How many people died during Stalin's repressions. Why was this necessary? Characteristic signs of repression

Immediately after the end of the Second World War, in September 1945, the state of emergency was lifted and the State Defense Committee was abolished. In March 1946, the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR was transformed into the Council of Ministers. At the same time, there was an increasing increase in the number of ministries and departments, and the number of their staff grew.

At the same time, elections were held to local councils, Supreme Councils of republics and the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, as a result of which the deputy corps, which had not changed during the war years, was renewed. By the beginning of the 50s. collegiality in the activities of the Councils increased as a result of more frequent convening of their sessions and an increase in the number of standing commissions. In accordance with the Constitution, direct and secret elections of people's judges and assessors were held for the first time. However, all power still remained in the hands of the party leadership.

After a thirteen-year break, the 19th Congress of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks) took place in October 1952, and decided to rename the party the CPSU. In 1949, congresses of trade unions and the Komsomol were held (also not convened for 17 and 13 years). They were preceded by reporting and election party, trade union and Komsomol meetings, at which the leadership of these organizations was renewed. However, despite the outwardly positive, democratic changes, during these very years the political regime in the country was tightening, and a new wave of repression was growing.

The Gulag system reached its apogee precisely in the post-war years, since those who had been imprisoned there since the mid-30s. Millions of new “enemies of the people” have been added. One of the first blows fell on prisoners of war, most of whom (about 2 million), after being released from fascist captivity, were sent to Siberian and Ukhta camps. Tula also exiled “alien elements” from the Baltic republics, Western Ukraine and Belarus. According to various sources, during these years the “population” of the Gulag ranged from 4.5 to 12 million people.

In 1948, “special regime” camps were created for those convicted of “anti-Soviet activities” and “counter-revolutionary acts,” in which particularly sophisticated methods of influencing prisoners were used. Not wanting to come to terms with their situation, political prisoners in a number of camps started uprisings, sometimes taking place under political slogans. The most famous of them were performances in Pechora (1948), Salekhard (1950), Kingir (1952), Ekibastuz (1952), Vorkuta (1953) and Norilsk (1953).

Along with political prisoners, there were also many workers in the camps after the war who did not meet the existing production standards. Thus, by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of June 2, 1948, local authorities were given the right to evict to remote areas persons who maliciously evade work in agriculture.

Fearing the growing popularity of the military during the war, Stalin authorized the arrest of Air Marshal A.A. Novikov, generals P.N. Ponedelina, N.K. Kirillov, a number of colleagues of Marshal G.K. Zhukova. The commander himself was charged with putting together a group of disgruntled generals and officers, ingratitude and disrespect for Stalin. The repression also affected some party functionaries, especially those who sought independence and greater independence from the central government. At the beginning of 1948, almost all the leaders of the Leningrad party organization were arrested. The total number of those arrested in the “Leningrad case” was about 2,000 people. After some time, 200 of them were put on trial and shot, including Chairman of the Russian Council of Ministers M. Rodionov, member of the Politburo and Chairman of the State Planning Committee of the USSR N. Voznesensky, Secretary of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks A. Kuznetsov. The “Leningrad Affair” should have become a stern warning to those who thought differently from the “leader of the peoples” in any way.

The last of the trials being prepared was the “case of doctors” (1953), accused of improper treatment of senior management, which resulted in the death of a number of prominent figures. Total victims of repressions in 1948-1953. became almost 6.5 million people. The flywheel of repression was stopped only after Stalin's death.

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 led the country during these years. 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 30s and did not slow down during the Second World War, as well as after its end. Today we will talk about what the social and political repressions of the Soviet Union were, consider what phenomena underlie those events, and what consequences this led to.

They say: an entire people cannot be suppressed endlessly. Lie! Can! We see how our people have become devastated, gone wild, and indifference has 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 their children. Indifference, the last saving reaction of the body, has become our defining feature . That is why the popularity of vodka is unprecedented even on a Russian scale. This is terrible indifference when a person sees his life not chipped, not with a corner broken off, but so hopelessly fragmented, so spoiled along and across 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. There was a lot of work to be done in the country, but there was not enough money for everything. The ideology shaped new thinking and perceptions, and was also supposed to motivate people to work for virtually nothing.
  • Strengthening personal power. The new ideology needed an idol, a person who was unquestioningly trusted. After Lenin's assassination 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 massacres of so-called pests, as well as saboteurs, began to take place in the country. The motive for these events should be sought in the relations between the USSR and Great Britain. Thus, at the beginning of 1927, the Soviet Union became 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 broke off all relations with the USSR, both political and economic. Domestically, this step was presented as preparation by London for a new wave of intervention. 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 were in contact with the empire were shot. These were representatives of ancient noble families. In total, in June 27, more than 9 thousand people were arrested, accused of high treason, complicity with imperialism and other things that sound menacing, but are very difficult to prove. Most of those arrested were sent to prison.

Pest Control

After this, 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, leadership positions were occupied by immigrants from imperial Russia. Of course, these people for the most part did not feel sympathy for the new government. Therefore, the Soviet regime was looking for pretexts on which this intelligentsia could be removed from leadership positions and, if possible, destroyed. The problem was that this required compelling and legal reasons. Such grounds were found in a number of trials that swept across the Soviet Union in the 1920s.


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

  • Shakhty case. In 1928, repressions in the USSR affected miners from Donbass. This case was turned into a show trial. The entire leadership of Donbass, as well as 53 engineers, were accused of espionage activities 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 sentences from 1 to 10 years. This was a precedent - society enthusiastically accepted the repressions against the enemies of the people... In 2000, the Russian prosecutor's office rehabilitated all participants in the Shakhty case, due to the lack of corpus delicti.
  • Pulkovo case. In June 1936, a major solar eclipse was supposed to be visible across 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 ties. The number of victims is classified.
  • The case of the industrial party. Those accused 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 group. In 1930, representatives of this organization were accused of attempting to disrupt industrialization and interfering in agricultural affairs.
  • Union Bureau. The case of the union bureau was opened in 1931. The defendants were representatives of the Mensheviks. They were accused of undermining the creation and implementation of economic activities within the country, as well as connections with foreign intelligence.

At this moment, a massive ideological struggle was taking place in the USSR. The new regime tried its best to explain its position to the population, as well as justify its actions. But Stalin understood that ideology alone could not restore order in the country and could not allow him to retain power. Therefore, along with ideology, repression began in the USSR. Above we have already given some examples of cases from which repression began. These cases have always raised big questions, and today, when 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 Shakhty case, rehabilitated all participants in the process. And this despite the fact that in 1928, no one from the country’s party leadership 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 20s were just the beginning; the main events were ahead.

Socio-political meaning of mass repressions

A new massive wave of repressions within the country unfolded at the beginning of 1930. At this moment, a struggle began not only with political competitors, but also with the so-called kulaks. In fact, a new blow by the Soviet regime against the rich began, and this blow affected not only wealthy people, but also the middle peasants and even the poor. One of the stages of delivering this blow was dispossession. Within the framework of this material, we will not dwell in detail 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, a reorganization of the special services took place. On this day, the People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs of the USSR was created. This department is known by the abbreviation NKVD. This unit included the following services:

  • Main Directorate of State Security. It was one of the main bodies that dealt with almost all matters.
  • Main Directorate of Workers' and Peasants' Militia. This is an analogue of the modern police, with all the functions and responsibilities.
  • Main Directorate of Border Guard Service. The department dealt with border and customs affairs.
  • Main Directorate of Camps. This administration is now widely known by the abbreviation 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 enemies of the people. In fact, this department could, without the presence of the accused, prosecutor and lawyer, send people into exile or to the Gulag for up to 5 years. Of course, this applied only to enemies of the people, but the problem is that no one reliably knew how to identify 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 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 established in the country. In fact, we are talking about expedited trials. All cases where people were accused of terrorism and aiding terrorism were transferred under the simplified trial system. Again, the problem was that almost all the people who came under repression fell into this category. Above we have already talked about a number of high-profile cases that characterize repression in the USSR, where it is clearly visible that all people, one way or another, were accused of aiding terrorism. The specificity of the simplified trial system was that the verdict had to be rendered within 10 days. The accused received a summons a day before the trial. The trial itself took place without the participation of prosecutors and lawyers. At the conclusion of the proceedings, any requests for clemency were prohibited. If during the proceedings a person was sentenced to death, this penalty was carried out immediately.

