June 17, 2016

Remembering Stalin’s deportation of the Baltic nations in June 1941

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Seventy-five years ago on June 1, 1941, when Stalin was Hitler’s ally, Moscow began the forcible deportation of tens of thousands of Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians from their occupied lands to the interior of the USSR. Fewer than half returned alive – an event that continues to cast a dark shadow on these countries and their relations with Moscow.

The deportation from the three occupied Baltic countries of more than 40,000 people was the first mass action of its kind following Stalin’s Anschluss of those countries as a result of the secret protocols of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact that made the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany allies.

Earlier senior officials in the overthrown governments of the three Baltic states were arrested and exiled, most to their deaths. But on June 13, 14, 15 and 16, the Soviet occupiers gathered up as many Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians as they could according to categories that had been worked out long before 1941.

According to an article in Estonian World, that plan called for the deportation of all those in the following categories and their families: “all the members of the former governments, higher state officials and judges, higher military personnel, former politicians, members of voluntary state defense organizations, members of student organizations, persons having actively participated in anti-Soviet armed combat, Russian émigrés, security police officers and police officers, representatives of foreign companies and, in general, all people having contacts abroad, entrepreneurs and bankers, clergymen and members of the Red Cross” (estonianworld.com/life/estonia-remembers-the-soviet-deportations/).

Taken together, such people constituted 23 percent of Estonia’s population at the time. Similar measures were adopted and taken in Latvia and Lithuania. What made this act of genocide even worse was that a large number of people were deported not because they were in these categories, but because others wanted their housing or “to settle scores.”

The Baltic people subject to this decree had no appeal and only a single hour to pack before being loaded onto cattle cars. In Estonia alone, “Over 7,000 women, children and elderly people were among the deported …more than 25 percent of all the people deported in June 1941 were minors (under 16 years of age). [And] the deportations also severely affected Estonia’s Jewish population – more than 400 Estonian Jews, approximately 10 percent of the Estonian Jewish population, were among the deportees.”

The travails of those deported did not end there or even in the difficult places to which they were sent. At the end of the first year, special Soviet commissions came to the camps and settlements and had “hundreds of the detainees” shot. “By the spring of 1942,” Estonian World reports, “of the more than 3,000 men dispatched to prison camps, only a couple of hundred were still alive.”

Many not sent to the camps but rather classified as “forced resettlers” died of cold, starvation or overwork. The same pattern held for Latvians and Lithuanians, as well as yet another round of deportations from the Baltic countries in March 1949 after Soviet forces retook and reoccupied Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

This year, as they did privately during Soviet times and publicly after the recovery of their independence, the peoples of these three countries marked this day as a memorial to those who were expelled and died. Fortunately, they were now joined by others who have pledged themselves never to forget what Moscow did.

The justice ministers of the three Baltic countries together with their counterparts from Poland and Ukraine issued a joint statement declaring that “history cannot be changed or forgotten especially because today there are still living witnesses of the crimes that were committed” (ru.delfi.lt/news/live/glavy-minyustov-stran-baltii-polshi-i-ukrainy-osudili-deportacii-1941-goda.d?id=71550814&rsslink=true).

The five ministers pointed out that the Soviet Union by this act, and others as well, sought to deprive people of their spirit and memory of independent statehood. “However, [even such] crimes against humanity cannot destroy spirits striving for freedom,” despite the continuing efforts of some to deny what happened.

And the five decried that “the official rhetoric of Russia remains what it has always been: the crimes are denied and the Soviet past and its leaders are praised to the skies.” Those who remember the deportations of June 1941 know just how wrong and even ill-intentioned such claims are.

But perhaps the highlight of this year’s day of memory was the visit of Crimean Tatar singer Jamala to Vilnius and her meeting with Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite – a meeting that a Russian commentator condemned (bloknot.ru/v-mire/zhertvy-deportatsij-gribauskajte-i-dzhamala-soshlis-na-nenavisti-k-sssr- 449544.html).

The Lithuanian leader said that it was entirely appropriate that the Crimean Tatar singer who won the Eurovision contest with her song recalling the deportation of her people by the Soviet government should be in Vilnius on the 75th anniversary of the first mass deportations of Lithuanians and other Baltic nations by the same government.

Jamala’s coming on that day, she said, was “symbolic” of the fact that “Soviet crimes will never be forgotten.”

Paul Goble is a long-time specialist on ethnic and religious questions in Eurasia who has served in various capacities in the U.S. State Department, the Central Intelligence Agency and the International Broadcasting Bureau, as well as at the Voice of America and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The article above is reprinted with permission from his blog called “Window on Eurasia” (http://windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/).

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