POPULATION OF THE SOVIET FAR EAST

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CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1
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December 23, 2016
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Publication Date: 
November 30, 1953
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REPORT
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477, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 CLASSIFICATION SECRET/SECURITY INFORMATION 411111E/ CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY INFORMATION REPORT 50X1 COUNTRY SUBJECT USSR/China Populatio PLACE ACQUIRED ----- DATE ACQUIRED BY SOUR DATE OF INFORMATION of the Soviet Far East 50X1 THIS DOCUMENT CONTAINS INFORMATION AFFECTING THE NATIoNAL DEFENSE OF THE UNITED STATES, WITHIN THE MEANING OF TITLE 18, SECTIONS 793 AND 794, OF THE U.S. CODE, AS AMENDED. ITS TRANSMISSION OR NEC!. CATION OF ITS CONTENTS TO OR RECEIPT AC AN UNAUTHORIZED PERSON IS PROHIBITED BY LAW. THE REPRODUCTION OF THIS FORM IS PROHIBITED. DATE DISTR. 30 Nov 1953 NO. OF PAGES 23 NO. OF ENCLS. (LISTED BELOW) SUPPLEMENT TO REPORT NO. THIS IS UNEVALUATED INFORMATION 50X1 SOURCE 1. THE POPULATION OF THE GREEN UKRAINE The first attempts of settlement after the occupation. Systematic movement Qf immigrants since the middle of the 19th century. The role of the Ukrainian in that movement. The status of the population before the 1917 revolution and during the First World War. The occupation of the country by the Bolsheviks and their first steps. The present situation the size of the population, ts distribution and occupations. The problem of nationalities and the policy. The Ukrainian character of the, country, especially of the Zelenyy Kiln, but without any 'political rights for the population. 2. Beginning this new chapter of our work, we wish to draw the attention of the reader or of the student to the fact, that we shall not discuss here the attempts of colonization of the country before 1850, because, at present, they have only historical interest and are outside the scope of this work5 ele shall begin with 1C.,50, when Nikolayevsk-on-the-Amur was founded and systematic expeditions to the Amur River began, during which emigrants also went -- at first, by compulsion, and then of their own will. 3 The peculiarity of the situation in the new territory, which had just been incorporated in the Moscow empire, played an important part in these migrations of the population. Those were the great new lands where the influence of the authorities was felt to a minimum degree and where there was space for independent action. The first settlers 1,7ave chiefly the Moscovites, and, partly, Cossacks from beyond the Baikal -ake -- elements that were anarchist in spirit, who wanted to live as they pleased, brooking no control. This led to the migrations into Siberia, of Yermak, and others. Another reason was the unlimited material possibilities to escape from the misery and to secure for oneself all sorts of riches, often acquired through robbery and even murder, when they pillaged the natives on the slightest provocation. These were the chief motives in the first resettlement movements. \ST PAOE FOR SUBJECT a AREA CODES CLASSIFICATION SECRET /SECURITY INFORMATION DISTRIBUTION State EV Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 2 SECRET Security Information 50X1 4. In the second half of the past century, began, also, attempts to colonize the new lands, but this time for political reasons, mainly because of the paucity of settlers and the moral disintegration of those who had immigrated, as well as the absence of an honest administration and assistance to the settlers. 5. After the formulation of the initial plans and military reinforcement of the Far East, the St. Petersburg administration encountered a number of serious problems. The principal one was how to secure physically the newly acquired expanses and to safeguard them against any possible losses in the event of a new military campaign. Indeed, at this time, on 24 August 1854, an allied British and French squadron, commanded by Admirals Price and de Point, were directing fire at Petropavlovsk on Kamchatka. An attempt to land in the Bay of deCastri and other maneuver were creating an ever menacing situation. The end of the Crimean War and subsequent events posed a real need for the fortification of the new lands in the East. They posed concrete pin-'nlems, which the Government resolved, one after another, as follows g the new lands were organized into the Primor'ye Oblast ? on 14 Nove ?er 1856, the first settlers arrived in Ussuri on 1 July 1858 in the number of 54 families, who founded the first settlements Korsakovskaya, Kazakevichevoye and Nevel'skoye. 6. In subsequent years laws were promulgated concerning the occupation by the Amur Cossack Army (1 June 1860), and the occupation of the bay and Peninsula of northern Primor'yel as well as Port May, and the beginning of the construction of Vladivostok on 20 June 1860. In subsequent years, there was an increased flow of settlers and an expansion of Russian imperialism on the shores of the Pacific, although the sale of Alaska' in 1867 was a retreat from expansion. However, the reasons are clear the Empire was not strong enough to retain both the shores of the Far East and Alaska, since there was almost no naval fleet in existence. Prior to that, Russia had sold Fort Ross in California. . The sale of Alaska was dictated by a different motive, namely, to erect a barrier between Russian and British possessions in Canada under the American flag. This was the chief reason for the sale of Alaska. 7. Apparently, the expanded activity of colonization of Great Britain ane' other European nations in those days -- such as France and Germany -- and events in Asia exertsd a certain influence. Russian expansion sought an outlet and a foothold toward the north, i.e., to ice-free ports on the shores of the Pacific, so that they would not freeze in the winter, such as Petropavlovsk or Nikolayevsk-on-the-Amur. These were the years when HongKong was founded and when trade began in Shanghai. 8. In the process of further consolidation, the Kurile Islands were exchanged for Sakhalin with Japan. True, as a result of the husso-Japanese war, later, Russia gave up Sakhalin again, but to this time only half of it, to the Japanese. (Treaty of Portsmouth, 23 August 1905). 9. There were attempts to strengthen the frontiers of the Amur and Primor'ye regions, through a more vigorous expansion of the movement to resettle the Cossacks, who were forcibly transferred from the Trans.Baikal so the East -- 18,500 persons, of whom 5,300 were dispatched to settlements along the Ussuri River and the rest were abandoned en route, along the banks of the Amur itself. The first group founded the Ussuri Cossackdom and the second, the Amur Cossack Army. Later, additional settlers were sent to these regions -- this time, however, from the Don and the Orenburg area (8,000 per ons). SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 3 SECRET Security Information 50X1 10. This plan for the resettleuent of Cossacks on the frontier strips in the new land wa proposed immediately upon the expeditions of General MUrav'yev to the Ammr. It is possible that if the Cossacks who had been resettled, had been allowed to rrange? their lives through their own ingenuity, they would have found themselves in a better situation than that, i2reated for them by the dministration, which refused to liberate these first settlers, and, on the contrary, instituted special "Sotnyye Komandiry" [-commanders of a hundreg, who, for the most part, were willful, lowly people, often young and given to drink, who drove the Cossacks to a state of exasperation, since the latter were unwilling to work for their own good, because they were not free... Therefore, these resettlement campaigns ended in complete failure, and a little later it became necessary to e rch for new settlers. 11. Thus emerged the plans for the resettlement movement, for settlers who could work the land and fulfill the hopes of the administration in the organization of the econ- omy and the supply of foodstuffs f?r the region, which had always been compelled to ibport liverything fro Siberia, even food for the Cossack settlers themselves. In th me ntime, despite all efforts to feed the local population, everything depended upon the arrival of food -- at onetime from Manchuria; only after 1932 these items began to be imported from Siberia or soMe.other parts of the Soviet Union. However, the supply Of foodstuffs, in genera14,.was inadequate. 12. The Tsarist administration tried in every way to safeguard the welfare of the Cossacks, since it considered them the best element .for the, defense of the frontiers. To this effect, special laws' were promulgated giving land grants and other privileges to the Cossacks. These efforts aastmed especially great proportions during the implementation of the plan of General pukhovskiv. -However, all these attempts had little success, mainly because the resettlement of Cossacks took place under a system of compulsion, i.e., forcibly, and because of the difficult living conditions In the new localities, the shortage of manpower and draft animals, the floods, the new climatic conditions, and the unusually inept administration. 13. In the course of a search for settlers -- because there were very few volunteers -- the government; at the request of Muravlyev, obtained from the War Minister 15,000 soldiers, so-called "penal convicts", who had been sentenced for various crimes. This element was even more unfit and exerted an even more pernicious influence on the Cossack population. Therefore, in 1879, according to the writings of Generki Unterbervr*, the government decided to return these penal convicts to their ho es. The majority of them returned, and the remainder disappeared to parts unknown. 