Purges of the Communist Party in the Soviet Union (russian: "Чистка партийных рядов", ', "cleansing of the party ranks") were Soviet political events, especially during the 1920s, in which periodic reviews of members of the
Communist Party were conducted by other members and the security organs to get rid of "undesirables".
Such reviews would start with a short autobiography from the reviewed person and then an interrogation of him or her by the purge commission, as well as by the attending audience. Although many people were victims of the purge throughout this decade, the general Russian public was not aware of the purge until 1937.
Although the term "
purge" is largely associated with
Stalinism
Stalinism is the means of governing and Marxist-Leninist policies implemented in the Soviet Union from 1927 to 1953 by Joseph Stalin. It included the creation of a one-party totalitarian police state, rapid industrialization, the theory ...
because the greatest of the purges happened during
Stalin's rule, the
Bolsheviks carried out their first major purge of the party ranks as early as 1921. Approximately 220,000 members were purged or left the party. The Bolsheviks stated as justification the need to get rid of the members who had joined the party simply to be on the winning side. The major criteria were
social origins (members of
working classes were normally accepted without question) and contributions to the revolutionary cause.
The first Party purge of the
Joseph Stalin era took place in 1929–1930 in accordance with a resolution of the
XVI Party Conference. Purges became deadly under Stalin. More than 10 percent of the party members were purged. At the same time, a significant number of new industrial workers joined the Party.
Operation Spring
Stalin ordered Operation Spring – the repression, arrest or execution of officers of the
Red Army who had served previously in the
Russian Imperial Army, of civilians who had been sympathetic to the
White movement, or of other subversives rounded up by the
OGPU
The Joint State Political Directorate (OGPU; russian: Объединённое государственное политическое управление) was the intelligence and state security service and secret police of the Soviet Union f ...
. 3,496 people were arrested and 130 were executed in several regions, being accused of "preparing uprisings in anticipation of intervention".
Business
The organizer of the initiated case "Spring" was the leader of the OGPU
Izrail Leplevsky
Izrail Moiseyevich Leplevsky (Russian: Израиль Моисеевич Леплевский; 1894 – July 28, 1938) was a Soviet security officer. He was part of the Intelligence Service and Secret police apparatus in the Ukrainian Soviet Social ...
. With the support of the deputy chairman of the OGPU
Genrikh Yagoda, he inflated the scale of "Spring" to the scale of the "case of the Industrial Party."
In total, according to some reports, more than 3,000 people were arrested, among them
Andrei Snesarev, A.L. Rodendorf,
Alexander Andreyevich Svechin
Alexander is a male given name. The most prominent bearer of the name is Alexander the Great, the king of the Ancient Greek kingdom of Macedonia who created one of the largest empires in ancient history.
Variants listed here are Aleksandar, Al ...
,
Pavel Sytin, F.F. Novitsky,
Aleksander Verkhovsky, I. Galkin, Yu. K. Gravitsky,
Vladimir Olderogge
Vladimir Alexandrovich Olderogge (August 5, 1873 – May 27, 1931) was a Russian and Soviet military leader. He was commander of the Eastern Front of the Red Army.
Biography
Olderogge was born July 24 (August 5), 1873 in Lublin to a Luther ...
, V. A. Yablochkin,
Nikolai Sollogub,
Aleksandr Baltiysky
Alexander is a male given name. The most prominent bearer of the name is Alexander the Great, the king of the Ancient Greek kingdom of Macedonia who created one of the largest empires in ancient history.
Variants listed here are Aleksandar, Al ...
,
Mikhail Dmitriyevich Bonch-Bruyevich
Mikhail Dmitriyevich Bonch-Bruyevich (russian: Михаи́л Дми́триевич Бонч-Бруе́вич; – 3 August 1956) was an Imperial Russian and Soviet military commander (Lieutenant General from 1944). His family belonged to ...
, N. A. Morozov,
Aleksei Gutor
Aleksei Yevgenievich Gutor (30 August 1868 – 13 August 1938) was a Russian lieutenant-general and Front commander during the First World War.
Born in Voronezh in a noble family, Gutor joined the Imperial Army. During the First World War Gutor ...