Political repression, party purge

Stalin carried out active repressions within the Bolshevik Party itself. One of the illustrative examples of the repressions that affected the Bolsheviks happened on January 14, 1936. On this day, the replacement of party documents was announced. This move had been discussed for a long time and was not unexpected. But when replacing documents, new certificates were not awarded to all party members, but only to those who “earned trust.” Thus began the purge of the party. If you believe the official data, then when new party documents were issued, 18% of the Bolsheviks were expelled from the party. These were the people to whom repression was applied primarily. 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 party's senior leadership.
  • In 1934 - 1935, 20 thousand people were expelled from the Bolshevik Party.

Stalin actively destroyed people who could lay claim to power, who had power. To demonstrate this fact, it is only necessary to say that of all the members of the Politburo of 1917, after the purge, only Stalin survived (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 remained alive. In 1934, the next congress of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks) party took place. 1934 people took part in the congress. 1108 of them were arrested. Most were shot.

The murder of Kirov exacerbated the wave of repression, and Stalin himself made a statement to party members about the need for the final extermination of all enemies of the people. As a result, changes were made to the criminal code of the USSR. These changes stipulated that all cases of political prisoners were considered in an expedited manner without prosecutors' lawyers within 10 days. The executions were carried out immediately. In 1936, a political trial of the opposition took place. In fact, Lenin's closest associates, Zinoviev and Kamenev, were in the dock. They were accused of the murder of Kirov, as well as the attempt on Stalin's life. A new stage of political repression against the Leninist Guard began. This time Bukharin was subjected to repression, as was the head of government, Rykov. The socio-political meaning of repression in this sense was associated with the strengthening of the cult of personality.

Repression in the army


Beginning in June 1937, repressions in the USSR affected the army. In June, the first trial of the high command of the Workers' and Peasants' Red Army (RKKA), including the commander-in-chief Marshal Tukhachevsky, took place. The army leadership was accused of attempting a coup. According to prosecutors, the coup was supposed 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, five were subsequently repressed and shot. However, from then 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 regiment commanders were repressed. In total, 40 thousand people were subjected to repression in the Red Army. These were 40 thousand army leaders. As a result, more than 90% of the command staff was destroyed.

Increased 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 dated July 30, 1937. This document stated the immediate repression of all anti-Soviet elements, namely:

  • Former kulaks. All those whom the Soviet authorities 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. Such participants included everyone who had ever actively or passively opposed Soviet power. In fact, this category included those who did not support the new government.
  • Anti-Soviet politicians. Domestically, anti-Soviet politicians defined everyone who was not a member of the Bolshevik Party.
  • 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 death.
  • 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 considered in an even more accelerated manner, where most cases were considered en masse. According to the same NKVD orders, repressions applied not only to convicts, but also to their families. In particular, the following penalties were applied to the families of those repressed:

  • Families of those repressed for active anti-Soviet actions. All members of such families were sent to camps and labor camps.
  • The families of the repressed who lived in the border strip were subject to resettlement inland. Often special settlements were formed for them.
  • A family of repressed people who lived in major 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 located abroad. The first victim of this department was Trotsky, who was killed in Mexico in August 1940. Subsequently, this secret department was engaged in the destruction of participants in the White Guard movement, as well as representatives of the imperialist emigration of Russia.

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

Results of repression

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


The history of Russia, like other former post-Soviet republics in the period from 1928 to 1953, is called the “era of Stalin.” He is positioned as a wise ruler, a brilliant statesman, acting on the basis of “expediency.” In reality, he was driven by completely different motives.

When talking about the beginning of the political career of a leader who became a tyrant, such authors bashfully hush up one indisputable fact: Stalin was a repeat offender with seven prison sentences. Robbery and violence were the main form of his social activity in his youth. Repressions became an integral part of the government course he pursued.

Lenin received a worthy successor in his person. “Having creatively developed his teaching,” Joseph Vissarionovich came to the conclusion that the country should be ruled by methods of terror, constantly instilling fear in his fellow citizens.

A generation of people whose lips can speak the truth about Stalin’s repressions is leaving... Are not newfangled articles whitening the dictator a spit on their suffering, on their broken lives...

The leader who sanctioned torture

As you know, Joseph Vissarionovich personally signed execution lists for 400,000 people. In addition, Stalin tightened the repression as much as possible, authorizing the use of torture during interrogations. It was they who were given the green light to complete chaos in the dungeons. He was directly related to the notorious telegram of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks dated January 10, 1939, which literally gave the punitive authorities a free hand.

Creativity in introducing torture

Let us recall excerpts from a letter from Corps Commander Lisovsky, a leader bullied by the satraps...

"...A ten-day assembly-line interrogation with a brutal, vicious beating and no opportunity to sleep. Then - a twenty-day punishment cell. Then - forced to sit with your hands raised up, and also stand bent over, with your head hidden under the table, for 7-8 hours..."

The detainees' desire to prove their innocence and their failure to sign fabricated charges led to increased torture and beatings. The social status of the detainees did not play a role. Let us remember that Robert Eiche, a candidate member of the Central Committee, had his spine broken during interrogation, and Marshal Blucher in Lefortovo prison died from beatings during interrogation.

Leader's motivation

The number of victims of Stalin's repressions was calculated not in tens or hundreds of thousands, but in seven million who died of starvation and four million who were arrested (general statistics will be presented below). Only the number of those executed was about 800 thousand people...

How did Stalin motivate his actions, immensely striving for the Olympus of power?

What does Anatoly Rybakov write about this in “Children of Arbat”? Analyzing Stalin's personality, he shares his judgments with us. “A ruler whom the people love is weak because his power is based on the emotions of other people. It's another matter when people are afraid of him! Then the power of the ruler depends on himself. This is a strong ruler! Hence the leader’s credo - to inspire love through fear!

Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin took steps adequate to this idea. Repression became his main competitive tool in his political career.

The beginning of revolutionary activity

Joseph Vissarionovich became interested in revolutionary ideas at the age of 26 after meeting V.I. Lenin. He was engaged in robbery of funds for the party treasury. Fate sent him 7 exiles to Siberia. Stalin was distinguished by pragmatism, prudence, unscrupulousness in means, harshness towards people, and egocentrism from a young age. Repressions against financial institutions - robberies and violence - were his. Then the future leader of the party participated in the Civil War.

Stalin in the Central Committee

In 1922, Joseph Vissarionovich received a long-awaited opportunity for career growth. The ill and weakening Vladimir Ilyich introduces him, along with Kamenev and Zinoviev, to the Central Committee of the party. In this way, Lenin creates a political counterbalance to Leon Trotsky, who really aspires to leadership.

Stalin simultaneously heads two party structures: the Organizing Bureau of the Central Committee and the Secretariat. In this post, he brilliantly studied the art of party behind-the-scenes intrigue, which later came in handy in his fight against competitors.

Positioning of Stalin in the system of red terror

The machine of red terror was launched even before Stalin came to the Central Committee.

09/05/1918 The Council of People's Commissars issues the Resolution “On the Red Terror”. The body for its implementation, called the All-Russian Extraordinary Commission (VChK), operated under the Council of People's Commissars from December 7, 1917.

