastically accepted the repressions against the enemies of the people ... In 2000, the Russian prosecutor's office rehabilitated all the participants in the Shakhty case, in view of the lack of corpus delicti.
  • Pulkovo case. In June 1936, a large solar eclipse was supposed to be visible on the territory of the USSR. The Pulkovo Observatory appealed to the world community to attract personnel to study this phenomenon, as well as to obtain the necessary foreign equipment. As a result, the organization was accused of espionage. The number of victims is classified.
  • The case of the industrial party. The defendants in this case were those whom the Soviet authorities called bourgeois. This process took place in 1930. The defendants were accused of trying to disrupt industrialization in the country.
  • The case of the peasant party. The Socialist-Revolutionary organization is widely known, under the name of the Chayanov and Kondratiev groups. In 1930, representatives of this organization were accused of trying to disrupt industrialization and interfering in agricultural affairs.
  • Union Bureau. The Union Bureau case was opened in 1931. The defendants were representatives of the Mensheviks. They were accused of undermining the creation and implementation economic activity within the country, as well as in relations with foreign intelligence.

At that moment, a massive ideological struggle was taking place in the USSR. New Mode he tried with all his might to explain his position to the population, as well as to justify his actions. But Stalin understood that ideology alone could not bring order to the country and could not allow him to retain power. Therefore, along with ideology, repressions began in the USSR. Above, we have already given some examples of cases from which repressions began. These cases have always raised big questions, and today, when the documents on many of them have been declassified, it becomes absolutely clear that most of the accusations were unfounded. It is no coincidence that the Russian prosecutor's office, having examined the documents of the Shakhtinsk case, rehabilitated all participants in the process. And this despite the fact that in 1928 none of the party leadership of the country had any idea about the innocence of these people. Why did this happen? This was due to the fact that, under the guise of repression, as a rule, everyone who did not agree with the new regime was destroyed.

The events of the 1920s were only the beginning, the main events were ahead.

Socio-political meaning of mass repressions

A new massive wave of repression within the country unfolded at the beginning of 1930. At that moment, the struggle began not only with political competitors, but also with the so-called kulaks. In fact, a new blow of the Soviet power against the rich began, and this blow caught not only wealthy people, but also the middle peasants and even the poor. One of the stages of delivering this blow was dispossession. As part of this material we will not dwell on the issues of dispossession, since this issue has already been studied in detail in the corresponding article on the site.

Party composition and governing bodies in repression

A new wave of political repressions in the USSR began at the end of 1934. At that time, there was a significant change in the structure of the administrative apparatus within the country. In particular, on July 10, 1934, the special services were reorganized. On this day, the People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs of the USSR was created. This department is known by the acronym NKVD. This division included the following services:

  • Main Directorate of State Security. It was one of the main bodies that dealt with almost all cases.
  • Main Directorate of Workers' and Peasants' Militia. This is an analogue of the modern police, with all the functions and responsibilities.
  • Main Directorate of the Border Service. The department was engaged in border and customs affairs.
  • Headquarters of the camps. This department is now widely known under the acronym GULAG.
  • Main Fire Department.

In addition, in November 1934, a special department was created, which was called the "Special Meeting". This department received broad powers to combat the enemies of the people. In fact, this department could, without the presence of the accused, the prosecutor and the lawyer, send people into exile or to the Gulag for up to 5 years. Of course, this applied only to the enemies of the people, but the problem is that no one really knew how to define this enemy. That is why the Special Meeting had unique functions, since virtually any person could be declared an enemy of the people. Any person could be sent into exile for 5 years on one simple suspicion.

Mass repressions in the USSR


The events of December 1, 1934 became the reason for mass repressions. Then Sergei Mironovich Kirov was killed in Leningrad. As a result of these events, a special procedure for judicial proceedings was approved in the country. In fact, we are talking about accelerated litigation. Under the simplified system of proceedings, all cases where people were accused of terrorism and complicity in terrorism were transferred. Again, the problem was that under this category included almost all people who fell under repression. Above, we have already talked about a number of high-profile cases that characterize the repressions in the USSR, where it is clearly seen that all people, one way or another, were accused of aiding terrorism. The specificity of the simplified system of proceedings was that the sentence had to be pronounced within 10 days. The defendant received the summons the day before the trial. The trial itself took place without the participation of prosecutors and lawyers. At the conclusion of the proceedings, any request for clemency was prohibited. If in the course of the proceedings a person was sentenced to death, then this measure of punishment was executed immediately.

Political repression, purge of the party

Stalin staged active repression within the Bolshevik Party itself. One of good examples The repressions that affected the Bolsheviks happened on January 14, 1936. On this day, the replacement of party documents was announced. This step has long been discussed and was not unexpected. But when replacing documents, new certificates were not awarded to all party members, but only to those who "deserved trust." Thus began the purge of the party. According to official data, when new party documents were issued, 18% of the Bolsheviks were expelled from the party. These were the people to whom the repressions were applied, first of all. And we are talking about only one of the waves of these purges. In total, the cleaning of the batch was carried out in several stages:

  • In 1933. 250 people were expelled from the top leadership of the party.
  • In 1934-1935, 20,000 people were expelled from the Bolshevik Party.

