The latest issue of International Crimes and History, no. 16 is a special topic issue on the Crimean Tatars and has my article, "The Deportation of the Crimean Tatars in the Context of Settler Colonialism."
Thursday, March 17, 2016
Monday, March 14, 2016
Abstract of Conference Paper on Germans deported to Kazakhstan
On 8 March 2016 I presented a paper on the deportation of ethnic Germans in the USSR to Kazakhstan to a conference at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The title of the conference was Jews and their Neighbors in Soviet Central Asia during the Second World War: Realities of Life and Survival. My paper, "Wir hatten nichts": The Fate of Ethnic Germans Deported to Kazakhstan during World War II was part of the Round Table on Deported and Evacuated Populations in Central Asia: A Comparative Approach. The abstract of the paper is below.
Abstract
"Wir hatten nichts": The Fate of
ethnic Germans Deported to Kazakhstan During World War II
by
J. Otto Pohl
In the fall of 1941 the Soviet government forcibly deported some
800,000 ethnic Germans from west of the Urals to desolate areas of Siberia and
Kazakhstan. Upon arrival in their new places of residence the NKVD (People's
Commissariat of Internal Affairs) classified them as special settlers, the same
legal designation as deported kulaks, and placed them under severe
restrictions. In particular they could not leave their newly assigned places of
settlement without special written permission. These legal restrictions
remained in place until the end of 1955. About half of these deportees ended up
in Kazakhstan where the local authorities initially assigned almost all of them
to agricultural labour. Settled into the already inhabited houses of Kazakh
kolkhoz workers, abandoned buildings needing repair, and even earth huts the
Germans suffered from a lack of proper housing. They also experienced severe
shortages of food, medicine, and winter clothing. As a result large numbers of
them perished from malnutrition, disease, and exposure. After 10 January 1942,
the Soviet government began the forced mobilization of the deported Germans
into labour columns known collectively as the labour army to work in lumber and
construction camps run by the NKVD in the Urals as well as building railroads.
They conscripted over 100,000 ethnic Germans from Kazakhstan to work in the
labour army. The mass induction of women after 7 October 1942 meant that many
of the Germans remaining in Kazakhstan were children without any adult
relatives to look after them. Deaths exceeded births among the ethnic Germans
in Kazakhstan and other regions of the USSR until 1948. Only after this date do
material conditions for the exiled Germans begin to improve significantly.
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