The reason for this radicalization of domestic politics was the murder of M. Uritsky, chairman of the St. Petersburg Cheka, and the assassination attempt on V. Lenin by Fanny Kaplan, acting from the Socialist Revolutionary Party. Both events occurred on August 30, 1918. Already this year, the Cheka launched a wave of repression.

According to statistical information, 21,988 people were arrested and imprisoned; 3061 hostages taken; 5544 were shot, 1791 were imprisoned in concentration camps.

By the time Stalin came to the Central Committee, gendarmes, police officers, tsarist officials, entrepreneurs, and landowners had already been repressed. First of all, the blow was dealt to the classes that are the support of the monarchical structure of society. However, having “creatively developed the teachings of Lenin,” Joseph Vissarionovich outlined new main directions of terror. In particular, a course was taken to destroy the social base of the village - agricultural entrepreneurs.

Stalin since 1928 - ideologist of violence

It was Stalin who turned repression into the main instrument of domestic policy, which he justified theoretically.

His concept of intensifying class struggle formally becomes the theoretical basis for the constant escalation of violence by state authorities. The country shuddered when it was first voiced by Joseph Vissarionovich at the July Plenum of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks in 1928. From that time on, he actually became the leader of the Party, the inspirer and ideologist of violence. The tyrant declared war on his own people.

Hidden by slogans, the real meaning of Stalinism manifests itself in the unrestrained pursuit of power. Its essence is shown by the classic - George Orwell. The Englishman made it very clear that power for this ruler was not a means, but a goal. Dictatorship was no longer perceived by him as a defense of the revolution. The revolution became a means to establish a personal, unlimited dictatorship.

Joseph Vissarionovich in 1928-1930. began by initiating the fabrication by the OGPU of a number of public trials that plunged the country into an atmosphere of shock and fear. Thus, the cult of Stalin’s personality began its formation with trials and the instillation of terror throughout society... Mass repressions were accompanied by public recognition of those who committed non-existent crimes as “enemies of the people.” People were brutally tortured to sign charges fabricated by the investigation. The brutal dictatorship imitated class struggle, cynically violating the Constitution and all norms of universal morality...

Three global trials were falsified: the “Union Bureau Case” (putting managers at risk); “The Case of the Industrial Party” (the sabotage of the Western powers regarding the economy of the USSR was imitated); “The Case of the Labor Peasant Party” (obvious falsification of damage to the seed fund and delays in mechanization). Moreover, they were all united into a single cause in order to create the appearance of a single conspiracy against Soviet power and provide scope for further falsifications of the OGPU - NKVD.

As a result, the entire economic management of the national economy was replaced from old “specialists” to “new personnel”, ready to work according to the instructions of the “leader”.

Through the lips of Stalin, who ensured that the state apparatus was loyal to repression through the trials, the Party’s unshakable determination was further expressed: to displace and ruin thousands of entrepreneurs - industrialists, traders, small and medium-sized ones; to ruin the basis of agricultural production - the wealthy peasantry (indiscriminately calling them “kulaks”). At the same time, the new voluntarist party position was masked by “the will of the poorest strata of workers and peasants.”

Behind the scenes, parallel to this “general line,” the “father of peoples” consistently, with the help of provocations and false testimony, began to implement the line of eliminating his party competitors for supreme state power (Trotsky, Zinoviev, Kamenev).

Forced collectivization

The truth about Stalin's repressions of the period 1928-1932. indicates that the main object of repression was the main social base of the village - an effective agricultural producer. The goal is clear: the entire peasant country (and in fact at that time these were Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, the Baltic and Transcaucasian republics) was supposed to, under the pressure of repression, turn from a self-sufficient economic complex into an obedient donor for the implementation of Stalin’s plans for industrialization and maintaining hypertrophied power structures.

In order to clearly identify the object of his repressions, Stalin resorted to an obvious ideological forgery. Economically and socially unjustifiably, he achieved that party ideologists obedient to him singled out a normal self-supporting (profit-making) producer into a separate “class of kulaks” - the target of a new blow. Under the ideological leadership of Joseph Vissarionovich, a plan was developed for the destruction of the social foundations of the village that had developed over centuries, the destruction of the rural community - the Resolution “On the liquidation of ... kulak farms” dated January 30, 1930.

The Red Terror has come to the village. Peasants who fundamentally disagreed with collectivization were subjected to Stalin's “troika” trials, which in most cases ended with executions. Less active “kulaks”, as well as “kulak families” (the category of which could include any persons subjectively defined as a “rural asset”) were subjected to forcible confiscation of property and eviction. A body for permanent operational management of the eviction was created - a secret operational department under the leadership of Efim Evdokimov.

Migrants to the extreme regions of the North, victims of Stalin's repressions, were previously identified on a list in the Volga region, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Belarus, Siberia, and the Urals.

In 1930-1931 1.8 million were evicted, and in 1932-1940. - 0.49 million people.

Organization of hunger

However, executions, ruin and eviction in the 30s of the last century are not all of Stalin’s repressions. A brief listing of them should be supplemented by the organization of famine. Its real reason was the inadequate approach of Joseph Vissarionovich personally to insufficient grain procurements in 1932. Why was the plan fulfilled by only 15-20%? The main reason was crop failure.

His subjectively developed plan for industrialization was under threat. It would be reasonable to reduce the plans by 30%, postpone them, and first stimulate the agricultural producer and wait for a harvest year... Stalin did not want to wait, he demanded immediate provision of food to the bloated security forces and new gigantic construction projects - Donbass, Kuzbass. The leader made a decision to confiscate grain intended for sowing and consumption from the peasants.

On October 22, 1932, two emergency commissions under the leadership of the odious personalities Lazar Kaganovich and Vyacheslav Molotov launched a misanthropic campaign of “fight against the fists” to confiscate grain, which was accompanied by violence, quick-to-death troika courts and the eviction of wealthy agricultural producers to the Far North. It was genocide...

It is noteworthy that the cruelty of the satraps was actually initiated and not stopped by Joseph Vissarionovich himself.

Well-known fact: correspondence between Sholokhov and Stalin

Mass repressions of Stalin in 1932 -1933. have documentary evidence. M.A. Sholokhov, the author of “The Quiet Don,” addressed the leader, defending his fellow countrymen, with letters exposing lawlessness during the confiscation of grain. The famous resident of the village of Veshenskaya presented the facts in detail, indicating the villages, the names of the victims and their tormentors. The bullying and violence against the peasants is horrifying: brutal beatings, breaking out joints, partial strangulation, mock executions, eviction from houses... In his response Letter, Joseph Vissarionovich only partially agreed with Sholokhov. The real position of the leader is visible in the lines where he calls the peasants saboteurs, “secretly” trying to disrupt the food supply...

This voluntaristic approach caused famine in the Volga region, Ukraine, the North Caucasus, Kazakhstan, Belarus, Siberia, and the Urals. A special Statement of the Russian State Duma published in April 2008 revealed previously classified statistics to the public (previously, propaganda did its best to hide these repressions of Stalin.)

How many people died from hunger in the above regions? The figure established by the State Duma commission is terrifying: more than 7 million.

Other areas of pre-war Stalinist terror

Let's also consider three more areas of Stalin's terror, and in the table below we present each of them in more detail.

With the sanctions of Joseph Vissarionovich, a policy was also pursued to suppress freedom of conscience. A citizen of the Land of Soviets had to read the newspaper Pravda, and not go to church...