14. The idea of General Dukhovskiy was to settle the Cossacks along the frontiers of the Primor9ye and Amor regions, for which purpose a select type of Cossacks of the Don, suitable for the colonization of the new lands, were to be dispatched. These were to be protected from the yellow race; as he wrote in his reports to the Tsar in 1879. Dun i ? the six years of 1895 - 1901, there were resettled 8,185 such persons of both sexes. The Don Cossacks did not justify the hopes that the government had placed in them, and they began to ask to be sent home. This was refused to them and the more prominent among them were, punished. P. F. Unterberger Primorskaya Oblast, 1856 - SECRET Security Information ? ? ? ? IL It St. Petersburg 1900. im,,,i,ecifiori in Part - Sanitized Com/ APproved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 4 SECRET Security Information 50X1 15. The remaioder were distributed among the various Cossack villages. However, the plan turned out a complete failure. 16. Here it must be mentioned that the forced resettl nt took place actually during the days of MUraViyeV 1855:- 1860s and endedduring the time of Korasanovyy (1861- 1862). In this period? 17,000 persons of both sexes were resettled in Zelenyy Kiln, among them 2,000 "penal convicts". In thi period were founded 67 "Stanitsy" [-Cossack vill es based on plan 7 in the Amur regi n and 29 in the Ussuri regions including a number of small villages. 17. General Dukbovskiys in order to conceal his planss employed, vague official orders and. detached va t territories for the Cossack settlements, so that, afterwards, there was :.lmost nothing left for the resettlers whom other ministries began to dispatch to the Far East. The question arose as to whether all resettlement should be halted. For a period of several years; a great struggle was waaed for these Cossack lands, of Which there were more than 14 million desyatin Z. a desyatina equals 2.7 acres 7% The question was posed whether the secret territories of Generz,l Dukhovskiy should be investigated. At that time, things did not go well with the village resettlement program. In 1907, the 6moo which had been imported and were to be settled in the villages were transferred to the marshy Ussuri lands, and a tr edy almost eneueds but was prevented by the energetic work of the resettlement administration; which found eans to save these tens of thousands of people from deaths epidemics, starvation and other misfortunes. 18. At this time? repeated requests for assistance came to the government agencies from the Cossacks, such as requests for food, etc. The Cossack settlements began to depend entirely on 'financial assistance from the gover-w-nt for their livelihood. At the same time, they failed to till the lands and leased it out to otherss chiefly Koreans, who began to cross the border by the thousands, especially after the Japanese occupation of. the land. A complete mor]. disintegration of the Cossackdom began. 19, Such f ilares Jod. already compelled the government to think of something new in the matter of resettlement. The first such measure was the law "concerning the conditions and regulations for resettlement to the Amur and Primorgye regions," promulgated on 26 March 1861. Simultaneously, a reorganization of the administrative Organs and territorial divisions was, undertaken, which brought about an expansion in the resettlement movement. Especially, the. construction of the Uasuri and, later, the Siberian railroads took a positive turn. 20. On the other handl the flood of anexclusivelnr agrarian element of settlers; espe- cially from the Ukraine, yielded unusually favorable results. From 1859 to 1900, a foundation was laid for the future resettlement movement, in which the Ukrainians were in the forefront.. At this time; i.e.; prior to 1900; something like 20-25 percent of those who arrived were Ukrainians chiefly from the Charnigovs Poltava, and Kiev provinces. Among the non-Ukrainian arrivals there were Belorussians) who settled, principally, in the Amur region. After 1900, the resettlement move- ment assumald purely Ukrainian character and maintained this character throughout the years, almost to the beginni of World War I and the revolution. 21. The census of 1897 gives interesting st tistics concerning the composition of the popul tion. 22. Altogether, there were 373i,44s people recorded in the Amur and Primor'ye territories, f wh.ra 2 700 belat:ed to the white race (2 ,914,4 Russians and 10,800* non- Russians) ?300 belo ed to Chinese, Koreans? and Japane es 24,54* Tungus, *The census doe not ke any distinction betweet Ukrainians and Russianss because the Russian gov rnment followed policy of Russific tion. SECRET Security Information neclassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 , 5 . SECRET Security Information 50X1 ol"de anOrochouss 4,564 Yakuts; Tartars, and others. A third group, numbering *000 people,: include 11 the Palaeoasiatic Gilyaks, Oroches, ChUkchas0 Koryaks0 Kamchadals and Ainus. 23. In the subsequent 20 ye rs0 the population rapidly i creased, and, in 1923 numbered 1,0560 people0 of. who 610, lived in the Primor'ye territory, 39100.9$ in the Amur territory, 20, 0 in the northern part of Sakhalin Island0 and 350*$* in the Kamchatka and Anadyr' regions. For the first time, in the 1923 census, is given the co position of the white race; as follows: *** Russians Ukrainians Other Europeans Koreans Chinese Japanese Others ? ? * ? EEIMEIYe terraME 21. percent 50.6 2.2 2203 1.2 94 99 09 0.02 90 4.7 AELIEWLE 38.0 percent 58.0 0.3 3.7 91 24. As regards the Korean population, the majority of it lived in the northern part of the pr ,..r'ye territory -- about ?40... people according to the 1923 census. The percentage of Ukrainians shows a sharp decrease in the Primor"ye territory, while in the Amur territory it is quite just (E3140 meaning "the sameg. Here0 it is ecessary to note that the ce atm of 1926 gave a still.newer variant0 showing an even greater decrease in the Ukrainianloopulation, although its total figure is still quite considerable, ramely0 3050e4. people, who, despite the most devious interrogation by the census, categorically listed themselves as Ukrainians. There are several reasons for the decrease in the number of Ukrainians, but the chief one is that the census took place precisely at the time that the famous Chita trial came to an end, in 1923-240 when a number of prominent Ukrainians had been Charged with "treason against the state, and conspiracy to detach the Far East from Russia, to establish a separate Ukrainian government, and to deliver the territory into the bands of the imperialists." Therefore, all the Ukrainian organizations in the territory have been banned and their. administrative personnel and most prominent leaders arrested and deported. Any mention of a Ukrainian moveront or sympathies led to arrest. In these circumstances, nevertheless, 3050.60 Ukrisnians listed themselves as Ukrainians. We refer to those interested in this matter to other of our writings, such as Ukraine ek Dalek. Skhid ['The Ukrainian Far East.] and Problemar Ukrainly* L The Problem of the Green Ukr i47. In the latter; the data concerning conditions and movements among the population are given a detailed description, based o various materials and different periods. 25. The colonization of the vast expanses of the Green Ukraine was conducted in the second half of the 19th century chiefly over the OdessaArladivostok route. Later, a considerable number of settlers began to travel by way of the Siberian railroad, as the latter progressed in construction. Sometimes they travelled the whole breadth *UkraIi.is 'kyy Da.lekyy Skhid has appeared in three editions. One is the Kharbin edition of l934 and and the other two were published by the Ukrainian Oceanic Institute. Problema Zelenyy Ukrainy is being prepared for the press. SECRET Security Information Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 - 6 - SECRET SEC STY INFORMATION 50X1 of Siberia by means of Lerses or oxen. This movement met with no obstacles, and the settlers would make their Way to Sretinak or the PribaYkalgye and would usually wait for Spring, in order to be able to sail over the Amur and other, s ller rivers ik Frei these localities?cthey were generally able to go by barge Ot ste nmoato, first, tathe rivernShiika; and then over the Amur t. their designated place of settlement; mainly, the Amur territory as far as the Zeya and Bureya valleys. The Pr'f,.riye resettlement movement began later and was conducted exclusively, over sea routes, via Odes a, with steamboats belonging to the *Volunteer Fleet" (a government steamship co pany) which serviced the Black Sea and Far Eastern Ports line. 26 After After the migrations via the Siberian railway between Vladivostok and Khabarovak had been co pleted, the settlers enloyed a considerable measure of relief. Simultaneously with the launching of the settlement movement to the Primor eye, began the con truction of a nese evin line through Manchuria, which was to link the Sibarian line with the PriMor'ye. For this purpose, Russi obtained by way of clever diplomatic convers tion a' concession for a new r ilroed line, with special right of defense and self.4administr tion over a strip of land five versts wide, on both sides of the r ilroad line, thus stretch of land ten versts in width was to be under Russian administr tion. The construction of this railroad entailed he suo- of money, which were b rrowed in France and were never paid back. I terest on this money,was paid only till the beginni e of World War I. The admintr tion of the railroad was actually in the hands, t first, of the Chinese- Russian B tit and later in tie hands of the Russian-Asian Bank. The costs of the exploit tion of the railroad were covered by the Ministry of Finance, which had the formal rightto control it 27. On 15 March 1838 the supplement ry agreement with China was signed conceiving the lease of Port Arthur and the Liao-tung penin ula and 'on ?4 July of the same year was signed a new agreementgrantiml:the right to build a' railroad line from Kharbin to Port Arthur, thentoailed S uthern Manchurian branch. By the peace treaty of Portsmouth, in l'e5,;ihis line, beginnie: with the st tion of Cheang- chgung passed, together with Port Arthur and the Port of Dal'nyy, to Japan. 