Aggressive,
Relentless Russification
 |
 |
| One
survivor's account |
The few deportees who afterwards succeeded in escaping from the
settlements have attested under oath the truth of the statements they have
given of the procedure of deportation. A Lithuanian deportee gave the following
account: "After a month's journey, we, the male deportees, were detrained in
the Krasnoyarsk region, at Kraslag, lagpunkt 7. On getting out from the train,
the NKVD functionaries expressed their joy at the arrival of a new transport of
bourgeois and fascist sons-bitches who in their own interest would be glad to
meet their end here. Besides all objects of value, money and clothes, even such
things as pocket knives, shaving apparatuses and small religious crosses were
taken away. Clad in rags, we were divided up in brigades and sent into the
tayga (virgin forest) to cut trees for railway-sleepers for a line under
construction. Our day's food-ration consisted of 400 g of bread and a thin soup
of frozen and rotten potatoes without any fat. We had to sleep in unheated
huts, without blankets, on bare boards or on the floor. When winter came and
the temperature fell to -50°C, mortality increased in a terrific manner. It
was impossible to bury the dead, because the ground was frozen to a great
depth, so they were heaped up in a corner of the camp. As early as Christmas
1941 nearly all the deportees of our transport had died." |
| Peters' parents happened not to be home at the fateful
hour. |
From the bills of lading it may be seen that between June 15
and June 27, 1941, a total of 901 goods-vans with deportees left Latvia. Of
these, 427 had carried prisoners. It seems that among them were also the heads
of the families of the deportees. A telephone message, received in Moscow on
June 13 at 2:30 by Commissar Serov, revealed that it was planned to deport
16,200 people from Latvia. The total number of people actually deported may be
reckoned to have been 15,600. Thus, a few hundred who happened to be
absent from their homes at the fateful hour or who had changed residence
succeeded in escaping deportation. The registration of deportees, which
was afterwards carried out, yielded detailed information about 15,081
deportees. Among them were 6,447 men, 5,302 women and 3,332 children under the
age of 16, this latter figure including also 291 infants under the age of 1,
and 315 elderly people over 70 years old. When the Red Army, in June, 1941,
retreated from Latvia, it engulfed in its wake also motor-drivers, railway-men,
sailors, children from summer rest-homes and nurseries and soldiers of the
Baltic Territorial Corps, especially officers, a total of about 13,000
persons. |
| The
sovietization of the Latvian Army |
After the occupation of Latvia by the Russians the units of the
Latvian National Army were reduced to one corps consisting of two divisions and
the military order and regulations of the Russian Red Army with its political
instructors (politruks) were introduced in it. As early as September 10, 1940,
several hundred Latvian officers and several thousand Latvian privates were
dismissed and replaced by soldiers of the Red Army. In spring 1941 the two
Latvian divisions were sent to camp at Litene. It was here that 120 Latvian
officers, mostly of the higher ranks, were told off by roll-call, put into
lorries and, surrounded by chekists and Red Army soldiers, disarmed, arrested
and deported. Also this scheme had already been planned early in spring 1941.
Brigadier Blauberg of the Territorial Baltic Corps, on April 12, issued a
secret order No. 02833 to all army prosecutors of the divisions, reminding them
to shadow all soldiers of the former national army who were left in the
national units of the Baltic Corps. ". . . In these national units there are
individuals who originated from a socially alien element, reactionary and
hostile to the Soviet rule and the Red Army. These elements, by abusing the
backwardness of individual fighters, their religious superstitions, national
ideas, insufficient understanding of the new socialistic order, are attempting
in all ways to wage an anti-Soviet and counter-revolutionary activity." |
| The
tragic statistics |
By adding those, the total of deported Latvians in the years
1940 and 1941 amounts to 35,000 or 1.8% of the population of Latvia. This
means that in the case of a Soviet occupation and in proportion to the
population: 2,400,000 people would be deported from the U.S.A., 865,000 - from
Great Britain and 205,000 - from Canada. All trades and social groups,
independent of nationality, sex and age, were affected by this deportation. Of
all the professions and occupations, decimated by the deportation, the army
lost 20 %, the police forces - 19 %, the judges and lawyers - 13 % and the
number of professors of higher educational institutions was reduced by 8 %.
Moreover, 372 school rectors and teachers, 1,953 pupils, many authors, artists
and scientists were banished. |
| Peters' parents were listed for the next deportation. |
This violent measure of June 13 and 14 was to be the
introduction to a still more extensive deportation which according to the plans
of the NKVD was to include several hundred thousands of Baltic citizens and
which was to take place on June 27 and 28, 1941. However, the beginning of
the Soviet-German war prevented the implementation of this second mass
deportation. Documents found in the University of Latvia after the Soviet
occupation authorities had left, revealed that the whole professional staff had
been entered on three nominal lists, bearing the following headings:
nationalists and fascists, neutrals, and sympathizers of the Soviet Government.