Hundreds of thousands of families of previously productive peasants, fearing dispossession and exile to the North, became an army supporting the country's gigantic construction projects. In order to limit their rights and make them manipulated, it was at that time that passporting of the population in cities was carried out. Only 27 million people received passports. Peasants (still the majority of the population) remained without passports, did not enjoy the full scope of civil rights (freedom to choose a place of residence, freedom to choose a job) and were “tied” to the collective farm at their place of residence with the obligatory condition of fulfilling workday norms.

Antisocial policies were accompanied by the destruction of families and an increase in the number of street children. This phenomenon has become so widespread that the state was forced to respond to it. With Stalin's sanction, the Politburo of the Country of Soviets issued one of the most inhumane regulations - punitive towards children.

The anti-religious offensive as of April 1, 1936 led to a reduction in Orthodox churches to 28%, mosques to 32% of their pre-revolutionary number. The number of clergy decreased from 112.6 thousand to 17.8 thousand.

For repressive purposes, passportization of the urban population was carried out. More than 385 thousand people did not receive passports and were forced to leave the cities. 22.7 thousand people were arrested.

One of Stalin’s most cynical crimes is his authorization of the secret Politburo resolution of 04/07/1935, which allows teenagers from 12 years of age to be brought to trial and determines their punishment up to capital punishment. In 1936 alone, 125 thousand children were placed in NKVD colonies. As of April 1, 1939, 10 thousand children were exiled to the Gulag system.

Great Terror

The state flywheel of terror was gaining momentum... The power of Joseph Vissarionovich, starting in 1937, as a result of repressions over the entire society, became comprehensive. However, their biggest leap was just ahead. In addition to the final and physical reprisals against former party colleagues - Trotsky, Zinoviev, Kamenev - massive “cleansings of the state apparatus” were carried out.

Terror has reached unprecedented proportions. The OGPU (from 1938 - the NKVD) responded to all complaints and anonymous letters. A person's life was ruined for one carelessly dropped word... Even the Stalinist elite - statesmen: Kosior, Eikhe, Postyshev, Goloshchekin, Vareikis - were repressed; military leaders Blucher, Tukhachevsky; security officers Yagoda, Yezhov.

On the eve of the Great Patriotic War, leading military personnel were shot on trumped-up cases “under an anti-Soviet conspiracy”: 19 qualified corps-level commanders - divisions with combat experience. The cadres who replaced them did not adequately master operational and tactical art.

It was not only the shopfront facades of Soviet cities that were characterized by the personality cult of Stalin. The repressions of the “leader of the peoples” gave rise to a monstrous system of Gulag camps, providing the Land of Soviets with free labor, mercilessly exploited labor resources to extract the wealth of the underdeveloped regions of the Far North and Central Asia.

The dynamics of the increase in those kept in camps and labor colonies is impressive: in 1932 there were 140 thousand prisoners, and in 1941 - about 1.9 million.

In particular, ironically, the prisoners of Kolyma mined 35% of the Union's gold, while living in terrible conditions. Let us list the main camps included in the Gulag system: Solovetsky (45 thousand prisoners), logging camps - Svirlag and Temnikovo (43 and 35 thousand, respectively); oil and coal production - Ukhtapechlag (51 thousand); chemical industry - Bereznyakov and Solikamsk (63 thousand); development of the steppes - Karaganda camp (30 thousand); construction of the Volga-Moscow canal (196 thousand); construction of the BAM (260 thousand); gold mining in Kolyma (138 thousand); Nickel mining in Norilsk (70 thousand).

Basically, people arrived in the Gulag system in a typical way: after a night arrest and an unfair, biased trial. And although this system was created under Lenin, it was under Stalin that political prisoners began to enter it en masse after mass trials: “enemies of the people” - kulaks (essentially an effective agricultural producer), and even entire evicted nationalities. The majority served sentences from 10 to 25 years under Article 58. The investigation process involved torture and the breaking of the will of the convicted person.

In the case of the resettlement of kulaks and small peoples, the train with prisoners stopped right in the taiga or in the steppe and the convicts built a camp and a special purpose prison (TON) for themselves. Since 1930, the labor of prisoners was mercilessly exploited to fulfill five-year plans - 12-14 hours a day. Tens of thousands of people died from overwork, poor nutrition, and poor medical care.

Instead of a conclusion

The years of Stalin's repressions - from 1928 to 1953. - changed the atmosphere in a society that has ceased to believe in justice and is under the pressure of constant fear. Since 1918, people were accused and shot by revolutionary military tribunals. The inhumane system developed... The Tribunal became the Cheka, then the All-Russian Central Executive Committee, then the OGPU, then the NKVD. Executions under Article 58 were in effect until 1947, and then Stalin replaced them with 25 years in camps.

In total, about 800 thousand people were shot.

Moral and physical torture of the entire population of the country, in fact, lawlessness and arbitrariness, was carried out in the name of the workers' and peasants' power, the revolution.

The powerless people were terrorized by the Stalinist system constantly and methodically. The process of restoring justice began with the 20th Congress of the CPSU.

When I die, a lot of rubbish will be placed on my grave, but the wind of time will mercilessly sweep it away.
Stalin Joseph Vissarionovich

Brief summary of the myth:


Stalin was the greatest tyrant of all times. Stalin destroyed his people on an unimaginable scale - from 10 to 100 million people were thrown into camps, where they were shot or died in inhumane conditions.


Reality:

What was the scale of the “Stalinist repressions”?

Almost all publications addressing the issue of the number of repressed people can be classified into two groups. The first of them includes works by denouncers of the “totalitarian regime”, citing astronomical multi-million dollar figures of those executed and imprisoned. At the same time, “truth seekers” persistently try not to notice archival data, including published ones, pretending that they do not exist. To justify their figures, they either refer to each other, or simply limit themselves to phrases like: “according to my calculations,” “I am convinced,” etc.


However, any conscientious researcher who begins to study this problem quickly discovers that in addition to “eyewitness memories” there are a lot of documentary sources: “Several thousand items of storage of documents related to the activities of the Gulag have been identified in the funds of the Central State Archive of the October Revolution, the highest bodies of state power and government bodies of the USSR (TsGAOR USSR)”


Having studied archival documents, such a researcher is surprised to see that the scale of repression that we “know” about thanks to the media is not only at odds with reality, but is inflated tenfold. After this, he finds himself in a painful dilemma: professional ethics requires him to publish the data found, on the other hand, how not to be branded as a defender of Stalin. The result is usually some kind of “compromise” publication, containing both a standard set of anti-Stalin epithets and curtsies addressed to Solzhenitsyn and Co., as well as information about the number of repressed people, which, unlike publications from the first group, is not taken out of thin air and not pulled out of thin air , and are confirmed by documents from the archives.

How much has been repressed?


February 1, 1954
To the Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee, Comrade N. S. Khrushchev.
In connection with signals received by the Central Committee of the CPSU from a number of persons about illegal convictions for counter-revolutionary crimes in past years by the OGPU Collegium, NKVD troikas, the Special Meeting, the Military Collegium, courts and military tribunals and in accordance with your instructions on the need to review the cases of persons convicted for counter-revolutionary crimes and currently held in camps and prisons, we report: from 1921 to the present time, 3,777,380 people were sentenced for counter-revolutionary crimes, including 642,980 people to VMN, to detention in camps and prisons for a term of 25 years and below - 2,369,220, into exile and deportation - 765,180 people.

Of the total number of convicts, approximately, 2,900,000 people were convicted by the OGPU Collegium, NKVD troikas and the Special Conference, and 877,000 people were convicted by courts, military tribunals, the Special Collegium and the Military Collegium.

... It should be noted that, created on the basis of the Resolution of the Central Executive Committee and the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR of November 5, 1934, by the Special Meeting of the NKVD of the USSR, which existed until September 1, 1953, 442,531 people were sentenced, including 10,101 people to VMN, to imprisonment - 360,921 people, to exile and deportation (within the country) - 57,539 people and to other measures of punishment (counting the time spent in custody, deportation abroad, compulsory treatment) - 3,970 people...

