What's new

Refreshing Memories; Crimean Tatar Genocide by Soviet Russia (1944 )

Back to topic, Turkish members have so far definitely failed to counter-argue/disprove historical facts provided by our Russian partners.

Lol, do you think that we rewrite the history here? :D All we just do is underlining the historical facts on the anniversary of 18th of May 1944 Tatar genocide.
 
Russians are teribly real racists.
They hate non-russian speakers, specially tatars and others nations.
If you kiss russians assandspeak in russian and live like a russian , you might be live there.
Written: "St. Petersburg is cemetary for foreigners."
99AD0F38-EEF2-4E69-9421-DF1392C5E989_mw800_mh600.jpg

main-qimg-76f280b218984c2cd6dcc20d8d967f4b

411b61232d458a96b115bc8e7e20af4e.jpg

Commie_Rally_Ukraine.jpg


Russians are proud with Stalins politics.
Some Terms confused each other, but I can say Stalin served for Russian Imperia.And Russian apreciate it.


hitler-stalinn-edited.jpg

They were friends. Stalin congrutaled Hitler when he occupied Paris.
Both USSR and Germany shared Poland.

http://data:image/jpeg;base64,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 http://data:image/jpeg;base64,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
deportation7.jpg
 
What a stupid logic, but you wher talking about armenian genocide against modern Turkey. So the Tatars are killed in the the time of Stalin so Russia can't be guilty of it. Turks are guilty of armenian genocide. And give russian imperialism blowjob againg today.
That,s what i was saying if they got ugly history then you got blood on hands in the past.
 
Can't really blame Stalin for doing this to the tartars. if someone stabbed you in the back, you'd do the same. Given their backstabbing nature, Stalin went soft on them
 
Can't really blame Stalin for doing this to the tartars. if someone stabbed you in the back, you'd do the same. Given their backstabbing nature, Stalin went soft on them

Indeed. Mostly relocating them. The war environment was definitely not a walk in the park.

***

Eurovision's Crimean Tatar Singer Is Crying a River to Wash Away Her Own People's Crimes

Scott Humor
Fri, May 13, 2016

Originally appeared at The Vineyard of the Saker

On Saturday, May 14, in Stockholm’s Globe Arena an event called the 2016 Eurovision Song Contest final will take place.

According to the Eurovision Official Rules 2016 posted on eurovision.tv:

1.2) Criteria of eligibility

1.2.1) Songs

“The lyrics and/or performance of the songs shall not bring the Shows, the ESC as such or the EBU into disrepute. No lyrics, speeches, gestures of a political or similar nature shall be permitted during the ESC. No swearing or other unacceptable language shall be allowed in the lyrics or in the performances of the songs. No messages promoting any organization, institution, political cause or other, company, brand, products or services shall be allowed in the Shows and within any official ESC premises (i.e. at the venue, the Eurovision village, the Press Centre, etc.). A breach of this rule may result in disqualification.”

However, rules are made to be broken.

On May 9, 2016, a tweet from the European Broadcasting Union confirmed “that neither the title nor the lyrics of the song contained “political speech” and therefore it didn’t breach any Eurovision rule, therefore allowing it to participate in the competition.[16] [wikipedia entry]

Why would the European Broadcasting Union feel propelled to make this statement on the Victory Day celebration in Russia?

That’s because Europeans love to defecate on our life, our history and our modest national holidays.

Thus, we have got a singing competition which doesn’t want to be politicized, and wisely so. But… since the EU members are in Cold War with Russia and NATO is building up an enormous quantity of troops and weaponry all along Russia’s borders, to make a singing competition into an sick anti-Russia spectacle is a given.

Enters Ukraine. Ukraine is a Western territory of Russia, temporally occupied by the West. It’s a colony of the US with a multiethnic society where Russians are the majority, but the US wants to grind into a monoethnic society with a pure, “Ukrainian” identity. Everyone who doesn’t want to speak the Ukrainian language is being burned alive, like in the Odessa Massacre, or shot, or bombed by NATO. Everyone in Ukraine is supposed to become “Ukrainian” which means “anti-Russian” and a follower of the Bandera ultra-nationalist ideology.

Everyone, that is, for the notable exception of so-called ‘Crimean Tatars” who are allowed by the US and EU to use their own language, their own national identity, their own religious extremist organizations like Hizb ut-Tahrir, Tablighi Jamaat and other terrorist organization, that are legal in Ukraine, but considered terror organizations in Russia.

As you’ve probably figured out by now, “Crimean Tatars” are not ethnic Tatars, they are Turks. Turkey is a NATO member and an ally of the EU and US, as you have probably heard.

About 120,000 “Crimean Tatars” live in Crimea. After the liberation of Crimea from Ukrainian occupation, about 8,000 ended up living in Ukraine. The rest of them don’t want to move to Ukraine and prefer to stay in Russia. If they are so upset about 1944, why wouldn’t they move to Turkey to enjoy the true freedom and democracy that the Associated membership with the EU brings?