28. The construction of this railroad line had a positive effect on the resettlement ovementfi although a considerable number of settlers still travelled by sea, and those who were going to the Amur territory went by railroad to Chita or Sretinsk and from there proceeded by water, as was done in the past. The new railroad line had a salutary effect on the economic life of the entire Far East and the Green Ukraine; bec uee tt brought the distant lands nearer to the metropolis, although the construction of the new railroad undoubtedly brought greater good to the territory itself. In the construction and servicing of the new railroad line, inasmuch as a need arose for many experts, as well as simple workers, the Ukrainians aim playad a role of prnA- importance. A considerable number of specialists of various kinds came directly from the Ukraine, and s.me came from the Turkestan railway construction project. In this case, again; the majority of them were Ukrainians. A large number f these rtiIroad experts had worked on the construction of the Siberian railr9t4 lime, \kers again Ukrainians composed an important percentage (See I tori e Ukr ins ho u v Azii [-History of the Ukrainian Movement in Asia Volume 30. We shall net concern, nurselve here with the separate details and problems of the ? resettlement.ve ent itself. There is a vast literature available on this subject, particularly the works of Professor Kaufman and Trudy Amurskoy Ekspeditsii [-The Work of the Amur Expediti gs, of which there are more than 20 volumes, as well as innumer ble other work .which give a complete picture .f the manner i which it was c nducted? the difficulties, and the result. The yearly reports of the governor general of the Primor'ye and Amur territories may be of particular interest. 11' SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @50-Yr2013/04/18:CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 - 7 - SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION 31. The main reason for the ss movement of settlers from Europe to Siberia and the Green Ukraine was the crowded land ituation in the Ukraine and the yearnif- of the people for a.bit more freedom, and the latter, they felt, existed here, in the Green Ukraine. This movement gained particular stret:th after a number of repressions wreaked upon the peasantry in the years 114)-5 and after the disturbances t the end of the last century. The beginning of the movement of settlers by sea frou the Black ,Se port offered to the Ukrainian peasants particularly favorable conditions, and it wee precisely Ukrainians Who came to the Far East in these years in the greatest number4. 32. The Koreans. constitute a special factor in the question of resettlement. The wretched living conditions in Korea and the difficulty of finding new lands compelled them to seek new places where they could work, and in this matter they found the southern part of the Primorgye. Here, those Koreans who began to engage in agriculture rented the land from the lazy Cossacks and little by little expanded their colonies. Even as early as 1, the matter assumed such a serious character that the Russian government was obliged to sign a special treaty with Koreq, 11!1r,rpby all Koreans who had crossed the border from Korea prior to 1884 became subjects of the Russian empire and those who had done so. after that date were considered foreigners; who were alloyed temporarily to sojourn on Russian soil. Later, the right to be considered Russi n subjects was extended to all Koreans who lived on Rue ian territory. Thi z a eement 10 :t its force after the J panese occupation of Kore inc 1910. 33. The question of colonizi the Green Ukraine with peas mt population gave rise to certain frictions among the administr tive circles and struggle of the latter with the military, because the military considered th defense of the Far East of paramount importance. The military circles were perturbed by number of reasons, because there were c n tant national manifestati ne of diss tisf ction and desires to liberate themselves amo the peoples of Turkestan, among i iO' still thrived the glorious tr ditioms of the past. Even under the Bolsheviks; they continue to wage their struggle; which may be discerned in such an instance as the publication of the Histor of K zakhstan, the fir t-vOlume of which appeared in 1939-41 under the aegis of the iiii Academy of Sciences and which reflects in vivid colors the traditions of their great past. Soviet criticism was greatly outraged by the glorification of the period of the Golden Horde and the culture and traditions of sovereignty of the Turkic and Tartar peoples.* 34. The military concept of colonization wa shelved and finally cue to naught in the particularly difficult conditions of the Far East. Then came the time to support the peasant elemept and; by way of priority, the Ukrainian; not only in the Far East but in SibPriA. Indeed, the Ukrainian element had existed dozens of years before this Trans Bail .nd the north - from the beginning of the Russian conquests of these land - but at that time the Ukrainians had come here as deportees or as part of some military unit. 35. This resettlement movement began in 1857 and continued all the time without interruption and with various degree of intensity. With the id of the plow, culture w s brought into A land where abounded the wilderness of forests which were trespassed only on occasions by a hunter. Brut, in some localities there existed Chicese settlements and tr de of a kind w s,oarried on; mainly along the rivers, particularly the Amur. -There were also .individual loc lities under Manchurian administration, which collected a itibute once a-year. *See the literary reviews in the publications of the Institute of Marxism-Leninism; 1943; and in the Series of critiques; s, for example, "Criticism of the Activity of the Kazakh Obkom;" Irkutsk; 29 Septe mier 1949; concerning the description of the Golden Horde. SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 50X1 , 8 - SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION 36. The Ukrainian peasants who migrated to the Green .Ukraine brought with them their own customs, their own speech, and their own methods of tilling the soil and husbandry, and only under the pressureof local conditions and climate did they begin to employ new methods; which were more suitable here. These settlers were faithful to their customs and mores, trying to maintain the latter in all their. vigor.. Since they were beginning to become a majority in the local population they gradually imposed a new aspect on this land. A real New Ukraine** began to be created here. 37. At the beginning of this century this fact so impressed new arrivals of visitors thateiven a Russian 4omrnalist, in his description of the Primorgye, at that'tirSe'Printed the following linee in his long article entitled The Ukraine in the Far East, one of a series of articles known as Notes of a Traveller in Siberia and the Far East: "The Little Russian (the author uses this appelation for the Ukrainians !settlers have been fort*late to obtain the best of all the lands that were destined for colonization in the Far East, namely, the black soil steppes. Therefore, this is the only territory where ones spirit can find rest, when one sees the happiness of these .people, : whereas in other localities mismanagement of every kind is only too evident. The climate and the flora here are the same as in Little Russia and there is a greater wealth of fauna. Here, whole flocks of pheasants are found to breed in the fields - the most beloved game in the Far East - and wild boars, goats, and other animals are to be found in the forests. Sugar beets grow well here and a wild variety of grapes. Wild bees also breed her. 38. "The villages and the mode of life of the colonists slake one feel as if they had been transported here directly from the Poltava or the Chernigov provinces. And the capital of the Ukraine, the Ussuri Nikolesk is very much like Gadyach, Or Konotop, particularly, with its traditional bazar rfaig, its bubliki kind of doughnug, its honey ..... and its garrulous marketwomen who are so unlike the friendly peasant tradi men with their eternal pipes in their mouths." 39. "One thing, unfortunately, they did not bring with the from the homeland to the New Ukraine, namely their cherry orchards; but the reason probably is that it is difficult to obtain them here for planting. In general,horticulture is still in its beginnings. The Little Russians carry.on their husbandry, in the majority of cases, with the help of Koreans rather than with their own hands and they, themselves work near the railroad line or trade in the bazars. Since they live in the vicinity, the Koreans require land for farming and therefore lease it from the local colonists. Husbandry among the Little Russians, unlike that among the colonists of other territories, has been placed on a sound basis." 