Prosecutor General R. Rudenko
Minister of Internal Affairs S. Kruglov
Minister of Justice K. Gorshenin


So, as is clear from the above document, in total from 1921 to the beginning of 1954, people were sentenced to death on political charges. 642.980 person, to imprisonment - 2.369.220 , to link – 765.180 . It should also be borne in mind that not all sentences were carried out. For example, from July 15, 1939 to April 20, 1940, 201 prisoners were sentenced to capital punishment for disorganizing camp life and production, but then for some of them the death penalty was replaced by imprisonment for terms of 10 to 15 years. In 1934, the camps housed 3,849 prisoners sentenced to capital punishment with a substitute for imprisonment, in 1935 - 5,671, in 1936 - 7,303, in 1937 - 6,239, in 1938 - 5,926, in 1939 - 3,425, in 1940 - 4,037.

Number of prisoners

« Are you sure that the information in this memo is true?“, - a skeptical reader will exclaim, who, thanks to many years of brainwashing, firmly “knows” about millions of people shot and tens of millions sent to camps. Well, let’s turn to more detailed statistics, especially since, contrary to the assurances of dedicated “fighters against totalitarianism,” such data is not only available in the archives, but has also been published several times.


Let's start with data on the number of prisoners in the Gulag camps. Let me remind you that those sentenced to a term of more than 3 years, as a rule, served their sentences in correctional labor camps (ITL), and those sentenced to short terms - in correctional labor colonies (CPT).



YearPrisoners
1930 179.000
1931 212.000
1932 268.700
1933 334.300
1934 510.307
1935 725.483
1936 839.406
1937 820.881
1938 996.367
1939 1.317.195
1940 1.344.408
1941 1.500.524
1942 1.415.596
1943 983.974
1944 663.594
1945 715.505
1946 746.871
1947 808.839
1948 1.108.057
1949 1.216.361
1950 1.416.300
1951 1.533.767
1952 1.711.202
1953 1.727.970

However, those who are accustomed to accepting the opuses of Solzhenitsyn and others like him as Holy Scripture are often not convinced even by direct references to archival documents. " These are NKVD documents, and therefore they are falsified.- they declare. – Where did the numbers given in them come from?».


Well, especially for these incredulous gentlemen, I will give a couple of specific examples of where “these numbers” come from. So, the year is 1935:


NKVD camps, their economic specialization and number of prisoners
as of January 11, 1935


192.649 153.547 66.444 61.251 60.417 40.032 36.010 33.048 26.829 25.109 20.656 10.583 3.337 1.209 722 9.756 741.599
CampEconomic specializationNumber
conclusion
DmitrovlagConstruction of the Moscow-Volga Canal
BamlagConstruction of the second tracks of the Trans-Baikal and Ussuri railways and the Baikal-Amur Mainline
Belomoro-Baltic-
ski plant
Construction of the White Sea-Baltic Canal
SiblagConstruction of the Gorno-Shorskaya railway; coal mining in the mines of Kuzbass; construction of the Chuisky and Usinsky tracts; provision of labor to the Kuznetsk Metallurgical Plant, Novsibles, etc.; own pig farms
Dallag (later
Vladivostoklag)
Construction of the Volochaevka-Komsomolsk railway; coal mining at the Artem and Raichikha mines; construction of the Sedan water pipeline and oil storage tanks of Benzostroy; construction work of “Dalpromstroy”, “Reserves Committee”, aircraft building No. 126; fisheries
SvirlagHarvesting firewood and commercial timber for Leningrad
SevvostlagTrust "Dalstroy", work in Kolyma
Temlag, Mordov-
Russian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic
Harvesting firewood and commercial timber for Moscow
Central Asian
camp (Sazlag)
Providing labor to Tekstilstroy, Chirchikstroy, Shakhrudstroy, Khazarbakhstroy, Chuisky Novlubtrest, and the Pakhta-Aral state farm; own cotton farms
Karaganda
camp (Karlag)
Livestock farms
UkhtpechlagWorks of the Ukhto-Pechora Trust: mining of coal, oil, asphalt, radium, etc.
Prorvlag (later -
Astrakhanlag)
Fishing industry
Sarovsky
NKVD camp
Logging and sawmilling
VaygachMining of zinc, lead, platinum spar
OkhunlagRoad construction
on the way
to the camps
Total

Four years later:



CampConclusion
Bamlag (BAM route) 262.194
Sevvostlag (Magadan) 138.170
Belbaltlag (Karelian ASSR) 86.567
Volgolag (Uglich-Rybinsk region) 74.576
Dallag (Primorsky Territory) 64.249
Siblag (Novosibirsk region) 46.382
Ushosdorlag (Far East) 36.948
Samarlag (Kuibyshev region) 36.761
Karlag (Karaganda region) 35.072
Sazlag (Uzbek SSR) 34.240
Usollag (Molotov region) 32.714
Kargopollag (Arkhangelsk region) 30.069
Sevzheldorlag (Komi ASSR and Arkhangelsk region) 29.405
Yagrinlag (Arkhangelsk region) 27.680
Vyazemlag (Smolensk region) 27.470
Ukhtimlag (Komi ASSR) 27.006
Sevurallag (Sverdlovsk region) 26.963
Lokchimlag (Komi Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic) 26.242
Temlag (Mordovian ASSR) 22.821
Ivdellag (Sverdlovsk region) 20.162
Vorkutlag (Komi Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic) 17.923
Soroklag (Arkhangelsk region) 17.458
Vyatlag (Kirov region) 16.854
Oneglag (Arkhangelsk region) 16.733
Unjlag (Gorky region) 16.469
Kraslag (Krasnoyarsk region) 15.233
Taishetlag (Irkutsk region) 14.365
Ustvymlag (Komi Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic) 11.974
Thomasinlag (Novosibirsk region) 11.890
Gorno-Shorsky ITL (Altai Territory) 11.670
Norillag (Krasnoyarsk region) 11.560
Kuloylag (Arkhangelsk region) 10.642
Raichichlag (Khabarovsk Territory) 8.711
Arkhbumlag (Arkhangelsk region) 7.900
Luga camp (Leningrad region) 6.174
Bukachachlag (Chita region) 5.945
Prorvlag (Lower Volga) 4.877
Likovlag (Moscow region) 4.556
South Harbor (Moscow region) 4.376
Stalin station (Moscow region) 2.727
Dmitrovsky Mechanical Plant (Moscow region) 2.273
Construction No. 211 (Ukrainian SSR) 1.911
Transit prisoners 9.283
Total 1.317.195

However, as I wrote above, in addition to the ITL, there were also ITC - corrective labor colonies. Until the fall of 1938, they, together with the prisons, were subordinate to the Department of Places of Detention (OMP) of the NKVD. Therefore, for the years 1935–1938 we have so far been able to find only joint statistics:




Since 1939, penitentiary colonies were under the jurisdiction of the Gulag, and prisons were under the jurisdiction of the Main Prison Directorate (GTU) of the NKVD.




Number of prisoners in prisons


350.538
190.266
487.739
277.992
235.313
155.213
279.969
261.500
306.163
275.850 281.891
195.582
437.492
298.081
237.246
177.657
272.113
278.666
323.492
256.771 225.242
196.028
332.936
262.464
248.778
191.309
269.526
268.117
326.369
239.612 185.514
217.819
216.223
217.327
196.119
218.245
263.819
253.757
360.878
228.031
Year1st of JanuaryJanuaryMarchMayJulySeptemberDecember
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
352.508
186.278
470.693
268.532
237.534
151.296
275.510
245.146
293.135
280.374
178.258
401.146
229.217
201.547
170.767
267.885
191.930
259.078
349.035
228.258
186.278
434.871
247.404
221.669
171.708
272.486
235.092
290.984
284.642
230.614

The information in the table is given for the middle of each month. In addition, again for particularly stubborn anti-Stalinists, a separate column provides information for January 1 of each year (highlighted in red), taken from an article by A. Kokurin posted on the Memorial website. This article, among other things, provides links to specific archival documents. In addition, those interested can read an article by the same author in the magazine “Military Historical Archive”.