This year, in Eurovision singing competition Ukraine is being represented by a singer called Jamalawith a song “1944” according to eurovisionworld.com.

I listened to this song, and found it being depressingly monotonous.

Here is the lyrics: “When they come… strangers. Come into your home. They kill all of you and say. “We are not guilty…not guilty.” Where is your mind? Humanity is crying. You think you are gods. But all die. Do not swallow my soul. Our souls. The youth is not enjoyed in peace and not live. We could build a future. Where people are free to live and love. Happy times… Where are your hearts? Humanity prospers. You think you are gods. But people are dying. Do not swallow my soul. Our souls.”

However, I must admit, I am no music critic and all ISIS-style songs sound to me the same.

Europeans, however, love it. This is how this political provocation by Susana Jamaladinova a.k.a.Jamala was announced by their media:

  1. Crimean singer in line to represent Ukraine at Eurovision
  1. Ukraine picks Crimean Tatar with tragic tale for Eurovision
“When strangers are coming, they come to your house, they kill you all and say ‘We’re not guilty’,” the song begins. “That terrible year changed forever the life of one fragile woman, my great-grandmother Nazylkhan. Her life was never the same,” Jamaladinova, who was born in Kyrgyzstan, said before the broadcast.

  1. Ukraine’s Eurovision entry takes aim at Russian oppression

Ukrainians have chosen a Crimean Tatar singer and her song 1944, about the mass deportation of Tatars under Joseph Stalin, to represent the nation

  1. According to liveleaks, Ukraine’s Tatar protest song Eurovision choice likely to irk Russia
Because, apparently this is a song about the mass deportation of Turks from Crimea after Crimea was liberated from the German occupation in 1944.

I want you to remember the phrase: “That terrible year changed forever the life of one fragile woman, my great-grandmother Nazylkhan. Her life was never the same.“ She is talking about 1944. It’s very significant that she says this. You will understand later why.

On May 9th 1944, after the final battle to liberate Sevastopol from the German occupation, after all the remaining German troops were cleared from Crimea, a decision was made by the Soviet Government to deport the majority of Turks from Crimea to the Soviet Republic of Uzbekistan. The Turks weren’t deported from Crimea to Siberia. Au contraire… Uzbekistan has a warm climate and was never devastated by the war.

I don’t know exactly the circumstances around the decision to remove Turks from Crimea after the liberation. I don’t know who made this decision inside the Soviet government and who signed it. Essentially this decision has saved the Crimean Turks from the fury and rage of the Soviet Russian army liberating Crimea. Because when the Russians came back, they found that the ENTIRE Russian population of Crimea was slaughtered by Turks under the supervision of Germans.

Just to remind you how people lived in Crimea before the war, a documentary called One Day in Artek made by students in 1939, also links to sources of historical photographs of pre-war Crimea.

Here are the historical facts:

Crimea was attacked by Germans on the first day of the Great Patriotic war June 22nd, 1941.

In July 1942, Sevastopol fell to the Germans. From October 1941 to July 1942, 156,000 Red Army soldiers were killed defending the city.

Even before the defenders of Sevastopol were defeated, about 100,000 Turks in Crimea greeted Germans occupiers as “liberators.”

“We are honored to have the opportunity to fight under the leadership of the führer Adolf Hitler – the greatest son of the German people… Our names later will be honored along with names of those who advocated the liberation of oppressed peoples.” This is from a speech of the Chairman of the Tatar Committee Jaljala Abdurashidova at a ceremony on 3 January 1942 in Simferopol.

The Wikipedia entry about the singer Jamala there is an interesting twist. It states that Jamala’s grandfather was fighting for the Red Army, and couldn’t “protect” his family from deportation. The facts are that in 1941 as the war had started, total 90,000 people were drafted to the Red Army from Crimea. 20,000 of them were Turks. During the first months of war and German attacks on Crimea, 20,000 Turks deserted the 51st Army as it was retreating from Crimea. As we see, almost every Crimean Turk drafted to the Red Army had deserted it. It’s been confirmed on village by village statistic. For example: from 132 men drafted from the village Koysh, 120 deserted the Army. Everyone who deserted the Red Army went to serve German occupants.

“From the very first days of arrival, Germans used the support of Tatar-nationalists. Trying to gain support among Tatars, Germans didn’t loot Tatar home, like they did to Russian people.” Wrote the Commander of the 5th Partisan region Krasnikov.

According to eloquent testimonies of German field Marshal Erich von Manstein: “...the majority of the Tatar population of the Crimea was set up very friendly to us. We even managed to form a Tatars armed battalions of self-defense, whose task was to protect their villages from attacks of Partisans who were hiding in the Yayla mountains.”