40. "Al]. necessary items of consumption are sold here, they are home-produced and quite low in price. The most unfortunate thing about this territory are the periodic floods, which destroy not only the sown or harvested grain or hay but entire estates. In other years, afflications are unknown here." 41. So wrote Shteinfel'd, a. famous journalist: of that time.* 42. In those days the settlers themselves 'called the: new land Zelenyy Klin ("The **The author uses here as i "New Ukraine."nn other places in his articles, the term, * The articles teexe printed in the Kharbin newspaper, Kharbinskiy Vestnik in 1O50 The article cited above, "The Ukraine in the Far East," appeared 10 August 1906, No. 649, page 2. SECRET pEppITIr INFORMATION narinQcifipn in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 - 9 - ,SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Green Wedgi7, at first applying this term to the Primor'ye and Ussuri territories andextendinF it later to include the Amur territory. Simultaneously, the appelation, "New Ukraine," is becoming more and more popular. Under this name appeared the first Ukrainian calendar for the year 1921 in Vladivostok, isiued by the Far-Eastern Ukrainian Secretariat. Thus, the basis was laid for assigning this territory, ethnographically, to our Ukrainian nation. 43. St. Petersburg had hoped all the time that the resettlement of a considerable number of onr'nessantrY to the Far East would weaken the Ukrainian people and that the ttni. disturbances would _cease; however, everything turned out to the contrary (See A Short History of the Ukrainian Movement in Asia). We have interesting examples in our history, of the intensification of the Ukrainian movement and innuMerable newspaper articles and commentaries which confirm this. The Russian administration realized this too late, when the Far East became not only the Zelanyy Klin, but also the New Ukraine, the present day Green Ukraine. The change in name for a land that is remote from Kiev is a chai..e of neo-political.importance for the Fax Eastd 44. The truth is that the great masses of people here had been subjected to unusually difficult material and moral_ conditions. :Far from their native soil, with a strong national tradition, but\exposed ta an alien school system, church, and administration; these masks, nevertheless, managed to support the elves and at an appropriate momeAt expressed, through Ukrainian conventions in the Far East, their mood and aspirations for an independent existence, not only in a national but also political sense...These Ukrainian masses were preparing for their own sovereignty; when the Constitution of the Ukrainians of the Far East was ratified..fsig 45. The arrival of settlers increased.. in particular after the completion of the railroad line. The main reasons that the movement assumed significant pro- portions were the famine and cholera epidemic in 1891. - 1892, as a result of which peasant disturbance broke aut. It was then to-1G the government began to assist the resettlement of.peasants,,particularly from the Ukraine. In 1Z?4 the entire length of the Siberian railroad lint had not yet been completed: none the less, 9,000 persons migrated to the Far East, of wham a considerable number came by sea and a smaller number via Siberia. After 1895 arrivals by sea declined in numbers. . 46. In order to illustrate how many Ukrainians arrived; we may consider the following notation: in the past year. rsic7 2,100 families arrived in the Amur territory and 2,798 !lhodaks" rpeasants sent out by their community to explore possibilities in the new la* - altogether 11,782 persons, of whome one-fourth had come from the Poltava province. Seven percent returned home. In the Primor'ye territory 10, 500 families arrived - altogether 61;547 persons, of whom a third came from the Chernigov province, and only 5 percent from the Poltava province. About 10 percent returned home. Also, about 400 persons migrated from the Amur territory to the Primorgye." 47. One of the reasons that the Ukrainian population did not lose its national traits in a foreign midst, far from the homeland; must be discerned in the unusually low level of the Russian administration personnel who, except for a very small number, regarded their sojourn in the Far East as a kind of punishment and a sojourn was only temporary. This was even more true of the Cossack masses who had been deported by force and who had no desire to remain here and to make their stay permanent, whereas the Ukrainian settlers had come here voluntarily under the pressure of poverty in their own country and intended to live here permanently. *12m11122112:12E1111, No. 1236, p. 3, 22 February 1908. SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 - 10 - SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION 50X1 48. The Cossacks, on the other hand, had been thrown here by the government be- cause 'Of strategic motives and were in the majority cases unfit for husbandry. Therefore, the Cossack masses disintegrated, and this process was accelerated by the system of subsidies granted them by the government. This was an easy method of mai taining the Cossack families in place, but the latter never became real'eolonizers. 49. This honorable role was taken over by the Ukrainian settlers, and although the conditions wetitnnfaVorable? they endured these trials of fate successfully, preserved their national traits and character, and when the revolution broke out these settlers quickly organized and took the road toward national sovereignty.' This signified at the same time the investment of the entire territbry with Ukrainian garb and the creation of a Ukrainian administration. Unfortunately,., the coming of the Bolsheviks prevented the Ukrainians from realizing their plans0 There was no longer time for this. 50. At the end of the foreign intervention in 1922, the administration passed into the,handa'of the so-called Far Eastern Republic, which though theoretically aid constitutionally was an independent republic and offered great promises and perspectives, was ia reality, frnm the very beginni y permeated, via certain party and professional cadres, by the Bolsheviks. Moreover, the Bolshevik army completely filled the vacuum which was created after the emigration of the "White armies" (the army-of General null, which came from SiVeria to the Far East, with which this army had nothing in common, and the local Primor'ye Zem kaya Clang Army, a reactionary organization of General Diteriks). Within the framework of this Far Eastern Republic there was also a ministry of nationalities, with a Ukrainian departmeht. P. V. Martyshyn was named candidate to the Ukrainian Far Eastern Secretariat. The Ukrainians developed an intense activity on the basis of the rights granted by the constitution, but very soon after the conquest of the territory of the Green 'Ukraine by the Bolsheviks, the latter compelled the National Assembly of the Far Eastern Republic to proclaim the "union" of the republic with the Russian federation; just as almost 25 years later, they "united" Eastern Ukraine, Estonia-, Latvia and: Lithuania. 51. Simultaneously; and even somewhat earlier, the Bolsheviks carried through the arrest of a dOmber of Ukrainian leaders and organized the Chita Trial, at which they were prosecuted.. However, under the pressure of events in the Ukraine, the Bolsheviks of the Far East were compelled quickly to alter some- what their policy, and they permitted the institution of a wholly Ukrainian administration and. school system in 14 rayons of the Far East., four of which were in the Amur territory and ten in the Primor'ye. In Blagoveshchensk were opened the Ukrainian Pedagogical Institute and Technical School. This policy continued until new changes occurred in the treatment of national problems in the Ukraine itself, which were related to the beginnings of the program of collectivization. Slowly the process of Ukrainization in the Far East dis- continued, and later all this passed into oblivion. Even the newspaper [-Socialist Reconstruction 7 ceased to appear in the Ukrainian language. 52. The years of 1929,-32, which were bound with the beginning of the collectivization program, must be nonsidered critical in the Ukrainian life. In these years began the resettlement of Ukrainians to thp Per Fast, but this time the settlers were, in the main, the richest and most prominent elements of the peasantry, who were . driven by force from-their native soil-because they were most openly in opposition to the Koikhozes They did not even recognize Communism and its policy of liquidating private property-and the right to conduct one's husbandry on the principle of private ownership./ SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @50-Yr2013/04/18:CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 OW( I - 11 - SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION 53. AS maybe seen, the moat openopposition to c011ectivization was that which occurred in the Ukraine Therefore,the majority of those driven from the villages were Ukrainians. ,The new wave of Ukrainians which came to Siberia and the Green Ukraine. brought with it a strong spirit of nationalism, knowledge and understanding of their own sovereignty, and the ability to use to advantage their own schools and books. Although the Soviet power began a large scalp program of Ruasification everyVbere, this process in the Green Ukraine met with constant obstacles and during World War II ceased completely -- this timefOr Military reasons, in order not to provoke the people at a time when a tremendous state of insecurity for the Soviets prevailed on every front., 54. Again, as a result of military events., hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians .' came to he Green Ukraine. In this manner the "pytoma:Vaga" (specific gravity? of the Ukrainian element lived through a number of crises and acquirea great significance in 1942-1946. To-day, the Ukrainians constitute, onee more, an absolute majority not only in, the Primor'ye but also the Amur territory and many other parts of:the Green Ukraine, ? ,?:-. 