Now we can compile a summary table of the number of prisoners in the USSR under Stalin:



It cannot be said that these figures are some kind of revelation. Since 1990, this type of data has been presented in a number of publications. Thus, in an article by L. Ivashov and A. Emelin, published in 1991, it is stated that the total number of prisoners in camps and colonies is 1.03. 1940 was 1.668.200 people, as of June 22, 1941 – 2.3 million; as of July 1, 1944 – 1.2 million .


V. Nekrasov in his book “Thirteen “Iron” People’s Commissars” reports that “in places of deprivation of liberty” in 1933 there were 334 thousand prisoners, in 1934 - 510 thousand, in 1935 - 991 thousand, in 1936 - 1296 thousand; on December 21, 1944 in camps and colonies - 1.450.000 ; on March 24, 1953 in the same place - 2.526.402 .


According to A. Kokurin and N. Petrov (especially revealing, since both authors are associated with the Memorial society, and N. Petrov is even an employee of Memorial), as of 1.07. 1944 in the camps and colonies of the NKVD there were about 1.2 million prisoners, and in NKVD prisons on the same date - 204.290 . As of 12/30. 1945 in the forced labor camps of the NKVD there were about 640 thousand prisoners, in correctional labor colonies - about 730 thousand, in prisons - about 250 thousand, in the bullpen – about 38 thousand, in juvenile colonies - about 21 thousand, in special camps and NKVD prisons in Germany - about 84 thousand .


Finally, here are data on the number of prisoners in places of deprivation of liberty subordinate to the territorial authorities of the Gulag, taken directly from the already mentioned Memorial website:


January 1935
January 1937
1.01.1939
1.01.1941
1.01.1945
1.01.1949
1.01.1953
307.093
375.376
381.581
434.624
745.171
1.139.874
741.643


So, let's summarize - during the entire period of Stalin's reign, the number of prisoners simultaneously in prison never exceeded 2 million 760 thousand (naturally, not counting German, Japanese and other prisoners of war). Thus, there can be no talk of any “tens of millions of Gulag prisoners.”


Let us now calculate the number of prisoners per capita. On January 1, 1941, as can be seen from the table above, the total number of prisoners in the USSR was 2,400,422 people. The exact population of the USSR at this time is unknown, but is usually estimated at 190–195 million. Thus we get from 1230 to 1260 prisoners for every 100 thousand population. In January 1950, the number of prisoners in the USSR was 2,760,095 people - the maximum figure for the entire period of Stalin's reign. The population of the USSR at this time numbered 178 million 547 thousand. We get 1546


Now let's calculate a similar indicator for the modern United States. Currently, there are two types of prisons: jail- an approximate analogue of our temporary detention facilities, in jail those under investigation are held, and those sentenced to short terms are also serving their sentences, and prison- the prison itself. So, at the end of 1999 in prisons 1,366,721 people were held in jails– 687,973 (see: Bureau of Legal Statistics website), which gives a total of 2,054,694. The population of the United States at the end of 1999 was approximately 275 million (see: US population), therefore, we get 747 prisoners per 100 thousand population.


Yes, half as much as Stalin, but not ten times. It’s somehow undignified for a power that has taken upon itself to “protect human rights” on a global scale. And if we take into account the growth rate of this indicator - when this article was first published, it was (as of mid-1998) 693 prisoners per 100 thousand American population, 1990–1998. average annual increase in the number of inhabitants jails – 4,9%, prisons- 6.9%, then, you see, in ten years the overseas friends of our domestic Stalin-haters will catch up and overtake the Stalinist USSR.


By the way, in one Internet discussion an objection was raised - they say that these figures include all arrested Americans, including those who were detained for several days. Let me emphasize once again: by the end of 1999, there were more than 2 million prisoners who are serving time or are in pre-trial detention. As for the arrests, they were made in 1998 14.5 million(see: FBI report).


Now a few words about the total number of people who were imprisoned under Stalin. Of course, if you take the table above and add up the rows, the result will be incorrect, since most of the Gulag prisoners were sentenced to more than a year. However, to a certain extent, the following note allows us to estimate the number of those who went through the Gulag:



To the head of the Gulag of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs, Major General Egorov S.E.


In total, 11 million units of archival materials are stored in the Gulag units, of which 9.5 million are the personal files of prisoners.


Head of the Gulag Secretariat of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs
Major Podymov

How many of the prisoners were “political”

It is fundamentally wrong to believe that the majority of those imprisoned under Stalin were “victims of political repression”:


Number of people convicted of counter-revolutionary and other especially dangerous state crimes


21724
2656
2336
4151
6851
7547
12267
16211
25853
114443
105683
73946
138903
59451
185846
219418
429311
205509
54666
65727
65000
88809
68887
73610
116681
117943
76581
72552
64509
54466
49142
25824
7894 1817
166
2044
5724
6274
8571
11235
15640
24517
58816
63269
36017
54262
5994
33601
23719
1366
16842
3783
2142
1200
7070
4787
649
1647
1498
666
419
10316
5225
3425
773
38 2587
1219


437
696
171
1037
3741
14609
1093
29228
44345
11498
46400
30415
6914
3289
2888
2288
1210
5249
1188
821
668
957
458
298
300
475
599
591
273 35829
6003
4794
12425
15995
17804
26036
33757
56220
208069
180696
141919
239664
78999
267076
274670
790665
554258
63889
71806
75411
124406
78441
75109
123248
123294
78810
73269
75125
60641
54775
28800
8403 2634397 413512 215942 4060306
Yearhighest
measure
camps, colonies
and prisons
link and
expulsion
other
measures
Total
convicted
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
9701
1962
414
2550
2433
990
2363
869
2109
20201
10651
2728
2154
2056
1229
1118
353074
328618
2552
1649
8011
23278
3579
3029
4252
2896
1105

8
475
1609
1612
198
Total 799455

By “other measures” we mean credit for time spent in custody, forced treatment and deportation abroad. For 1953, information is provided only for the first half of the year.


From this table it follows that there were slightly more “repressed” than indicated in the above report addressed to Khrushchev - 799,455 sentenced to capital punishment instead of 642,980 and 2,634,397 sentenced to imprisonment instead of 2,369,220. However, this difference is relatively small - the numbers are of the same order.


In addition, there is one more point - it is very possible that a fair number of criminals have been squeezed into the table above. The fact is that on one of the certificates stored in the archives, on the basis of which this table was compiled, there is a pencil note: “Total convicts for 1921–1938. – 2,944,879 people, of which 30% (1,062 thousand) are criminals.”. In this case, the total number of “repressed” does not exceed 3 million. However, to finally clarify this issue, additional work with sources is necessary.


Let's now see what percentage the “repressed” made up of the total number of inhabitants of the Gulag:


Composition of the NKVD Gulag camps for


Yearquantity% to all
composition of the camps
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
135.190
118.256
105.849
104.826
185.324
454.432
444.999
420.293
407.988
345.397
268.861
289.351
333.883
427.653
416.156
420.696
578.912*
475.976
480.766
465.256
26.5
16.3
12.6
12.6
18.6
34.5
33.1
28.7
29.6
35.6
40.7
41.2
59.2
54.3
38.0
34.9
22.7
31.0
28.1
26.9

* In camps and colonies.