Stalin actively destroyed people who could claim power, who had power. To demonstrate this fact, it is only necessary to say that of all the members of the Politburo of 1917, only Stalin survived after the purge (4 members were shot, and Trotsky was expelled from the party and expelled from the country). In total, there were 6 members of the Politburo at that time. In the period between the revolution and the death of Lenin, a new Politburo of 7 people was assembled. By the end of the purge, only Molotov and Kalinin survived. In 1934, the next congress of the VKP(b) party took place. The congress was attended by 1934 people. 1108 of them were arrested. Most were shot.

The assassination of Kirov aggravated the wave of repressions, and Stalin himself addressed the party members with a statement about the need for the final extermination of all enemies of the people. As a result, the Criminal Code of the USSR was amended. These changes stipulated that all cases of political prisoners were considered in an expedited manner without attorneys for prosecutors within 10 days. The executions were carried out immediately. In 1936, a political trial took place over the opposition. In fact, Lenin's closest associates, Zinoviev and Kamenev, ended up in the dock. They were accused of murdering Kirov, as well as an attempt on Stalin's life. Has begun new stage political repressions against the Leninist guard. This time, Bukharin was subjected to repressions, as well as the head of the government, Rykov. The socio-political meaning of repression in this sense was associated with the strengthening of the personality cult.

Repression in the army


Beginning in June 1937, repressions in the USSR affected the army. In June, the first trial over the high command of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army (RKKA), including Commander-in-Chief Marshal Tukhachevsky. The leadership of the army was accused of attempting a coup. According to the prosecutors, the coup was to take place on May 15, 1937. The accused were found guilty and most of them were shot. Tukhachevsky was also shot.

An interesting fact is that of the 8 members of the trial who sentenced Tukhachevsky to death, later five were themselves repressed and shot. However, from that time on, repressions began in the army, which affected the entire leadership. As a result of such events, 3 marshals of the Soviet Union, 3 army commanders of the 1st rank, 10 army commanders of the 2nd rank, 50 corps commanders, 154 division commanders, 16 army commissars, 25 corps commissars, 58 divisional commissars, 401 regimental commanders were repressed. In total, 40 thousand people were subjected to repressions in the Red Army. It was 40 thousand leaders of the army. As a result, more than 90% of the command staff was destroyed.

Strengthening repression

Beginning in 1937, the wave of repressions in the USSR began to intensify. The reason was order No. 00447 of the NKVD of the USSR of July 30, 1937. This document declared the immediate repression of all anti-Soviet elements, namely:

  • Former kulaks. All those whom the Soviet government called kulaks, but who escaped punishment, or were in labor camps or in exile, were subject to repression.
  • All representatives of religion. Anyone who had anything to do with religion was subject to repression.
  • Participants in anti-Soviet actions. Under such participants, everyone who had ever acted actively or passively against the Soviet regime was involved. In fact, this category included those who did not support the new government.
  • Anti-Soviet politicians. Inside the country, all those who were not members of the Bolshevik Party were called anti-Soviet politicians.
  • The White Guards.
  • People with a criminal record. People who had a criminal record were automatically considered enemies of the Soviet regime.
  • hostile elements. Any person who was called a hostile element was sentenced to be shot.
  • Inactive elements. The rest, who were not sentenced to death, were sent to camps or prisons for a term of 8 to 10 years.

All cases were now dealt with in an even more expedited manner, where most cases were dealt with en masse. According to the same order of the NKVD, repressions applied not only to convicts, but also to their families. In particular, the families of the repressed were subjected to the following measures punishments:

  • Families of those who were repressed for active anti-Soviet actions. All members of such families were sent to camps and labor settlements.
  • The families of the repressed, who lived in the border zone, were subject to resettlement inland. Often special settlements were formed for them.
  • The family of the repressed, who lived in large cities of the USSR. Such people were also resettled inland.

In 1940, a secret department of the NKVD was created. This department was engaged in the destruction of political opponents of Soviet power abroad. The first victim of this department was Trotsky, who was killed in Mexico in August 1940. In the future, this secret department was engaged in the destruction of members of the White Guard movement, as well as representatives of the imperialist emigration of Russia.

In the future, repressions continued, although their main events had already passed. In fact, repressions in the USSR continued until 1953.

The results of repression

In total, from 1930 to 1953, 3,800,000 people were repressed on charges of counter-revolution. Of these, 749,421 people were shot ... And this is only for official information... And how many more people died without trial or investigation, whose names and surnames are not included in the list?


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