55. Below we give a number of tables which illustrate vividly the changes in the composition of the population of the Green Ukraine and the ever increasing role of the Ukrainian. element, although its significance continued to be concealed by the Bolshevik press and is hidden from the casual onlooker. 56. This new Ukrainian element ia better oriented, as VAS the case in the years of the revolution and the civil war., and at a decisive moment this element may change the course of events and find its place among the rest of the popUlation.. 57. In the meantime?, we have no concrete data concerning the Ukrainian educational system in the Green Ukraine, but We know that publicly nothing is permitted to the Ukrainian, except theater and songs over, the radio. At the same. time there are very frequent-dasss'of repreeentatives Of various rayofis at congresses and conventions who cannot speak Russian. However, we know that a considerable number of Ukrainian schools were Shut in 1932, that the institute at Blagoveshchensk has adopted the Russian language, and that all the - children are now being sent to Russian schools, where there is no mention made concerning the Ukrainian language, let alone its culture and history. 58. In this manner is conducted a large-scale attempt to assimilate and liquidate the Ukrainian people also here, the Green Ukraine. The process of deporta- tion of great. masses of people from the Ukraine to alien soil -- to Siberia and the Far East -- is not always what it is planned to be. These elements of the Ukrainian population, which are very well oriented, when they arrive in these lands already populated by Ukrainians, do not assimilate from a viewpoint favorable to the Russians but reinforce the local Ukrainian people and even add to its specific. gravity (pytoma vaga). Thus the Green Ukraine is becoming more and more a country with absolute Ukrainian majority -- moreover, one with a considerable national consciousness. It is not our task at this point to calculate all the "pros" and "cons" in the,historical processes which at present are transpiring there We have only:iiAe a-summation of the statistical and geographical data.. 59. Therefore, the general_ picture of the situation with regard to the composition of the population,and4ts distribution over the entire territory of the Green Ukraine is approximately as follows below, on the basis of the latest investiga- tions not only of our Ukrainian experts but also foreigners who have had the opportunity to study carefully all the available materials. SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 - la - SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION 60. We have already cited above the figures concerning the size of the population in the Green Ukraine at the end of the last century, according to the census of 1897, and we have indicated the census of 1926 and 1923. Now'we shall pause a little for details regarding these data because they are basic to the clarification of this important problem., which is to follow. 61. For certain reasons, we place special emphasis on the composition of the population during these years in Zelenyy Juin, the Primor'ye and Amur territory, where tpe bulk of the Ukrainian people reside. This entire expanse was inhabited in 1926 by 1,2502000 people2 whose distribution with respect to nationality and territory was in 1926, according to official figures*, as follows: Russians Ukrainians Others Primor'ye territory 200,000 l5,000 250,000 2 6.0000o Amur territory 300,000 175,000 175,000 : 66op000 5ic7 Total 500,000 325,000 425,000 = 12250,000 These bare figures tell very little, except that they establish the preponderance of Russians,. which is not true even if one consults other books published by the Soviets, as for 'instance the work of V. Ye. Gluzdovekiy**. He states that in 1923 the population in the Guberniyas 5rovinde2/ of the Far. Eastern Territory was as follows: Guberniya Area '1897 1923 ' in sq. km. Total Urban Village Amur 393,000 120,000 391,000 109,000 282,000 Primoreye 690,000) 610,000 187,000 423,000 ) Sakhalin Islad 422001 '23,00Q0 202000' Nomad 25,000 ) Natives Kamchatka 1 291 000) 352000 In tosans and cities 10,000 ' Total 2,416,000 373,000 1,0562000 62. These figures show the distribution of the population per square kilometer to be as follows: Amur -- 1; Primor'ye O. Sakhalin -- 0.5; Kamchatka -- 0.3; the average for the entire territory is 0,44. 63. - lutplowskiy gives the percentages of the population in-the Primor'ye and Amur territories on the tasis of the 1923 census, as follows :- Russians Ukrainians Other Europeans Primor'ye Amur 21.5 38.0 50.6 58.0 2.2 0.3 (Jews) * All-Union Census of the Population of the USSR, Moscow, 1928, Vol. VII ** V. Ye Gluzdovskiy a3lEtevosna0blast? he Far Eastern Region72 Vladivostok, 1925 SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Koreans Chinese Natives 3 - SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION (continued) Primor ys 22.3 1.2 1.9 Amur 1.2 =COOP 2.4 50X1 Undeter ned 2.8 0.2 64. He also writes that in 1917 there were in the Primoriye Guberniya the following: 3,989 Gilyaks on the continent and 2,203 Gilyaks on Sakhalin Island; 4,021 Gol!ds on the continents 1 077 Oroches on the continent and 149 on Sakhalin; 20 Tunguses of the first type LEV and 241 of the second; 32 Yakuts on the continent and 22 on Sakhalin. Altogether there were 9,139 on the continent and 2,615 on Sakhalin Island. Then he remarks in his notes that in 1923 there were only 8,109 on the centinent; therefore, the remainder must have been reckoned as Russians or must have perished in the revolution. It I 65. We shall not list here the distribution of the Russian and Ukrainian populations in the individual rayons of the Primorlye and Amur territories, which is given in the booX? Dal'nevostochnyy Kray he Far Eastern Territorg by three authors, or in D linovostochnyy Kray v Tsifrakh ghe Far Eastern Territery in figures7 published in Khabarovsk in 1929. These details are to be found, also in the Statistical Tables on the Ukrainian Population Based on the Census of 1926, published by the Scientific Institute in Warsaw in 1930. We only wish to point out that the figures given by this census must be subjected to a critical evolution, because they are in every case minimized. There were a number of reasons for these minimized figures. The first and main reason, which has already been mentioned, is that the census-takers had special instructions in their Circular No, 14, which stated that those who declared themselves "Russian" should be recorded as "Russian-Great Russian" and that as Ukrainians should be considered only those who called themselves such. Moreover, everjithing tended to make it easier for the Russians to record a European part of the population as Russian, even if part of the latter were natives or Buryats, as happened, in the Trans-Baikal territory, where they were recorded as Russians. 66. Therefore, it must be concluded that the population figure for the Ukrainians in the Primor'ye needs to be augmented by at least 100 percent as against the figure given by the 1926 census, and for the Amur territory by not less than 60 percent. Then the data will be more exact. Such data will then appear as follows:* ?Primorlye Khabarovski7 Kral Ukrainians 54% 45% Russians 13% 42% Koreans 20% Others (chiefly natives) 13% 13% However, the ;igures for the Ukrainians, compared with those given by the Gluzdovskiy, are 3.4 percent greater for Primorlye and 13 percent fag smaller for Ammr, with a difference of only three years between the two censuses. The new percentage given for the Russians is 8.5 percent smaller in Primor'ye and 4 percent greater in Amur, than in 1923. The figure for the natives is also smaller in Primor'ye ind larger in Amur. OR al. *See Ukrainskgyy Halos, article by I. Svit, part 23, January 1943, Shanghai SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION 50X1 67. The resettlement during the collectivization increased the Ukrainian population in the Amur territory, while there were few new settlers in Primor'ye. Of interest are the following figures showing the increase Of population in these two territories, Primor'ye and Amur, found in the data of K. Mehnert, published in 1944 under the title of ahanyyjale gastern Siberia7: 1926 1,244,433 1928 1,354,200 1929 1,443,500 1930 1,478,900 1939 2,338,095 68. We shall return to these data later. This author further states that even beginning with the construction of the Siberian railroad, part of the settlers travelled to the Far East from the ports of Black Sea, and, "since Odessa is in the Ukraine, there were more Ukrainians, than others." Even after the railroad had been built, the proportion of the Ukrainian settlers was considerable. 69. This, author says that "The problem of statistics in regard to nationalities is the most disputed one, since it is impossible to establish an objective standard for them. According to the Ukrainian sources, the Slav population of Eastern Siberia consists of one-third Ukrainians and two-thirds Russians; while more than a half of the total of 2,500,000 Ukrainians live in the Soviet Far East, especially in the Frimor'ye territory. The Great Russian authors, on the other hand, allow a much smaller figure, only about several hundred thousand, for the Ukrainiens. We point out this problem also because, as a result of the war, it became evident that the attitude towards the Bolshevik regime of the Ukrainian part of the population was more negative than that of the Great Russians. Therefore, the Soviet authorities can rely less on the Ukrainians in Eastern Siberia than on Great Russians." 