Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Political Repressions
Today is Day of Remembrance of
the Victims of Political Repressions in Russia (День памяти жертв политических
репрессий.) It was officially remembered in the Soviet Union from October 30,
1991 to December 25, 1991 and in Russia since December 26, 1991.
The repressed were called the “Enemies
of the People” (Враги народа) by the Soviets. Punishments by the State
included summary executions, sending innocent people to Gulags, forced
resettlement, and stripping of Citizen's Rights. If one member of the family
was found to be an “Enemy of the People” then the whole family was considered
one and punished.
Repression was conducted by the
Cheka, the NKVD, the KGB and other State Organs. While Political Repression was
an everyday occurrence in the Soviet Union - as in all Communist countries -
there were special campaigns throughout the USSR’s existence (1917-1991.)
The Red Terror (1917 to 1922):
3,284,000 people murdered.
The New Economic Period
(1923-1928): 2,200,000 people murdered.
Collectivization (1928-1935):
14,400,000 people murdered.
Forced Psychiatry Treatments
Part 1 (1921-1955): 1,802 people murdered.
The Great Purge (1936-1938):
4,345,000 people murdered.
Holodomor Man-Made Famine
(1932-1933): 3,500,000 people murdered.
Katyn Massacre (1940):
22,000 Poles murdered.
Forced Population Transfers
(1930-1952): 389,521 Kulaks murdered, 400,000 Chechens murdered, 90,000
Poles murdered, 40,000 Soviet Koreans murdered, 5,400 Estonians murdered,
17,400 Latvians murdered, 28,000 Lithuanians murdered, 18,800 Finns murdered,
20,000 Hungarians murdered, 19,000 Karachais murdered, 228,800 Soviet Germans
murdered, 360,000 non-Soviet Germans murdered, 16,000 Kalmyks murdered, 23,000
Ingush murdered, 11,000 Balkars murdered, 195,471 Crimean Tatars murdered,
50,000 Meskhetian Turks murdered.
Gulags (1919-1953): 1.7
Million died as a direct result of their detention (doesn’t include those who
died from starvation, the extreme cold, forced labor, etc.)
Forced Psychiatry Treatments
Part 2 (1964-1989): Out of the 10,347 officially punished people 96% of
them were murdered through extreme usage of dangerous chemicals and medicines.
After Joseph Stalin died in 1953
and until Nikita Khrushchev was overthrown in 1964, the Soviet Government had a
process called Legal Rehabilitation (Юридическая реабилитация) in which
innocent men, women and children that were tortured, imprisoned and/or killed
or their relatives could apply to have them officially made full legal Soviet
Citizens again (with all the pensions and other benefits restored.
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32 million men, women and children were officially Rehabilitated by the
Soviet Government from 1953-1964. 13 million of those were from the Russian
Civil War Period (1917-1923) alone. The vast majority of the Rehabilitated had
died during their official imprisonment.
From 1988-1991 different Soviet
Republics (like the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republics in April 1991)
of the Soviet Union created different Political Rehabilitation Laws. In 1993,
the Russian Federation created their first Rehabilitation Law.
-
From 1993 to 2004, the Russian Prosecutor's Office reviewed 978,891
applications for Legal Rehabilitation of which 797,532 were allowed and 388,412
were satisfied, 636,335 cases against 901,127 people were reviewed and 634,165
were recognized as victims of Political Repression and Legally Rehabilitated.
In 2004 the Russian Government stopped announcing official Legal Rehabilitation
numbers. That is when President Putin moved away from blaming Stalin and the
USSR to praising, promoting and
rehabilitating Stalin and the USSR.
Note: These are only the
men, women and children that the Russian Government has declassified that the
Soviet Communists officially admit to murdering from 1917-1991. The actual
number is much higher. It also doesn’t include the millions upon millions of
men, women and children that the Soviet Communists repressed and imprisoned and
that survived.
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