According to Washington based International Committee for Crimea: “The German military authorities in the Crimea began creating self defense battalions from Crimean Tatar POWs in January 1942. General Manstein viewed the Crimean Tatars as being more sympathetic to the German occupation than the Slavic population of the peninsula. These POWs volunteered for service in the self defense battalions in exchange for release from the camps and better rations. The Germans formed six battalions and 14 companies of Crimean Tatars with 1,632 men by 15 February 1942.[13] In total, close to 20,000 Crimean Tatars served in German organized self-defense battalions during WWII.[14]”

What Washington is omitting that collaborating with German Turks actively participated in the genocide of Russians in occupied Crimea.

From archive of NKVD so called “Special Files. message #465/B” “Jankoy district, a group of three Tatars was arrested who by the German order executed in gas chambers 200 Gypsies.” “In Sudak, 19 Tatar-executioners were arrested. they violently executed Red Army servicemen captured by Germans. From those arrested, Osman Setarov personally shot 37 soldiers. Osman Abdureshidov shot 38 soldiers of the Red Army.”

Many Crimean Turks left the peninsula along with German troops. For example, the Polit-Commender of the 2nd Belaruskiy Front reported that they had 49th Army armed encounter with so called “Tatar-Volga legion” organized by the Berlin based “Tatar Committee” headed by Shafi Almas. “Tatar-Volga legion” consisted of three battalions and over three thousand people. All of them Turks under the command of the German Colonel Sikondorf. This is according to the Archives of the Institute of Russian History of Russia’s Academy of Science. F.2. Special File. January 27th, 1944 report of the Deputy Commander of the Main Political Command of the Red Army Shikin.

However, these sort of direct battles with the regular Red Army regiments were unusual for Turks. They much preferred to deal with the civilian population and POWs, the way they have dealt in Turkey with the non-Turkish population. SS Crimean-Tatar Battalion burned alive 15,000 Russians, Ukrainians, Greeks and Armenias, the entire population of village Mirnoe (Peaceful)

During the occupation of Crimea, Germans and Romanians organized 116 death camps staffed with Crimean Turks. They were organized by Schuma organization into 152 battalion. For the exception of 6 military officers, all 320 servicemen in this battalion were Crimean “Tatar” Turks. For example death camp “Red” also known as Crimean Buchenvald. In this death camp people were executed, without a chance to get out.

In two years of German, Romanian and Turkish occupation of Crimes, over 90,000 civilians were murdered and over 85,000 were trafficked to Germany for forced labor Only about 2% of those people survived and returned.

In nearby so called “internment” camp, out of 140,000 people interned, 40,000 were murdered and 100,000 were trafficked to Germany for forced labor. Turks working in the death camp “Red” were “creative” in the ways they murdered people. They drowned mothers with children in cesspools. They mass burned people alive by tying them up with barbwire, pouring gasoline on them and setting them on fire. Just compare, for 7 years in Buchenvald 56,000 people were killed. 8,000 per year. In death camp “Red” in less than 2 years Germans, Romanians and Turks murdered 15,000 people. The prevailing notion that the majority people killed in these particular death camps were Jews, is wrong. The majority of people killed there were Russians.


crimean-tatars-1-300x233_0.jpg



crimean-tatars-2-300x199_1.jpg



According to the article “Death Camp “Red” – Crimean Buchenvald” Ukrainian occupation authorities for decades and during the Soviet time and during the “independence” were refusing to recognize the place as a memorial to 15,000 Russian, Ukrainian, Armenian and Greek people perished in this camp. The memorial has been build in 2015 after the liberation of Crimea from the Ukrainian occupation.

In 1942, near the resort town Sudak, Tatars captured and murdered a group of reconnaissance troops of the Red Army who came to them seeking support of the locals. While another group of “self-defenders” captured and burnt alive 12 Soviet paratroopers. On February 4th, 1943 Crimean Tatar volunteers from the villages of Beshoy and Komush seized four partisans from the group of S. A. Mukovnina. Partisans L. S. Chernov, F. V. Gordienko, K. G. Sannikov, and H. K. Kiyamov were brutally murdered: stabbed repeatedly with bayonets, stacked on pyres and burned. Especially disfigured was the corpse of Kazan Tatar H. K. Kiyamova. Apparently, Crimean Turks mistook him as their tribesman. Genetically, Kazan Tatars don’t relate to Crimean Turks, despite of the similar name.

Equally cruelly Crimean Tatar were murdering the non-Tatar civilian population.