, A. Kh. Bazarevsky,
Mikhail Matiyasevich
Mikhail Stepanovich Matiyasevich (Matiasevich) (Smolensk, May 23 une 41878 – Kyiv, August 5, 1941) was a Soviet military commander, who commanded several military units of the Red Army during the Russian Civil War.
Biography
From the nobili ...
, V. F. Rzhechitsky, V. N. Gatovsky, P. M. Sharangovich, D. D. Zuev and others.
Historiography
This case gained fame with the release in 2000 of the book of the Ukrainian historian Yaroslav Tinchenko “The Calvary of Russian Officers”, which essentially raised this topic for the first time and made it accessible to the general reader.
Some documents relating to the operation "Spring" were published in the USSR in a two-volume collection of documents "From the archives of the Cheka, OGPU, NKVD" dedicated to this operation.
1932 to 1935
Stalin ordered the next systematic party purge in the Soviet Union in December 1932, to be performed during 1933. During this period, new memberships were suspended. A joint resolution of the Party
Central Committee
Central committee is the common designation of a standing administrative body of Communist party, communist parties, analogous to a board of directors, of both ruling and nonruling parties of former and existing socialist states. In such party org ...
and Central Revision Committee specified the criteria for purging and called for setting up special Purge Commissions, to which every communist had to report. Furthermore, this purge concerned members of the Central Committee and of the
Central Revision Committee, who previously had been immune to purges, because they were elected at
Party Congresses. In particular,
Nikolai Bukharin
Nikolai Ivanovich Bukharin (russian: Никола́й Ива́нович Буха́рин) ( – 15 March 1938) was a Bolshevik revolutionary, Soviet politician, Marxist philosopher and economist and prolific author on revolutionary theory. ...
,
Alexei Ivanovich Rykov
Alexei Ivanovich Rykov (25 February 188115 March 1938) was a Russian Bolshevik revolutionary and a Soviet politician and statesman, most prominent as premier of Russia and the Soviet Union from 1924 to 1929 and 1924 to 1930 respectively. He was ...
, and
Mikhail Tomsky were asked to defend themselves during this purge. As the purges unfolded, it became increasingly apparent that what had begun as an attempt to cleanse the party of unequipped and defecting members would culminate in nothing less than a cleansing of integral party members of all ranks. This included many prominent leading party members that had ruled the regime for over a decade. At this time, of 1.9 million members, approximately 18 percent were purged (i.e. expelled from the party).
Until 1933 those purged (totaling 800,000) were not usually arrested. (The few that were became the first waves of the
gulag forced labor system.)
But from 1934 onwards, during the
Great Purge, the connotations of the term changed, because being expelled from the party came with the possibility of arrest, with long imprisonment or execution following.
The Party Central Committee would later state that the careless methodology used resulted in serious errors and perversions which hindered the work of cleansing the party from its real enemies.
Great Purge
The most prolific period of executions occurred during the
Great Purge, from 1936 to 1938.
The Central Committee Plenum passed a resolution in 1935 declaring an end to the purges of 1933.
Sergey Kirov, leader of the Leningrad section of the Communist party, was murdered in 1934. In response, Stalin's
Great Purge saw one third of the Communist party executed or sentenced to work in labor camps. Stalin induced terror among his own party and justified it with Marxist principles. Victims of the Great Purge were placed in a losing scenario regardless of what view they took. They were required to confess their transgressions towards the party and name accomplices. Although most were innocent, many chose to name accomplices either in hopes of gaining freedom or just to stop their torture by interrogators, which was ubiquitous at the time. The prisoner most often was still punished the same whether they denied their crimes, admitted them and provided no accomplices, or admitted them and provided accomplices. It made little difference as to their fate. This can be described as a one-shot,
n-person prisoner's dilemma. The punishment remained the same regardless of the terms of confession.
The Great Purge was no less perilous for those few foreigners who attempted to assimilate into
Soviet culture. In one piece of literature, the author recalls a Soviet general describing the Great Purges as "difficult years to understand" for citizens and foreigners alike. These foreigners were treated much the same as Soviet ethnic minorities, and they were thought to be potential threats in the impending war.