Let us now consider in more detail the composition of the inhabitants of the Gulag at some moments of its existence.


Composition of prisoners in correctional labor camps for the crimes charged
(as of April 1, 1940)


32,87

1,39
0,12
1,00
0,45
1,29
2,04
0,35
14,10
10,51
1,04
0,58

3,65

2,32
1,10
0,23

14,37

7,11
2,50
1,55
3,21

1,85
7,58
5,25
11,98
17,39
0,87
3,29
0,90 100,00
Charged crimesNumber %
Counter-revolutionary crimes
including:
Trotskyists, Zinovievites, rightists
treason
terror
sabotage
espionage
sabotage
leaders of counter-revolutionary organizations
anti-Soviet agitation
other counter-revolutionary crimes
family members of traitors to the Motherland
without instructions
417381

17621
1473
12710
5737
16440
25941
4493
178979
133423
13241
7323

Particularly dangerous crimes against the order of government
including:
banditry and robbery
defectors
other crimes
46374

29514
13924
2936

Other crimes against management order
including:
hooliganism
speculation
violation of the passport law
other crimes
182421

90291
31652
19747
40731

Theft of social property (law of August 7, 1932)

Crimes against the person
Property crimes
Socially harmful and socially dangerous element
Military crimes
Other crimes
No instructions
23549
96193
66708
152096
220835
11067
41706
11455
Total 1269785

REFERENCE
on the number of people convicted of counter-revolutionary crimes and banditry,
held in camps and colonies of the Ministry of Internal Affairs as of July 1, 1946.


100 755.255 100 1.371.98657,5

22,3
2,0
1,2
0,6
0,4
4,3
4,2
13,9
1,0
0,4
0,6
0,1
1,9 162.024

66.144
3.094
2.038
770
610
4.533
10.833
56.396
2.835
1.080
259
457
1.323 21,4

8,7
0,4
0,3
0,1
0,1
0,6
1,4
7,5
0,4
0,1
-
0,1
0,2 516.592

203.607
15.499
9.429
4.551
3.119
30.944
36.932
142.048
8.772
3.735
4.031
1.469
7.705

By the nature of the crimeIn the camps % In the colonies % Total %
General presence of convicts 616.731 100
Of these, for criminal offenses,
including:
Treason to the Motherland (Article 58-1)
Espionage (58-6)
Terrorism
Sabotage (58-7)
Sabotage (58-9)
Kr sabotage (58-14)
Participation in a/c conspiracy (58–2, 3, 4, 5, 11)
Anti-Soviet agitation (58-10)
Polit. bandit. (58–2, 5, 9)
Illegal border crossing
Smuggling
Family members of traitors to the Motherland
Socially dangerous elements
354.568

137.463
12.405
7.391
3.781
2.509
26.411
26.099
85.652
5.937
2.655
3.722
1.012
6.382

37,6

14,8
1,1
0,7
0,3
0,2
2,3
2,7
10,4
0,6
0,3
0,3
0,1
0,6


Head of the Gulag Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR
Aleshinsky
Pom. Head of the Gulag Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR
Yatsevich



Composition of Gulag prisoners by nature of crimes
(as of January 1, 1951)



285288
17786
7099
2135
3185
1074

39266
61670
12515
2824
2756
8423
475976
49250
591
416
194
65
91

7316
37731
432
432
90
1948
103942


42342

371390
31916

3041
1089
207
8438
3883
35464
32718
7484
12969

989
343
29457
1527
429

13033
6221

11921
62729
1057791
29951

265665
41289

594
901
161
6674
3028
25730
60759
33115
9105

32
73
9672
604
83

6615
6711

23597
77936
890437

1533767 994379
CrimesTotalincl.
in the camps
incl.
in the colonies
Counter-revolutionary crimes
Treason to the Motherland (Article 58-1a, b)
Espionage (Art. 58-1a, b, 6; Art. 193-24)
Terror (v.58-8)
Terrorist intent
Sabotage (v.58-9)
Sabotage (vv.58-7)
Counter-revolutionary sabotage (except for convicted
for refusing to work in the camps and running away) (Article 58-14)
Counter-revolutionary sabotage (for refusal
from work in the camp) (vv.58-14)
Counter-revolutionary sabotage (for escaping
from places of detention) (Article 58-14)
Participation in anti-Soviet conspiracies, anti-Soviet
organizations and groups (Article 58, paragraphs 2, 3, 4, 5, 11)
Anti-Soviet agitation (Articles 58–10, 59-7)
Insurgency and political banditry (Article 58, paragraph 2; 59, paragraphs 2, 3, 3 b)
Members of the families of traitors to the Motherland (Article 58-1c)
Socially dangerous element
Other counter-revolutionary crimes
Total number of people convicted of counter-revolutionary crimes

334538
18337
7515
2329
3250
1165

46582
99401
12947
3256
2846
10371
579918

Criminal offenses
Theft of social property (Decree of August 7, 1932)
According to the Decree of June 4, 1947 “On strengthening security
personal property of citizens"
According to the Decree of June 4, 1947 “On criminal liability
for theft of state and public property"
Speculation

committed outside of prison
Banditry and armed robbery (art. 59–3, 167),
committed while serving a sentence

not in places of detention
Intentional murders (Articles 136, 137, 138) committed
in places of detention
Illegal border crossing (Articles 59–10, 84)
Smuggling activities (Articles 59–9, 83)
Cattle theft (Article 166)
Repeat offenders (Article 162-c)
Property crimes (Articles 162-178)
Hooliganism (Article 74 and Decree of August 10, 1940)
Violation of the law on passporting (Article 192-a)
For escapes from places of detention, exile and deportation (Article 82)
For unauthorized departure (escape) from places of mandatory
settlements (Decree of November 26, 1948)
For harboring those evicted and fleeing places
compulsory settlement, or complicity
Socially harmful element
Desertion (Article 193-7)
Self-harm (art. 193-12)
Looting (v.193-27)
Other military crimes
(Article 193, except paragraphs 7, 12, 17, 24, 27)
Illegal possession of weapons (Article 182)
Official and economic crimes
(Article 59-3c, 109–121, 193 paragraphs 17, 18)
According to the Decree of June 26, 1940 (unauthorized departure
from enterprises and institutions and absenteeism)
According to the Decrees of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR
(except those listed above)
Other criminal offenses
Total criminal convictions

72293

637055
73205

3635
1920
368
15112
6911
61194
93477
40599
22074

1021
416
39129
2131
512

19648
12932

35518
140665
1948228

Total: 2528146

Thus, among the prisoners held in the Gulag camps, the majority were criminals, and the “repressed”, as a rule, were less than 1/3. The exception is the years 1944–1948, when this category received worthy additions in the form of Vlasovites, policemen, elders and other “fighters against communist tyranny.” The percentage of “political” ones in correctional labor colonies was even smaller.

Mortality among prisoners

Available archival documents make it possible to illuminate this issue.


Mortality of prisoners in Gulag camps


7283
13267
67297
26295
28328
20595
25376
90546
50502
46665
100997
248877
166967
60948
43848
18154
35668
15739
14703
15587
13806 3,03
4,40
15,94
4,26
3,62
2,48
2,79
7,83
3,79
3,28
6,93
20,74
20,27
8,84
6,66
2,58
3,72
1,20
1,00
0,96
0,80
YearAverage quantity
prisoners
Died %
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1949
1950
1951
1952
240.350
301.500
422.304
617.895
782.445
830.144
908.624
1.156.781
1.330.802
1.422.466
1.458.060
1.199.785
823.784
689.550
658.202
704.868
958.448
1.316.331
1.475.034
1.622.485
1.719.586

I have not yet found data for 1948.