The first-mentioned group was marked out for deportation on June 27 and
28. |
| More
than 20% of the Latvian government was deported on June 13/14 |
Among the deportees of June 13/14, 1941, were the following
members of the last Latvian Saeima (Parliament): J. Visna, R. Dukurs, A.
Veckains, P. Lejins - Social Democrats; State President K. Ulmanis, H. Celmins,
General J. Balodis, H. Dzelzitis - Peasant Party; M. Skujenieks - Progressive;
G. Milbergs, P. Apinis - New-settlers; Berta Pipina - Democr. Centre; Arv.
Bergs - Nationalist; P. Leikerts - Indep. Peasants; 0. Rancans - Letgall.
Catholics; J. Trasuns - Letgall. Progressive; the rabbis M. Nuroks and M.
Dubins - of the Jewish Group; deputies M. Kalistratov, Russian starover, and T.
I. Muiznieks, Soc. Dem., were shot. Thus, the loss amounted to 20 % of the
total number of Saeima members. The number of deported parliament deputies
increases, if we add the members of the Constitutional Assembly and of the
first three Saeimas. |
Autumn, 1944 The second, and final, Soviet occupation Throughout the Soviet
occupation... Aggressive Russification of Latvia |
The second Soviet occupation, which was continued since autumn
1944, shows that the true purpose of these administrative deportations is
completely to exterminate the entire middle class. In an agricultural country
this means the liquidation of the peasant class (the so-called kulaks) also, in
order to completely carry out the programme of agricultural collectivization
which provides only for the existence of "poor peasants". According to the data
of the 15th Conference of the Russian Bolshevik party in 1926, only those
peasant were regarded as poor whose yearly income did not exceed 39 dollars,
while a well-off peasant's income was fixed at 46 dollars. The rest (kulaks)
were considered to be enemies of the people. Yet before the annexation of the
Baltic States, all three Baltic "people's parliaments", under the protection of
the occupation army, on July 22, 1940, passed resolutions on land
nationalization. Seven days later, a special Bill of Land Reform was passed
which provided the maximum of 30 ha of land to be used by a family. At the same
time, lots up to 10 ha each were apportioned to new-settlers from the fund of
nationalized land. This new agrarian law created two different classes of
peasants: working peasants with lots ranging from 1 to 10 ha and "kulaks" whose
farms were larger. After the second Soviet occupation, it was decreed, on
September 7, 1944, for reasons of propaganda, to increase the land norm of the
working peasant to 15 ha, while the maximum area tilled by kulaks was reduced
from 30 ha to 15-20 ha. In 1935, 44.5 % of the Latvian farmers had a landed
property from 1 to 10 ha each, or 59 % of them 1 to 15 ha each. This meant
that at least 41% of farming peasant and their families were now by law
included in the category of enemies of the people and thus predestined for
deportation. This scheme continues to work in all three Baltic countries
without interruption ever since 1944, the vacuums created by the deported Balts
being filled up by infiltrating Russians and other Soviet Peoples. |
| |
| The
List |
The list published here contains the names of those Latvian
citizens who were deported from Latvia to Soviet Russia during the Soviet
occupation of 1940-1941. |
| |
The list was compiled in Riga in 1942, during the German
occupation. When in 1941, the latter superseded the Soviet occupation, some
Latvian organizations: the Latvian Red Cross, the Latvian Statistical Board and
the Information Bureau of the Latvian Relief ("Tautas palidziba"), made an
attempt towards establishing the losses of human life which the Latvian people
had suffered during the Soviet occupation. A general inquiry was launched, in
the course of which the relatives and friends of missing or deported Latvians
reported their family members and acquaintances who had been deported, murdered
by the Cheka or who were simply missing, attesting their statements with their
own signatures. The questionnaires collected were checked by the Latvian
Statistical Board and the data statistically compiled. All names included in
this list were reported by January 20, 1942. It must, however, be taken into
consideration that a number of deportees had no relatives or friends to send in
their names and make the necessary statements. The registration of losses of
human life was continued afterwards and by January 1, 1943, the total of
Latvian victims, deported or murdered by the bolsheviks, exceeded 34,000.
The published list must not be regarded as complete, containing, as it does,
only some 30,000 names. Not included are the names of those murdered, nor of
those who were registered but who were recovered before January 20, 1942. Among
the names in this list will be found quite a few persons who as fellow
travellers of the communists of their own free will followed the retreating Red
Army, but were, for tactical reasons, reported by their relatives as deported.
Part of them returned when the Russians occupied Latvia for the second time,
having been forcibly enrolled in the Red Army. |
| |
The original of the list published here was in its time sent to
the International Red Cross in Switzerland to be a guide in tracing of fates of
the deportees. |
| |
Now, after 40 years of bolshevik terror, the number of
perished and deported Latvians has multiplied, by far exceeding the number of
names contained in this list. Those additional thousands of names are kept in
the secret files of the NKVD. |
|
|
|