As noted in a special report of L. P. Beria in the names of I. V. Stalin, V. M. Molotov and G. M. Malenkov No. 366/b, dated 25 April 1944: “locals claim that they suffered more prosecution from the Tatars, than from Romanian invaders”. It got to the point that escaping their violence, the Russian-speaking population asked for help from the German authorities and received their protection! for example, Alexander Chudakov (a local witness, not a known Soviet author) testifies: “My 1943 my grandmother was nearly shot by Crimean Tatar executioners in front of my mother — at that time a seven year old girl just because she had the misfortune to be a Ukrainian, and her husband — my grandfather — had worked before the war as a Chairman of the village Council and in that time fought in the ranks of the Red Army. My grandmother was saved from bullets, by the way… the Germans, who were amused by the degree of brutality of their lackeys. It all happened a few kilometers from the Crimea, in the village of Novodmitrovka in Kherson region of Ukraine”.


crimean-tatars-3-300x207.jpg



According to recently declassified data from the Special files of the State defense Committee (May 1, No. 387/B) during the German occupation of Crimea they organized the Muslim committees, which “on instructions of the German intelligence agencies conducted the recruitment of Tatar youth in the volunteer corps to fight Partisans and the Red Army, required suitable personnel to insert them into the Red Army, and were spreading pro-fascist propagation among the Tatar population of Crimea.” Germans had also created a “Tatar National Committee,” which was headed by Turkish-citizen immigrant Abdurashid Cemil. The Committee had branches in all regions with Tatar population actively collaborated with the Germans. In 1943, Feodosia was visited by Turkish emissary Amil Pasha, who called on the Tatar population to support the activities of the German authorities.

Among specific causes of Turks in Crimea was a fundraiser to help the German army “after the defeat of the German 6th army of Paulus at Stalingrad.” So Feodosia Muslim Committee gathered “one million rubles” donated by Tatars.

From the report of Beria to the State Committee of defense No. 366/B, dated 25 April 1944 (from the same Special files): “activities of the “Tatar national Committee” was supported by broad segments of the Tatar population, which the German occupational authorities gave all kinds of support: not one Crimean Tatar was trafficked to Germany for forced labor, (excluding the 5,000 people who voluntarily went to Germany), they paid lower taxes than the occupied population, etc. Not one Tatar settlement was destroyed by Germans.”

It was clear that Germans were using ethnic Turks as executors of the Slavic population of Crimea.

It’s not hard to notice that when Crimea was liberated and before Russians started returning there, significant resources were brought to evacuate Crimean Tatars from the peninsula. As we see from the reports and Classified files, the soviet government knew exactly what was taking place there during the occupation. It was generally assumed that Russian Crimeans coming back from fighting war and finding their homes destroyed and their families, children, wives, parents and grandparents, murdered in the most horrendous ways, would want to take revenge on the murderers, the Crimean Tatars. That’s why even today after 72 years, the majority of Russians believe that Crimean Tatars were saved by the Soviet Government by evacuating them from the region they committed horrible atrocities, to Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, where people didn’t know what took place in Crimea.

Now, remember a phrase of Jamaladinova, “That terrible year changed forever the life of one fragile woman, my great-grandmother Nazylkhan.” She is talking about 1944. Not the 1941, when Germans, Romanians, Turks, Finns, Estonians, Lithuanians, Latvians, Italians, Japanese, and many others had attacked and invaded Soviet Russia and Crimea. She is not talking about 1942-1943, the years of occupation, when entire populations of Russians, Armenians, Greeks, and Gypsies, and Jews were annihilated. No, of course not. Those were the good years for Crimean Tatars. They were murdering people, and they were taking those people’s belongings. Afterwards, instead of locking them all up in jails for war crimes, mean Stalin evacuated them to warm plentiful lands of Uzbeks and Kazakhs. And what about those railroad wagons? Have you ever seen what wagons were used to transport troops across the country? The Soviet Union devastated by the war with Europe, didn’t have any other wagons. It was one type of wagons for everything.

Turks evacuated from Crimea were given opportunity to attend schools and universities, to build houses. They were living amongst the locals just like everyone else did. They were provided with free arable lands they used to grow fruits and vegetables and to sell it in Russia. There income was higher than average income in Soviet Russia. For the exemption of very few, none of them was convicted and jailed for war crimes and genocide. During the post-war years the population of Crimean Tatars or Crimean Turks grew from about 100,000 to 500,000. It’s grew 5X times! As we know the Russian population severely declined during those years, especially during the liberal terror, that didn’t take place in “independent Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.

I would like to ask the organizations of Eurovision and the leaders of European nations, what gives them moral superiority to troll the memory of the Soviet Government and the Russians who survived the most horrific war in history of mankind, that you conducted against us?

I have no doubt that the same people of Europe who are now voting for this political provocation masquerading as a “song,” the same people, and we will see all their faces on our TVs would be burning us, our children and our parents alive, if it wasn’t for Russia’s army and Russia’s fleet.

Time after time, the Europeans are throwing their dung at us Russians, and we got your message, Europe. We got your message back in 1941, and we are getting it now. You can keep your dung… I mean Eurovision.

