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Media type:
Book
Title:
Return to the motherland
:
displaced Soviets in World War II and the Cold War
Contains:
Introduction : displaced in war and peace -- Workers from the East : deportation and conditions of labor among Eastern workers -- Forced labor empire : community, transnational contact, and sex -- Collaboration and resistance : wartime agency and its limits in Wustrau and Leipzig -- Liberated in a foreign land : wild re-Sovietization and the choice to return in Allied-occupied Europe, 1945 -- Ambiguous homecoming : social tensions in repatriation to the USSR -- Repatriation and the economics of coerced labor : between punishment and pragmatism -- A return to policing : collaborators, spies, and the Cold War under late Stalinism -- Unheroic returns : returnee-resisters, historians, and police -- Wayward children of the motherland : the Soviet fight for nonreturners in Western-occupied Europe -- Return after Stalin : the return to the motherland campaign in the 1950s -- Conclusion : No one is forgotten, no one is forgiven.
Footnote:
Enthält Literaturangaben und ein Register
Description:
This book follows those who were displaced to the Third Reich back to the Soviet Union after the victory over Germany. At the end of World War II, millions of people from Soviet lands were living as refugees outside the borders of the USSR. Most had been forced laborers and prisoners of war, deported to the Third Reich to work as racial inferiors in a crushing environment. Seth Bernstein reveals the secret history of repatriation, the details of the journey, and the new identities, prospects, and dangers for migrants that were created by the tumult of war. He uses official and personal sources from declassified holdings in post-Soviet archives, more than one hundred oral history interviews, and transnational archival material. Most notably, he makes extensive use of secret police files declassified only after the Maidan Revolution in Ukraine in 2014. The stories described in Return to the Motherland reveal not only how the USSR grappled with the aftermath of war but also the universality of Stalinism's refugee crisis. While arrest was not guaranteed, persecution was ubiquitous. Within Soviet society, returnees met with a cold reception that demanded hard labor as payment for perceived disloyalty, soldiers perpetrated rape against returning Soviet women, and ordinary people avoided contact with repatriates, fearing arrest as traitors and spies. As Bernstein describes, Soviet displacement presented a challenge to social order and the opportunity to rebuild the country as a great power after a devastating war.