70. In our opinion, it was necessary to quote these lines in. order to show to what extent foreign authors, notito mention the Russians, are, at best, cautious in dealing with the Ukrainian probiet; sometimes they ignore it completely. In the most recent book on USSR geography by Theodore Shabad? the author only mentions the existence of a Ukrainian population in the Far East in A statement that the Russians and Ukrainians compose four-fifths of the entire population of the Soviet Far East, i.e. east of the Stanovoy ridge (p. 314). Not a word does he say about the Ukrainians in the Zeya -- Amur region. In describing the Khaborovsk and Khor regions and the latter's environs he says again that the Russians and Ukrainians make up the majority of the population. In his description of the Primorgye proper -- the southern part of it -- he touches upon the Mrsinian acclimatized agricultural cultures, such as sugar beets, corn, watermelons, etc., but makes no reference whatever to the population. 71. We gathered our data on the composition of the population during various periods of time, beginning with 1925 and up to 1947, from various sources, mainly direct Soviet information, and then made estimates, as cautious as possible, of the present situation. Many of these data were Used by us in drawing up our map of the Green Ukraine which was published in Kharbin, Manchuria in 1937, and, particularly, in the above-mentioned article and other works.. Fart of the information was taken from the research notes, most of them in manutcript, of Dr. M. M. Mil'ko,'deceased. * Klaus Mehnert --- "Eastern Siberia -- Underpopulated Treasure House", 20th Century Shanghai, January 1944, pp. 19-31 and 75- (2 appendices and map). SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 - 15 - SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION 50X1 72. In order not to return to this subject any more, we wish to indicate here various Asiatic nationalities represented in this territory, including the aborigines. No- w re in the present Soviet Union are there so many diverse tribes living together. True, many of them nuMber only a few hundred souls while many of them have 'disappeared altogether-. 73. According to the census of 1939, there are approximately 554,000, but not more than 6000000 of them in the entire territory of the Green Ukraine, divided as follows; Yikato (The Yakut Autonomous Oblast') 300,000 Buryats (The Mongolian-Buryat ASSR) about 210,000 Tungnses or Yevenkis 40,000 Chukchas (Chukotskiy Nat. Okrug) 13,000 Koryaks (Koryakskiy National Okrug) 8,000 Lamuts (Okhotsk coast) 69800 Govds (Amur territory) 5,500 Kamchadals (Kamchatka) 4,500 Gilyaks (Anmr territory) 4,400 Udes (in the Prinor'ye south of the Amir River) 1,500 Aleuts (on the islands near Kanchatka) 350 Manegirs (along the lower Amur) 59 Yukagirs (the Kolyma region) 45 Ainue (Sakhalin Island) 31 Total 6 A f:ic7 74. This nanL.or is greater than the 554,000 nentfoned above, b3cause there is a difference in the calcu2,ation of the Buryats in the Transbaikal, region caused by the fact that the borders of the Gl'een Ukraine sometimes do not tally with the administrative subdivisions of Eastern Siberia .cording to the Soviet nomenclature. 75. It should be pointed o-lt that after the end of the war and of the occupation of the southern part of Sakhalin, the number of Ainus somewhat increased, but not more than by a thousand. Be ides, it is not known what hapPened to the 350,000 Japanese who resided there. 76. The present distribution of the Asiatic nationalities in the entire territory of the Green Ukraine, as revealed in the censuz of 1939 will be shown below. However, the basis of these estimates will still be the census of 1926, which gives the clearest picture of tional composition, because the process Of Russification and the policy connected with it tendi g to wipe out national differences have been more and more evident during the last 20 years. 77. The majority of Buryats live in the present Buryat-Mongolian Automomous Republic. There is a small number of them in other localities of the Chitinskaya Oblast and partly in the southern strip of the Yakut territory. KECRET SECURITY INFORMATION nedassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 16 SECRET :SECURITY INFORMATION 50X1 78. The Yakuts, constituting the bulk of the population of the Yakut territory, reside alo,_ the middle part of the Lena River anher tributaries, the Aldan and Vilyuy0 while the Yevenkis (Tungtses) and the Lamuts live in the far north, aid the Yunagirs at the very north, with the Chukchas near them The Yunagirs belong to one of the oldest and., at one time,numerous tribes. 79. On the territory proper of the'Greenliedge and:Kamchatka the Chinese and the Koreans live in considerable nutbersA The case vith.the Koreans is not clear. According to the ce sus of 19260 they n A6ered about 1.40000, while according to the information available in 19170 Gluzdovskiy gives their number as 530600 in that year. and 940400 in 1923. It is difficult to say why the figure for .1917 was doubled. It is also known, that in.1929-300 the greater part of the Koreans were moved to the neighborhood of Khabaronsk0 the northern part of Primoraye0 and there again they began to be moved further west; to Southern Siberia and Kazakstan. There were even reports maintaining their almost complete abseloce from the territory before the beginning of the war of 1941-45. On the whole there are very few Chinese, because the majority of them emigrated to the adjoingg Manchuria under the pressure of the Soviet economic system during the post-revolutionary years of, 192-l929 80. The indigenous tribes are largely composed of Palaeoasiatics0 such as Tunguses, the Chukabas0 Nymylans (Koryak )0 Itelmens (Kamchadals), and Nivkhs (Gilyaks). The latter belo to a separate ethnographic group. e 81. The Pun gu -Manch an uri group includes the Nanais (Golgds) an once MU rous people, the Udes (udegis or Udekhes). A 82. The Chinese in the old times did not distingaish-the population on both b:Ags f the Amur River and the Ussuri,territory according to the. people's speech or origin, as did the Europeans and s we do now, but according to the way they wore their hair. Thus, the Mangum or Olchas vete the people with long hair;" the Gol'ds were called "fish skins," because they wore clothes and footwear made of fish skin which is resistant to dampness and. water, and the tribes. on the Primor'ye coast and the Oroches were described a "long red' hatr."* According to Chinese sources, the Oroches were a sizable tribe who bred reindeer. 83. In the middle of the peat century, the Chinese began slowly to 1.mmIgrate into these len. . They were forbidden by order from Peking to travel further north than the tqwn of Sansin in the lover reaches of the Sunguri River or further east the.' the town of Ningut. But in spite of these rders which were rather severely enforced (see descrip- tion of the travels of the icssionary,,H...de la.BrUnterl ) this author g-ntions numerous natives who belong to the Yupitatt8zelITtribee2 &Manchurian Tungu people who lived along the banks of the Ussuri. River. ? Starting with the first Five-year Plan, the Bolsheviks began to increase their resettlement ctivities with special attention being paid to the development of the heavy industry and economy necessary for military purposes in the Far East. Since that time the populati(erg )1AP. increased considerably in some place and the number of political and other prisonersused for slave labour has been groviA:. It was first officially ment.wueo. that 6te cere?nies connected with the opening of the railroad line between the st tic, of ValocLvyevka. (near Uabarodsk).and the new town of Komsomol'sk, built by special OPT det chmente, as was reported at the time in the description of events in Tikho 0kenakaya Zvezda he Pacific Star7 (Khaborovsk, 1935). It was mentioned again in Pionerskaya Pravda, No I.1, 12/11/1943 LIT was impossible to say whether the middle figure in the manuscript is Roman or Arabic, ergo, whether * E. G. Ravenstein - The Rus lens on the Amur, London, 1861, p. 82. ** Ho de 1 Brumere, Annale de la Propagation de la Fol linnals of the Propagation of Paith7vol. XX, 1848. SECRET SECURITX INFORMATION npr.lassified in Part- Sanitized CopyApprovedforRelease @50-Yr2013/04/18:CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 50X1 17 . SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION February or_Nove er was meanq on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the beginning of construction of the town of Komsomol'sk on the site of the former church village of Permskoye. 85. It is not the first time that prison Islas Was ,sed. As far back as 1593, the endless wave of deportees, unwanted by Moscow for one reason or another, began roUiv. in, fir t to Siberia and then to the Far East. The first deportees were those who had been mixed up in the political assassination of Tsarevich Dmitriy. At the end of the 17th century, large groups of revolutionaries arrested in the Ukraine were among them.* The uprisings of the streletsy biembers of a special permanent army in the 16th and 17th centuries/ and of the Cossacks in the Ukraine, as well as the religious persecutions of the dissenters and old-believers who fought against Peter the First's innovations, led to a certain development of the ild expanse of this part of Asia, because many of the exiled were gifted people, morally steadfast and courageous, very much like the pilms4sem who name to New England. They created the best organized communities in the Transbaikal territory, and later in the Amur region, with high moral standards. In 1758 and again in 1831 and 1863, large groups of Poles and Lithuanians were banished. Later came those who sympathized with the rebels and the defenders of the Caucasas, headed by the distinguished Sham17, 86. There was no lack either in those days of good, educated people, whose mark was of great benefit to the sciences, especially, the ethnography. 