Just like the demands of the European politicians to let out of jail Natalya Savchenco who killed two Russian journalists reporting from Donbass. Just like refusal of Turkey government to punish people who down the Russian fighter jet fighting ISIS in Syria. Just like refusal of Kiev junta to punish those terrorists who murdered 400 people in Odessa on May 2, 2014, and over hundred Police officers in Mariupol. The western society openly demonstrate that their crimes against us Russians won’t be punished, but rewarded.

It means that it’s up to us to punish perpetrators.

To all those saying that Germany and Russia are natural allies...

The Eurovision 2016 is shaping up to become a true statement of glorification of Nazism and its excuses to condone the genocide of Russians in World War II, which turned out to be the pinnacle of European civilization.

For those of you who feel propensity to burn people alive, enjoy, while you can….

P.S. Researching for this article, I came across a comment that strikes me as very true. Someone wrote that in Russia we all have become victims of the Western Cold war against us. We endured economic losses and hardships, caused by sanctions. Our inner peace and sense of security have also been taken away. The only good thing is that our children are growing up hating the Western democracy and everything its represent: hatred, perpetual wars, misery for so many nations and death of so many innocent.

Thank you for your time.

@vostok
 
There was no Soviet Russia but Soviet Union. Stalin was not a Russian but a Georgian. Stop faking history!
 
Iyoseph Stalin was Jew as Lenin.

If Stalin had made politics against Russians and suffered them, why have Russian Patriots still showed Stalins pictures?

Why do Russian Nationalists still use symbols of USSR?

The USSR was %100 achievment of Russians.
The USSR in name of Internasyonalism created a one big nation.
If today in RF Chuvahs,Tatars, Bashkurds, Cechens, Georgian, and members of other Kaocosian nations ,even a lot of Azerbadjanese, Uzbeks, Kazaks call themselves " Russian", it is achievment of the USSR!

Also a lot of German were assimilated and got Russians thanks to Stalin.

Stalin made great jobs for Russian Imperialism.

There was no Soviet Russia but Soviet Union. Stalin was not a Russian but a Georgian. Stop faking history!
There was Soviet Russia and not only . There were also The Ukrainian Soviet Republiq, The Crimiean Soviet Republiq, Azerbaidjan S.R. , Kazakistan S.R. etc...
 
I don't know if you guys have watched the Eurovision song contest finals, A Crimean Tatar lady name Jamala ( Cemile ) has won the title with the song " 1944 " which tells the genocide of Crimean Tatars by the Soviet Russia.

This is the song;


The Story

The forcible deportation of the Crimean Tatars from Crimea was ordered by Joseph Stalin as a form of collective punishment for alleged collaboration with the Nazi occupation regime in Taurida Subdistrict during 1942-1943. The state-organized removal is known as the Sürgünlik in Crimean Tatar. A total of more than 230,000 people were deported, mostly to the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic. This included the entire ethnic Crimean Tatar population, at the time about a fifth of the total population of the Crimean Peninsula, as well as smaller numbers of ethnic Greeks and Bulgarians. A large number of deportees (more than 100,000 according to a 1960s survey by Crimean Tatar activists) died from starvation or disease as a direct result of deportation. It is considered to be a case of ethnic cleansing.[1][2][3] For a long time Crimean Tatars and Soviet dissidents called for recognition of the genocide of Crimean Tatars. On November 12, 2015 parliament of Ukraine adopted a resolution recognizing the event as a genocide and declared 18 May as a Day of Remembrance for the victims of Crimean Tatar genocide.[4]

During destalinization the deportation was denounced by the Soviet government; nevertheless, the Crimean Tatars were denied the right of return up until late perestroika times.

A total of 238,500 people were deported, compared to a recorded total of 9,225 Crimean Tatars who had served in anti-Soviet Tatar Legions and other German-formed battalions.[13]

The deportation began on 18 May 1944 early morning in all Crimean-inhabited localities and lasted until 16:00 on 20 May 1944.[14] More than 32,000 NKVD troops participated in this action.[14] The forced deportees were given only 30 minutes to gather personal belongings, after which they were loaded onto cattle trains and moved out of Crimea.[11][15] A deportee recalled the knocking of their door at 3 am on 18 May and being given 15 minutes to get ready.[16] Despite the fact that the decree allowed the deportees to take their "personal items, clothing, household objects, dishes and utensils, and up to 500 kilograms of food per family" with them,[12] some deportees did not take anything with them as the events were reminiscent of the Holocaust, and they expected to be killed soon.[16] The deportees were brought to central gathering stations in Simferopol and Bakhchysarai, and after a short waiting period, loaded on trains.[17]