Mortality of prisoners in prisons


7036
3277
7468
29788
20792
8252
6834
2271
4142
1442
982
668
424 2,61
1,00
2,02
11,77
10,69
3,87
2,63
0,84
1,44
0,56
0,46
0,37
0,27
YearAverage quantity
prisoners
Died %
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
269.393
328.486
369.613
253.033
194.415
213.403
260.328
269.141
286.755
255.711
214.896
181.712
158.647

The average number of prisoners is taken as the arithmetic mean between the figures for January 1 and December 31.


Mortality in the colonies on the eve of the war was lower than in the camps. For example, in 1939 it was 2.30%


Mortality of prisoners in Gulag colonies



Thus, as the facts show, contrary to the assurances of the “accusers,” the mortality rate of prisoners under Stalin was kept at a very low level. However, during the war the situation of Gulag prisoners worsened. Nutritional standards were significantly reduced, which immediately led to a sharp increase in mortality. By 1944, the food standards for Gulag prisoners were slightly increased: for bread - by 12%, cereals - 24%, meat and fish - 40%, fats - 28% and vegetables - by 22%, after which the mortality rate began to decrease noticeably . But even after this, their calorie content remained approximately 30% lower than pre-war nutrition standards.


However, even in the most difficult years of 1942 and 1943, the mortality rate of prisoners was about 20% per year in camps and about 10% per year in prisons, and not 10% per month, as A. Solzhenitsyn, for example, claims. By the beginning of the 50s, in camps and colonies it fell below 1% per year, and in prisons - below 0.5%.


In conclusion, a few words should be said about the notorious Special camps (special camps), created in accordance with Resolution of the Council of Ministers of the USSR No. 416-159ss of February 21, 1948. These camps (as well as the Special prisons that already existed by that time) were supposed to concentrate all those sentenced to imprisonment for espionage, sabotage, terrorism, as well as Trotskyists, right-wingers, Mensheviks, Socialist Revolutionaries, anarchists, nationalists, white emigrants, members of anti-Soviet organizations and groups and “persons who pose a danger due to their anti-Soviet connections.” Prisoners of special guards were to be used for hard physical work.



Reference
on the presence of a special contingent held in special camps on January 1, 1952.


№№ Name
special
camps
Spi-
they
Diver-
santa
Ter-
ror
Trots-
cysts
Pra-
high
Men-
sheviks
Social RevolutionariesAnar-
hists
National
nalists
White-
emig-
welts
Participant
antisov.
org.
Dangerous
elem.
Total
1 Mineral 4012 284 1020 347 7 36 63 23 11688 46 4398 8367 30292
2 Mountain 1884 237 606 84 6 5 4 1 9546 24 2542 5279 20218
3 Dubravny 1088 397 699 278 5 51 70 16 7068 223 4708 9632 24235

4 Stepnoy 1460 229 714 62 16 4 3 10682 42 3067 6209 22488
5 Coastal 2954 559 1266 109 6 5 13574 11 3142 10363 31989
6 River 2539 480 1429 164 2 2 8 14683 43 2292 13617 35459
7 Ozerny 2350 671 1527 198 12 6 2 8 7625 379 5105 14441 32342
8 Sandy 2008 688 1203 211 4 23 20 9 13987 116 8014 12571 38854
9 Kamyshevy 174 118 471 57 1 1 2 1 3973 5 558 2890 8251
Total 18475 3663 8935 1510 41 140 190 69 93026 884 33826 83369 244128

Deputy Head of the 2nd Department of the 2nd Directorate of the Gulag, Major Maslov


The mortality rate of prisoners in special prisons can be judged from the following document:



№№
p.p.
Camp nameFor cr. crimeFor criminal
crime
TotalDied in IV
sq. 1950
Released
1 Mineral 30235 2678 32913 91 479
2 Mountain 15072 10 15082 26 1
3 Dubravny
4 Stepnoy 18056 516 18572 124 131
5 Coastal 24676 194 24870 NoNo
6 River 15653 301 15954 25 No
7 Ozerny 27432 2961 30393 162 206
8 Sandy 20988 182 21170 24 21
9 Lugovoy 9611 429 10040 35 15

As can be seen from the table, in the 8 special camps for which information is given, out of 168,994 prisoners in the fourth quarter of 1950, 487 (0.29%) died, which, in annual terms, corresponds to 1.15%. That is, only slightly more than in ordinary camps. Contrary to popular belief, the special camps were not “death camps” in which dissident intellectuals were supposedly exterminated, and the most numerous contingent of their inhabitants were “nationalists” - the forest brothers and their accomplices.


A. Dugin. Stalinism: legends and facts // Slovo. 1990, No. 7.° C.24.
3. V. N. Zemskov. GULAG (historical and sociological aspect) // Sociological studies. 1991, No. 6.° C.15.
4. V. N. Zemskov. Prisoners in the 1930s: socio-demographic problems // Domestic History. 1997, No. 4.° C.67.
5. A. Dugin. Stalinism: legends and facts // Slovo. 1990, No. 7.° C.23; archival

Beginning in 1920 and ending only thirty years later, Stalin’s repressions were part of a long and purposeful policy of Joseph Vissarionovich and his circle. Their targets were opponents of the government in force at that time.

The word "repression" in Latin means suppression, punishment applied by the state and government.

During the reign of Joseph Vissarionovich, repressions were carried out actively, massively and unquestioningly. What are the reasons for the punishments used in the USSR? Stalin's repressions were carried out in accordance with the articles of the Criminal Code in force at that time. Here are some of their names: terror, espionage, terrorist intentions, sabotage, sabotage, counter-revolutionary sabotage (for refusing to work in a camp, for escaping from prison), participation in conspiracies, anti-Soviet groups and organizations, agitation against the current government, family political banditry and insurrection. However, to understand the essence of these articles, you need to read them in detail.

What were the reasons that caused Stalin's repressions?

Disputes on this topic continue to this day. Some historians believe that initially the repressions pursued only one goal - the elimination of the political opponents of Joseph Vissarionovich. Others believe that they were one of the methods of intimidating and pacifying the Soviet people, aimed at further strengthening the current government. And some even put forward a rather dubious version that the Soviet Union needed free money to build highways and canals. There is a point of view that believes that Stalin’s repressions pursued anti-Semitic goals.

Who initiated mass incarceration?

Despite the fact that the main culprits of the repressions were considered Stalin’s close associates: (General Secretary of State Security) and L. Beria (Commissioner of Internal Affairs), who allegedly conveyed incorrect information, most historians argue that the repressions were the work of Joseph alone Vissarionovich. He was provided with reliable and verified information about future prisoners.

Since 1930, the USSR has created a system of camps for Gulag prisoners, which included special settlements (intended for people sent into exile), colonies (for imprisonment for at least three years), camps (for prisoners who received a fairly long sentence). A little later, the Bureau was included in this system. They dealt with convicts who were sentenced to forced labor without imprisonment.

Victims of repression

From declassified archives it is known that for counter-revolutionary acts the number of people sentenced to serve their sentences by 1954 totaled 3,777,380 people, with 642,980 prisoners receiving capital punishment. During the period of repression, more than 1.5 million people convicted of both political and criminal offenses died.

Few victims of Stalin's repressions were rehabilitated during the Leader's lifetime; many were able to achieve this only after his death. The persons who led the arrests (Beria, Yezhov, Yagoda, etc.) were subsequently convicted themselves. During perestroika and the post-Soviet period, almost all victims of repression were rehabilitated, with the exception of those responsible for mass arrests. The state provided monetary compensation for the loss of valuable property during the “dekulakization” carried out in the 1930s during forced collectivization.

It is necessary to remember this bitter history of the past and try to do everything to ensure that in the future nothing reminds of the period in the life of the Soviet people, which can be succinctly described in two words: “Stalin. Repression."



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