Germans,
Poles
Poles,, ; singular masculine: ''Polak'', singular feminine: ''Polka'' or Polish people, are a West Slavic nation and ethnic group, who share a common history, culture, the Polish language and are identified with the country of Poland in Ce ...
,
Finns, and other westerners were shown the same fate the bourgeoisie had been dealt following the
end of
NEP. Punishments ranged from eviction and relocation to
summary execution
A summary execution is an execution in which a person is accused of a crime and immediately killed without the benefit of a full and fair trial. Executions as the result of summary justice (such as a drumhead court-martial) are sometimes include ...
.
[''Humphreys, Brendan (2018-07-03). "Ethnic and Religious Minorities in Stalin's Soviet Union: New Dimensions of Research". Scando-Slavica. 64 (2): 312–314. doi:10.1080/00806765.2018.1525320. ISSN 0080-6765.'']
1950s
Following
Stalin's death
Joseph Stalin, second leader of the Soviet Union, died on 5 March 1953 at his Kuntsevo Dacha at the age of 74, after suffering a stroke. He was given a state funeral in Moscow on 9 March, with four days of national mourning declared. The day ...
in 1953 purges as systematic campaigns of expulsion from the party ended; thereafter, the center's political control was exerted instead mainly through loss of party membership and its attendant
nomenklatura
The ''nomenklatura'' ( rus, номенклату́ра, p=nəmʲɪnklɐˈturə, a=ru-номенклатура.ogg; from la, nomenclatura) were a category of people within the Soviet Union and other Eastern Bloc countries who held various key admi ...
privileges, which effectively downgraded one's opportunities in societysee . Recalcitrant cases could be reduced to
nonpersons via
involuntary commitment
Involuntary commitment, civil commitment, or involuntary hospitalization/hospitalisation is a legal process through which an individual who is deemed by a qualified agent to have symptoms of severe mental disorder is detained in a psychiatric hos ...
to a psychiatric institution.
See also
*
Bibliography of Stalinism and the Soviet Union
*
Case of Trotskyist Anti-Soviet Military Organization
*
Moscow Trials
The Moscow trials were a series of show trials held by the Soviet Union between 1936 and 1938 at the instigation of Joseph Stalin. They were nominally directed against "Trotskyists" and members of "Right Opposition" of the Communist Party of th ...
*
Political repression in the Soviet Union
*
Purge of the Red Army in 1941
*
Racism in the Soviet Union
References
Literature
*
*Ganin A.V. Everyday life of the General Staffists under Lenin and Trotsky. - M., 2016.
*Ganin A.V. In the Shadow of "Spring." Former officers under repression of the early 1930s // Homeland. 2014. - No. 6. - S. 95-101.
*Ganin A.V. Gambit Monighetti. The incredible adventures of the "Italian" in Russia // Homeland. 2011. - No. 10. - P. 122–125.
*Ganin A.V. Archive and investigation of the military scientist A. A. Svechin. 1931-1932 // Bulletin of the archivist. 2014. - No. 2 (126). - S. 260–272; No. 3 (127). - S. 261–291.
*Bliznichenko S. S., Lazarev S. E. “Anti-Soviet conspiracy” at the Naval Academy (1930-1932) // Bulletin of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The science. Society. Person. 2012. No. 3 (41). - S. 118–124.
*Lazarev S.E. Military-political academy in the 1930s // Scientific reports of Belgorod State University. Series “History. Political science. Economy. Computer science". 2013. No. 8 (151). - Vol. 26. - S. 140–149.
*Bliznichenko S. S., Lazarev S. E. Repression at the F.E.Dzerzhinsky Naval Engineering School in the 1930s. // Recent history of Russia. 2014. - No. 1 (09). - S. 124–139.
External links
В энциклопедии С-Петербурга* ''Ярослав Тинченко.'
* З архівів ВУЧК, ГПУ, НКВД, КГБ. 2002 год, номер 1–2, изд-во «Сфера», Киев.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Purges of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
Political repression in the Soviet Union
Political and cultural purges
1937 in the Soviet Union
Great Purge
Military of the Soviet Union
Communist Party of the Soviet Union
de:Stalinsche Säuberungen