183,155[14] - 193,865 Crimean Tatars were deported, 151,136 of them to Uzbek SSR, 8,597 to Mari ASSR, 4,286 to Kazakh SSR, the rest 29,846 to the various oblasts ofRussian SFSR.[14] According to NKVD records, 2,444 Crimean Tatar families were separated during the deportation.[18] This was considered to be intentional by the Crimean Tatars, as they believed that the aim of the Soviet government was to achieve their deaths by any means; if not physically, then through grief and loneliness.[17] At the same moment, most of the Crimean Tatar men who were fighting in the ranks of the Red Army were demobilized and sent into forced labor camps in Siberia and in the Ural mountain region.[11]

Cultural destruction[edit]
The Soviet government planned the ethnic assimilation of the Crimean Tatar community into the Central Asian population.[34] It destroyed Tatar cultural assets; this included the destruction of Tatar monuments and burning of Tatar manuscripts and books,[2] including those by Lenin and Marx. Tatar mosques were converted into cinemas and warehouses, gravestones of Tatars were used as building material. Exiled Crimean Tatars were banned from speaking of Crimea and official Soviet texts, including the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, erased all references to them. When applying for internal passports, "Crimean Tatar" was not accepted as an existing ethnic group and those that designated themselves as "Crimean Tatars" were automatically denied passports.[35] The traditional production methods of the Crimean Tatars were destroyed through the force labor imposed on them.[31]

The Soviet Union engaged in a policy of "toponymic repression" against Crimean Tatars. This commenced with a decree from the Party Committee of the Crimean Oblast on 20 October 1944, ordering the renaming of all Tatar, Greek and German-language place names (including mountains and rivers), and was followed by a decree of the RSFSR Supreme Soviet Presidium on 14 December, stipulating the renaming of all districts and district centers to Russian-language names. Two more decrees followed on 21 August 1945 and 18 May 1948, resulting in the renaming of 1389 more Crimean Tatar towns and villages.[36]

Soviet propaganda[edit]
The Soviet government of the time denied the nature of the deportation by claiming that it was voluntary and reflecting it in this light to the domestic and international media. At the time of the deportations, the term "resettlement" was used by the NKVD instead of "deportation".[34]

A revisionist approach was adopted in the historical presentation of Crimean Tatars, where they were represented as bandits and thieves that had no developmental contributions. In some Soviet spy novels, they were vilified as evil Nazi agents and traitors.[2]

On 28 April 1956, by the decree of the Supreme Soviet Presidium of the USSR, the Crimean Tatars were released from special settlement, accompanied by a restoration of their civil rights. In the same year, the Crimean Tatars started a petition to allow their repatriation to Crimea. They held mass protests in October 1966, but these were violently quelled by the Soviet military. On 21 June 1967, the first meeting of the Soviet government, represented by the KGB Chairman, the Minister of the Internal Affairs and the Secretary of the USSR Supreme Soviet with a Crimean Tatar delegation took place. Prompt rehabilitation of Crimean Tatars were promised, but never fulfilled. On 27 August and 2 September 1967, thousands of Crimean Tatars took to the streets to protest in Tashkent. The protests were cracked down upon, but prompted official Soviet response.[37]

Although a decree of the Supreme Soviet Presidium issued on 5 September 1967 removed the charges against Crimean Tatars, the Soviet government did nothing to facilitate their resettlement in Crimea and to make reparations for lost lives and confiscated property. Crimean Tatars, having a definite tradition of non-communist political dissent, succeeded in creating a truly independent network of activists, values and political experience.[38] In 1968, 300 families were allowed to return, but this was only for propaganda purposes.[39]Crimean Tatars, led by the Crimean Tatar National Movement Organization,[40] were not allowed to return to Crimea from exile until the beginning of the Perestroika in the mid-1980s.[41]

The 1991 RSFSR law On the Rehabilitation of Repressed Peoples addressed rehabilitation of all ethnicities repressed in the Soviet Union. However the law had various deficiencies, including unclear legal status of a number of peoples, such as Crimean Tatars moved across the borders of Soviet republics, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.[42] After the annexation of Crimea by Russia, on April 21, 2014 Vladimir Putin signed the decree No 268 "О мерах по реабилитации армянского, болгарского, греческого, крымско-татарского и немецкого народов и государственной поддержке их возрождения и развития". ("On the Measures for the Rehabilitation of Armenian, Bulgarian, Greek, Crimean Tatar and German Peoples and the State Support of Their Revival and Development"),[43] amended by Decree no. 458 of September 12, 2015.[44]The decree addressed the status of the mentioned peoples which resided in Crimean ASSR and were deported from there.