87. Let us examine now the size of the present population of the Green Ukraine on the basis of the most recent data at our disposal. However, the fact mast always be kept in mind that the actual status is unknown outside of the USSR, in view of the continuous resettlement of consider ble numbers of the population.- a process which probably will never end as long as the Soviet Communist government is. in existen e there. 88. The follow's: set of tables, prepared with the greatest possible accuracy and circum- spection, should give us an pprox ?-te idea of the actual, conditions. We may emphasize that a considerable number of former estimates, s:de especially before the war, were fterwards confirmed by the data published in the Soviet press. 89. The territory of the present Green Ukraine, according to the most recent Soviet data, ? is divided into the following krays and. lands g The Buryat - Mongolian Autonomous Soviet Republic; the Chitinskaya Oblast with the Aga Buryat - Mongolian National Okrug; the Yakut Autonomous Republic the Amur Oblast, the Khabarovsk Kray; the Kamch tka Oblast; the Nizhniy LEowe/ Amur Oblast, the Jewish Autonomous Oblast' gormerly, the Jewish Autonomous Socialist Soviet Republic. - Birobidzhan the Primorye Kray; and the new Sakhalin Oblast. 90. Of these, the oblasts and. the krays? beginning with the Amur oblast, and ending with the Sakhalin Oblast, form the Soviet Far East. 91. Their total are in square kilometers was as follows Buryat - Mongolian Republic Chitinskaya Oblast Yakut Autonomous Republic 331,400 720,0. 3,0300900 S., Amur Obl st, including the Khabarovsk Kray 2,572,000 206,600 about. _22,222 Total 6,965?900 .51e7 square *Wright, ''.Asiatic Hassle," Vol. 2, p. 34, "Southern Russia", Note by I. S. Primor'ye Kray Island of Sakhalin SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part-Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @50-Yr2013/04/18:CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 OUAl SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION kilometers on which 4,440,251 persons resided in 1939. 92. There are a few curious comparisons of the size of population on these lands. 12.2_2 1926 1222 1947 Buryat-Mongolian Rep. 446;900 54T000 542;000 about 600,000 Chitinskaya Oblast 546,200 10159,000 to 1,050,000 Yakut Aut. Rep, 400,544 ,0 450,000 Amur Oblast 1,330,000 u 575,000 Khabarovsk Kray 391,000 6600000 1,250;000 Primorgye Kray 610,000 6000000 907,220 ;' 19475,000 Island of Sakhalin 20,000, 1000000 100,000 Kamchatka Oblast up to 1926 35,000 Total 2,329,100 4,440,000 about 5,7000000 5i27 51.27 93. Lack of uniformity in administration subdivisions prevalent on all the lands of the Green Ukraine at all times, with frequent changes of the borders of separate krays and ?blasts, makes it extremely difficult to arrive at a conclusion; therefore, the estimates, of necessity, must be only rough ones. 94. The Zelenyy Klin proper, i.e. the Primor'ye gray and the Amur Oblast) can be more accurately defined, because of a more varied material on the subject at our disposal, and because the borders of separate rayons or ?blasts, and the like, are easier determined. 95. In accordance with the most recent data of 1947, furnished above, one should bear in mind, that with the growth of towns and villages, the population has increased; for instance, in Chitia, by 30,4f0; in Yakutsk, by 25,000; new towns, such as Aldan and Nizhne Kolymsk, which used to be small villages, have come up; Komsomol'sk-on-the-Amur, by S,000 Khabarovsk, by 100,00.; Vladivostok, by 1200000; Nikolgek, now Voroshilovsk0 by &I9000; and Nikolayevsk-on-the-Amur, by 30,000; a new tow, Magadan, has grown up to about 50,000 inhabitants. On the whole, the Khabarovsk-Amur territory acquired about half a million of new population, and the Primor'ye Kray 570,000. Also, Sakhalin Island, only half of which belonged to USSR up to 1945, but which is fully occupied now, had at the time of its occupation (the southern part) about 300,000 of Japanese alone, whose fate is unknown up to this day. 96. According to the official data of 1939, the population of the Amur-Khabarovsk territory and the Primor'ye Kray amounted to 2,1509000 of which the former had 10350,000 and the Primor'ye Kray :so 000. 97. Of these, there were in - Ukrainians Rus ians Others ELIMQLLXt 225,000 350,000 225,000 SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION KhabarovATer. FercenXage 475,000 32.6 750,000 51.1 125,000 16.3 noriaccifiarl in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 - 19 - SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION: 98. In the fall of 19410 when the war with Germany began to assume a character more and more menacing for Moscow, the Soviet authoritative started an extensive evacuation of the population from the territories threatened by the war - first of all, from the Ukraine, more from the left bank territory, especially the Slobozhan region, than from the right bank. During that time, more than 500,000 people were resettled in the Far East, the majority of whom were Ukrainians. The arrival of these Ukrainians in the Far East greatly changed the national composition of the population of the Green Ukraine. In 15420 this change was in favor of the Ukrainians) even taking into account the inaccuracy and the stubborn system of Soviet statistics of showing data only favorable to them- selves.* , 99. By the end of 1942 or the beginning of 1943, the ;ioures were about as follows: Rtes1ans Ukrainians Others Total Primor'ye 350;000 .1 400,000 2057555-- 950,000 Khabarovsk ter. 750,000 850,000 150,000 1,750,000 Total 1,100,000 11250)000 350,000 20700,000 Percentage 40.7 46.3 13 100 100. The rest of the population - others - is composed of various national groups; among them the Belorussians and the local aborigines. Thus, the percentage of Ukrainians increased from 32.6 percent to 46.3 percent; or by 13.7 percent, while the percentage of the Russians decreased by 104 percent) and that of the others by 33 percent. 101. The specific gravity of our Population changed greatly?too0 because, while formerly it was composed exclusively of farmers and partly of mere women servicing the railrOad? a younger generation came from the Ukraine now, people who now graduated from Ukrainian,schoole, in the Ukraine, and who knew what they were, although some of them had 'a warped political psychology resultimg from Communist treatment. Besides, it was an eleme.t best'fitted for work, which the Bolsheviks deliberately sent to Siberia and the Far East in order to deprive the. Ukraine of nationalist elements. 102. The government course of Russification is against the Ukrainian national spirit, but this course is not enforced as strongly in Siberi and the Far East, as it is in the Ukraine. 103. About 300,000 men included in the above figure were conscripted into the Red Army; the majority of them, probably never returned home0 and, if they did, they came as invalids. The repatriation Movement from the Far East back to the Ukraine and other parts of the Soviet Union, althoughactive in 1944, suddenly stopped, when special laws were promulgated forbidding departure fro the place of new employ- ment. At the beginning of 1945, this prohibition was in full force, and those who departed without leave were forcibly brought back. By the end of 1946, the situation was completely under control, no one left the Far East without per- mission. On the contrary, new contingents began to arrive - Ukrainians, Turkic Tartars, Georgians, and Russians, deported from Manchuria, and former fugitive and emigrants from Siberia and the Far East as well as the Ukraine, among them a few from the Western Ukraine; altogether about 600 or 7,110 persons were sent to the green Ukraine, especially the northern part of it. After frantic propaganda under the slogan of uretur to father1and"0 up to 7,5 4 people, for the most part Russians, were evacuated from China, and the greater part of them were fortunately sent to the Urals and Western Siberia (theuevacuation" of 1946-1948). * I. Svit, the Green Ukraine, NDIT of the Green Ukraine, 1949, p. 9 and the following. SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION * * Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 20 SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION 104. It is interesting to examine, as far as it is possible to do so, the present Situation. All authors, both European-and American, with few exceptions, are of the opinion that the population of Siberia' and the Far East, therefore, the Green Ukraine, is growing rather rapidly.. As' far as we are concerned, the only point of interest is, whether or not this groWth is on the part of the Ukrainian population. Part of the data we have or have had at our disposal speaks for a growth of the Ukrainian population, especially in the Amur-Khabarovsk territory, but also on Sakhalin and in the Far North. Although mortality and exhaustion take a great toll of the deportees, the process of replenishment is going on and will go on until the Moscow Communist system of government is abolished. 105. In this manner, we have the following data on the siz4, of the population of the Green Ukraine for the period immediately after the end of the war and the first post-war year, the year of the transition to '"peaceful life." (1948) 108. Total population of the entire Green Ukraine: Buryat - Mongolian Republic Chitinskaya Oblast (including the Aga rayon) Yakut Oblast' ? 