After the annexation of Crimea by Russia, the Crimean parliament recognized the 20th century history of Crimean Tatars as a "tragic fate."[45]

Crimean activists were calling for the recognition of the Sürgünlik as genocide.[46] This was also supported by Soviet dissidents.[47][48] Greta Lynn Uehling, in her book Beyond Memory: The Crimean Tatars' Deportation and Return, wrote that the deportation of the Crimean Tatars satisfied the definition of genocide according to the UN Genocide Convention, as despite the fact that not all Crimean Tatars were exterminated, the genocidal intent of destroying a particular ethnic group and implementing calculated policies to achieve this was present.[17] On November 12, 2015 Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine adopted a resolution on recognition of Crimean Tatars' genocide.[49] On May 11, 2016, it appealed to the international community, particularly the United Nations, OSCE, European Parliament and Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe to recognize the deportation as genocide.[50]

KIRIM-TATAR-S%C3%9CRG%C3%9CN%C3%9C-VE-SOYKIRIMI-18-MAYIS-1944.png


kirim-surgunu-3.jpg


k%C4%B1r%C4%B1m.jpg


Genocide has destroyed half of the Crimean Tatars.
This is nothing but a propaganda ploy by E.U./NATO fags to make Russia look bad.

Why weren't they shedding crocodile tears when the Crimean Tatars were being persecuted? Oh, right, they were in bed with Stalin.

You should read about the forced repatriation of Muslim Tatars by the British and American troops at the end of WW2. They literally forced thousands of Tatars by gunpoint to return to Stalin so he could massacre them and send the rest to slave camps.
 
Last edited:
List of Russian genocides
1. Ahiska Turks
2. Tatars
3. Circassians (Çerkez)
So much more but can't remember them all.
 
Actually, The Crimean Tatars Support Russia

"The unedifying reality (for Ukrainian nationalists) is that not only did the Russo-Ukrainian majority in Crimea overwhelmingly support its return to Russia but it was not even opposed by the Crimean Tatars."

Anatoly Karlin
(The Unz Review)


They agree with Trump: Russia's not so bad after all

We have added an interesting new video about the history and political realities of the Crimean Tatars at the end of this article. It was not part of the original article.

In the wake of blatantly political voting during Eurovision 2016, which Ukraine’s Crimean Tatar representative Jamala won despite losing both the popular and the jury vote, to Russia and Australia respectively, the debate has been dominated by the following two positions:

Russia supporters – It was a political song, and as such inadmissable under long-standing Eurovision rules. The voting hewed to geopolitical lines – there was a remarkable correlation between the jury votes for Russia, and the levels of antipathy towards Russia amongst their respective national elites. Indeed, prior to the event, a Eurovision source told a British paper that “the feeling is that the European Broadcasting Union know how unpopular a Russia win would be and will do everything possible to help the other favourites to victory.” As soon as the conspiracy theory proved itself true, the official NATO Twitter account sent its congratulations to Jamala just to let the point sink in. One need hardly ask what relation an organization that calls itself a defensive military alliance has to a singing contest in which the main players – Russia, Ukraine, Australia – aren’t even members in it.

West/Ukraine supporters – Haha, suck it Russia! Why don’t you give back Crimea to its rightful owners and then we’ll talk? Or according to Refat Chubarov, the head of the old Mejlis and self-appointed spokesman for all Crimean Tatars: “”Inshallah, one of the beautiful days we will gather together in a free from the Russian occupiers Crimea, in the ancient and glorious Bakhchisarai! Today another important step to this day has been taken!”

Personally, I am not interested in Eurovision, and never have been. Nor am I interested in banning songs about historical events, least of all songs that have zero relevance or bearing on modern day Russia. Moreover, Russia’s representative Sergey Lazarev had gone on record in 2014 saying that for him, Crimea remains Ukrainian, so even if there was a conspiracy to cheat Russia out of a Eurovision win, it rebounded on entirely the wrong (or right, depending on your viewpoint) person.

So normally I wouldn’t be wasting column space on this – if it hadn’t raised a much more important and serious misconception: Underlying the general Western line on Eurovision is a singular lack of concern not just for the opinions of Crimeans in general (which is already well established), but of the Crimean Tatars themselves.

The unedifying reality (for Ukrainian nationalists) is that not only did the Russo-Ukrainian majority in Crimea overwhelmingly support its return to Russia but it was not even opposed by the Crimean Tatars, a minority that has been lazily assumed by many Western commentators to be uniformly and irreconcilably opposed to Putin and Russia.

In a VCIOM opinion poll asked in February 2015, one year after the referendum in which Crimeans voted to rejoin Russia, around half of Crimean Tatars said they’d support the majority decision if the referendum was to be repeated. Only a quarter said they’d vote to remain in Ukraine. To be sure, this is significantly more than in the case of Crimean Russians and Ukrainians, amongst whom Ukraine patriots constitute a fraction close to the poll’s margin of error, but they are by no means a majority or even a plurality.


2014.jpg


Now to be sure one might rejoinder that VCIOM is a state-owned polling firm and as such can’t be relied upon to present an objective picture of Crimean Tatar opinon. Let us then turn to that famous Kremlin mouthpiece, The Washington Post, and its political science bloggers Gerard Toal and John O’Loughlin writing in January 2015. On the basis of surveys they conducted in Crimea in December 2014, they found that a slightly more Crimean Tatars approved of Putin than disapproved of him; for comparison, less than 10% of them liked Obama, while almost 60% of them “disliked” or “strongly disliked” him.

op.jpg


Incidentally, these figures are backed up by anecdotal evidence.