560,000 10075,000 425,000 Amur-Khabarov4 territory 1,800,000 Primor'ye 1,400,000 Sakhalin and Kurile Islands 200,000 Total in 1947/1948 5,480,000 107. Approximate estimates of the proportion of various nationalities can be made now. It must be pointed out, however, that these data represent only a rough estimate for orientation purposes, since no official information has been pUblished during the last few decades, and that which we had at our disposal does mot throw direct light on the situation, because it was gleaned on the side lines, such as, the increase in broadcasts on Ukrainian subjects or concerts by the Khabarovsk and Vladivostok radio stations, and by the station of Aleksandrovsk-on-Sakhalin, the participation of an increasing number of Ukrainians in various conferences and kray or rayon congress, "roll calls," and other information of the kind showing a numerical or factual increase of the Ukrainian influence, however unpleasant this might be for the Soviet administra- tion. The same refers to persons engaged in transport between Magadan and Nizhne- Kalymsk, or-various enterprises of Dal?stroy, and, particularly, in the mining and timber industries'. There- are few Ukrainians taking Part in fishing. 108. The only part of the Green Ukraine we have not Sufficiently explored is the Transbaikal territory, Since we have no detailed. information about the composition of the population in that region. The information 'derived from the censuses of 1917, 1923, and 1928, is not very clear. It is only evident from the 1923 census, that the peasant population in the Transbaikal territory amounted to 430,400 people out of a total of 548,200, i.e., perhaps, Ou percent.. The population of the Buryat-Mongolian republic . had 414,600 peasants out of a total of 446,900 (Gluzdovksiy, p. 204). 109. This author makes the interesting statement, that among the population of the Trans- baikal territory, excluding the Buryat-Mongolian rayons (which afterwards formed an autonomous republic, the Cossacks constituted 40 percent of the total population; persons of peasant origin, including town workers, 50 percent; the Tunguses, 3 percent; the Buryats, 3 percent; and other town inhabitants, 4 percent. In addition, the author states, that during the years 1898-1912, only 3,700 people arrived in the Transbaikal territory, a shockingly small figure, compared with the number of emigrants who arrived in the Amur oblast ? and the Primor?ye Kray during the same years. SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 50X1 . 4 - US OFFICIALS ONLY SECRET s SECURITY INFORMATION 110. By Way of e timating the population of the three principal localities of resettlement of the Coss cks (the former Nerehinskiy0 Sretenskiy and Borzins y di tricts) amd taking into consideration a small nuMber in other localities* we arrive at the approximate noire of 275,000 of the purely Cossack populeten .1.n 1943, i.e. 25.5 percent of the total population of the Transbaikal territory0 while the Aborigines (the Bur:tats0 Mb olian p ame d2unguses) amounted to about 460200, or 43 percent. In this manner, t the end of the war, approximately the following picture pre anted itself t Russian p 61 percentl, Co adk 9 25.5 percent, aborigines ercent9 and others, about 9.2 percent. However, the figures for th_ TranObeital ..orritory obtained duri the investiga- tions conducted by the olerainian Secretariat ought to include a considerable nuMber of 1.ee Ukrainian population, no less than about 3 to 5 percent, or a round figure of lieeee. In sus% a ca e, the figure for the Russians would t4 undotnbtedly smallerloespecially if the Belorussians who had lived there since lo ago and others are taken into account* Presumably, the 17011.7,n1q; make up a little mere than half ef the total eipulation of the Tranabaikal territory proper. Thi is the only area of the Green Ukraine where they predominate, alth ii surrounded on all sides by non-Russian population. Those ere our suppositions0 because we do not include here the Ukr inian deportees wine work'in the Nerchinsk and Sretensk are and in the gold nines on the borders of the Yakut reptiblic0 where again their percentage is gra ter t that of the Russian 111. We wianin e A size here the important feature of the growth of population on the entire territory of the Green Ukraine, tamely the growth of towns and industrial centers. The information available to date0 namely, the lists of person elected in okrugs0 published periodically, reveal in general outlin only salient factors affect ee the movement f the popula- tion - in other words0 the pre nt demography of the country, because election okrugs and their numerical composition do not reflect correctly even the size of the populatiOn0 let alone its national composition, except for a chance mention of the name of a delegate. Most important to consider here is the importation ff people from various loaalities, i.e delegates to the city and town administration offices, various okrug councils, etc. But this source of information is not steady and is difficult to work with, since under emigr tion conditions we have not at our disposal either the means or the proper staff of scientist capable of dealing with the informa- tion we can get. I ti ? 112. On the bawl. of the data we do have, we can note only certain aspects, as, foresxample0 the population of individual places as it was in 1939 and 1* 6 - 19 . Ulan-Ude (Bury t-Mo olia) Chita Cheremokovsklye mines Yakut k0 capital of the Yakut Rep. Vladivestok Khabarov k Kb oeolosk-on-the-Amur Vorshilovsk Blagove hchensk 22,12 129,400 10295 669000 1 6i9 (approximately 150,000 1500 000 1 *4 3ee, 4*. 000 **I lee0300 300, 70,744 200A00 70, 1250 ***, 58,700 70, CV* SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 -g2- ' SECRET SECURITY XIV ORMA,TION 50X1 113. Below are a few figures for smaller places, which are of cOnsiderable industrial or other importance. Theile data refer to the last years of war and shoUld be somewhat increased for the'present, but not as much as was the case with the above-Mentioned places. Tetrovsk UAW Nerchinek 10,000 Sreteiak 14,000 Aldan 50,000 Nikolayevak-onaAmur 15,000 Birobidzhan , :A.A.). 50,000 Magadan ' 15,000 (this is the figure we have, but it might be much too small for the present time. PetrOPavlovsk..-oh-Kamchatka 20,000 -Aleksandrovsk-on-Sakhalin 1,000 Okha, center of oil industry 12,000 .Spaaek ' 10,000 I addition, in Primorlye Lesozarodsk Suchan with its mines, Artete and Tetyakha have large populations. II 114. A whole aeries of settlements were established in the Par North, all.of them of deportees. The population of Sakhalin, especially the southern part of it, and that along the Kurile Islands have been increased. The actual status, however, is unknown. 115. This is the picture presented by the population of the entire Green Ukraine at the end of the first half of the 20th deatury. 116. It should be pointed out once-mOre0 that the greatest circumspection and conservation were exercises in preparing these statistical data, in order to avoid exaggeration or e arrass ett. One thingmay be said with ' certainty, viz., that the specific gravity of the Ukrainian population in the Far East is great, and that its presence there is emphasized by many foreign experts and authori. We, our part, take it as a confirmation of our on information about the life in this land, the Green Ukraine. ******** Suppleme *Evaluation of Yermak and his c011eagues. The construction of fortresses is approved, because "the Russian state will profit by it in the future". Boris Godanovvs.measures in Siberia had a purpose - "to increase benefits for the state." Anything "that can benefit Russia "is considered appropriate. From the standpoint of benefits to the statepco pulsory measures concerning the aborigines are also .justified. Miller expresses the views of the upper strata of Moscow society. He strongly ndemns "the evil deede of Yermak d his Cossacks on the Volga River, but their banditry in Siberia he considers highly useful; therefore, without preliminaries, he repeats the Cossacks' thoughts: "if they return to Russia, they have no other means to make a living, except to live, as before, by plunder on the Volga River. They must then kill their own borthers - Christians, while here they will kill only infidels." I. G.F. Millere_the Hiatorian of Siberia - S. V. Bakhruskin? p. 42 SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1 23 SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION 50X1 ** ?The majority of peasants in FrimoroYe? old inhabitants as well as new settlers, are of Ukrainian origtn. The'tsartat Policy in resettlement was to relieve the centersof the Agrarian movements. Notwithstanding this, no Ukrainian nationalism wee ever apparent among the peasants in the Far Eat. The local Ukrainian councils which dreamed about separating the Fa F East from RSFSR (in general, from Russia) and creating a Ukrainian colony out of it, found members exclusively in the tanla of the intelligentsia. Even rich peasants demanded the instruction in schools to be in Russian, and not in Ukrainian, because the Russian language was more widely spread (for example, the village of Lutkovka). O.S. "O.S." This is a note by a well-known Communist, 0.1. SaMov, who resided iu the Far East$ particularly in Primoroye$ during the revolution and the civil war. So emplainethe author in his preface to the book cited below: ZIA October Revolution and the Civil War in the Far East A chronicle of events of 1917-1922 by S. Tsypkin Shurygin, C. Bulygin, Allgiz$ La' () State Publicatio47Moticow-- KhaLarovsk$ 1933. Ispartkomotdel [Arty Research Committee-(?) of the Far-Eastern Kral Committee of the NKP /041, p.305.0 UBRARY suaricr:al ARIA CODES .812,4 9N , . 811.7 9N 8:09 '9N , .9N SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr2013/04/18 : CIA-RDP82-00047R000300580003-1