The Dutch Russia expert Nils van der Vegte was closely following the Crimea situation in early 2014 and around the time of the referendum informed his Twitter followers that “about 50% of the Tartars want to become part of Russia” and that they are split “20% pro-UKR, 20% pro-RU, and the rest are apolitical.” The exactitude with which subsequent polls would confirm Nils van der Vegte’s impressions is nothing short of remarkable.

But surely things could have changed in the past year to make the Crimean Tatars suddenly hate Russia. What about all the persecutions and the disbanding of the Mejlis, the main representative body of the Crimean Tatars?

Well, let’s talk about that. As part of Ukraine’s project to bind a restive Crimea to itself, the Mejlis was selectively filtered to be universally loyal to Ukraine to the point where its political inclinations came to fundamentally diverge from those of its supposed constituents. This was made most plainly evident in November 2015, when Mejlis-affiliated “activists” cut the light to 90% of the world’s Crimean Tatars for a PR stunt presented as an “energy blockade” of Crimea. This, unsurprisingly, was not all that popular amongst Crimean Tatars themselves, according to that other great Russophile propaganda organ The Kyiv Post:

Sure, one resident said, Putin may not be the best leader, but he at least kept his word – he had sent generators to the peninsula to save the day. The Ukrainian authorities, on the other hand, spent months railing against numerous human rights abuses on the peninsula … only to commit their own human rights violation in response.

It is in this context that Russia’s banning of the Mejlis has to be viewed – an organization that owes its loyalty to a foreign power and which despite having zero democratic legitimacy, and not only pretends to not only speak for every Crimean Tatar but engages in quasi-terrorist actions against Russia and ultimately its own people.

Set against that, the Crimean Tatar language has been made one of three official languages in the Republic of Crimea – a status that it never enjoyed in unitary Ukraine. This was part of a package of reforms that guaranteed and expanded their political and civil rights as an ethnic minority.

They have also been able to share in the steep improvement in living standards that all Crimeans have enjoyed since joining Russia. Western headlines such as “The Misery and Terror of Life Under Putin in Crimea” regardless, economic statistics indicate that wages have stayed well ahead of inflation; not only did Crimeans escape the vast contraction in living standards that occured in Poroshenko’s Ukraine, but the introduction of Russian-grade wages and pension payments even allowed them to bypass the (much more minor) recession taking place in Russia itself. Although this development has been very mystifying to some, such as the economist Dave Dalton and “Crimea expert” Ellie Knott both of whom have insisted that the economic statistics are falsified – as people who dislike dislike data that fails to reflect badly on Russia are wont to do – it is a reasonable and logical enough occurence for people familiar with the very considerable gap between Russia’s and Ukraine’s GDP per capita and the concept of “convergence” in economics.

All things considered, it is highly unlikely that Crimean Tatars have sharply turned against Russia in the past year, however much the neocons, the Poroshenko regime, and their pet Mejlis might wish it were otherwise.

In the spirit of tolerance and social justice that Eurovision represents, I would suggest they check their privilege and stop appropriating the voices of Crimean Tatars.

On a less hyperbolic note, I am certainly not trying to argue Crimean Tatars are very enthusiastic and happy about Crimea’s return to Russia (though that should be obvious enough from the data). But nor are they particularly aggrieved about it; that describes a very modest minority, while the majority are basically apathetic (and another small minority are volubly Russophilic). Any talk of using them as a fifth column, let alone a partisan underground, belongs to the realm of fantasy – which is irresponsible but understandable, since their emigre Mejlis politicians have nothing else to offer.
 
Don't you see the contradiction of yourself? :lol:
Dunkoff you suppose you have high intellekt!

Do you think other republics of soviet union supported or planned deportation of Criemean Tatar .

There were Azerbaidjan,Turkmenistan, Kazakhistan Sobiet Republic ,for example did President of KSR offer deportation?

Every Soviet Republic directed by Russian Soviets. It was "LEGACY" of Russian Impire.
Russian Impire recovered in the name USSR?

Why was the capital of the USSR Moscow? Why everyvbody was speaking in Russian language at sovyet meetings?

Do you think Kazakhs or Azerbaidjane ordinary people were against Hitler? Did they like Russians?
If they had had oppurtinity they would have run from Soyuz.


USSR = Russian Impire =Russsian Fedreration.



You must come from East Germany where your grandfathers were assimilated.by Russians.
 
The soviets oppressed everyone that was religious. Orthodox Christians severely suffered oppression and many were killed on the spot. This is the result of the first actual atheist state.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom