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History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union - Decline of the Russian Germans

History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union - Decline of the Russian Germans: Encyclopedia II - History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union - Decline of the Russian Germans

The decline of the Russian German community started with the reforms of Alexander III. In 1871, he repealed the open door immigration policy of his ancestors, effectively ending any new German immigration into the Empire. Although the German colonies continued to expand, they were driven by natural growth and by the immigration of Germans from Poland. The Russian nationalism that took root under Alexander III served as a justification for eliminating in 1871 the bulk of the tax privileges enjoyed by Russian Germans, and after 1874 the ...

See also:

History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union, History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union - Germans in central Russia and Ukraine, History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union - Decline of the Russian Germans, History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union - Germans in the Baltics

History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union, History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union - Decline of the Russian Germans, History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union - Germans in central Russia and Ukraine, History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union - Germans in the Baltics, German Russian, Volga German, Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, German operation of the NKVD

History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union: Encyclopedia II - History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union - Decline of the Russian Germans



History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union - Decline of the Russian Germans

The decline of the Russian German community started with the reforms of Alexander III. In 1871, he repealed the open door immigration policy of his ancestors, effectively ending any new German immigration into the Empire. Although the German colonies continued to expand, they were driven by natural growth and by the immigration of Germans from Poland.

The Russian nationalism that took root under Alexander III served as a justification for eliminating in 1871 the bulk of the tax privileges enjoyed by Russian Germans, and after 1874 they were subjected to military service. The resulting disaffection motivated many Russian Germans, especially members of traditionally dissenting churches, to migrate to the United States and Canada. They moved primarily to the American Great Plains and to western Canada, especially North and South Dakota, Manitoba and Saskatchewan.

After 1881, Russian Germans were required to study Russian in school and lost all their remaining special privileges. Many Germans remained in Russia, particularly those who has done well as Russia began to industrialise in the late 19th century. Russian Germans were disproportionately represented among Russia's engineers, technical tradesmen, industrialists, financiers and large land owners.

World War I was the first time Russia went to war against Germany since the Napoleonic era, and Russian Germans were quickly suspected of having enemy sympathies. The Germans living in the Volhynia area were deported to the German colonies in the lower Volga river in 1915 when Russia started losing the war. Many Russian Germans were exiled to Siberia by the Tsar's government as enemies of the state - generally without trial or evidence. In 1916, an order was issued to deport the Volga Germans to the east as well, but the Russian Revolution prevented this from being carried out.

The loyalties of Russian Germans during the revolution varied. While many supported the royalist forces and joined the White Army, others were committed to Kerensky's Provisional Government, to the Bolsheviks, and even to smaller forces like Nestor Makhno's. Russian Germans - including Mennonites and Evangelicals - fought on all sides in the Russian Revolution and Civil War. Although some Russian Germans were very wealthy, others were quite poor and sympathised strongly with their Slavic neighbours. Educated Russian Germans were just as likely to have leftist and revolutionary sympathies as the ethnically Russian intelligentsia.

In the chaos of the Russian Revolution and the civil war that followed it, many ethnic Germans were displaced within Russia or emigrated from Russia altogether. The anarchy surrounding the Russian Civil War was devastating to many German communities, particularly to religious dissenters like the Mennonites. Many Mennonites hold the forces of Nestor Makhno in Ukraine particularly responsible for large-scale violence against their community.

This period was also one of regular food shortages, caused by famine and the lack of long distance transportation of food during the fighting. Coupled with the typhus epidemic of the early 1920s, as many as a third of Russia's Germans may have perished. Russian German organisations in the Americas, particularly the Mennonite Central Committee, organised famine relief in Russia in the late 1920s. As the chaos faded and the Soviet Union's position became more secure, many Russian Germans simply took advantage of the end of the fighting to emigrate to the Americas. Emigration from the Soviet Union came to a halt in 1929 by Stalin's decree, leaving roughly one million Russian Germans within Soviet borders.

The Soviet Union seized the farms and businesses of Russian Germans, along with all other farms and businesses, when Stalin ended Lenin's New Economic Policy in 1929 and began the forced collectivisation of agriculture and liquidation of large land holdings.

Nonetheless, Soviet nationalities policy had, to some degree, restored the institutions of Russian Germans in some areas. In July 1924, the Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was founded, giving the Volga Germans some autonomous German language institutions. The Lutheran church, like nearly all religious affiliations in Russia, was ruthlessly suppressed under Stalin. But, for the 600,000-odd Germans living in the Volga German ASSR, German was the language of local officials for the first time since 1881.

When Nazi Germany broke the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact by invading USSR in 1941, the Volga German ASSR was abolished, and Russia's German population was almost entirely banished to Kazakhstan. Many of those who remained in European Russia followed the Germany army in its retreat in 1943 and 1944, remaining in Germany after WWII. Others immigrated to Canada, the United States and Latin America.

On November 26, 1948, Stalin made the banishment permanent, declaring that Russia's Germans were permanently forbidden from returning to Europe, but this was rescinded after his death in 1953. Many Russian Germans returned to European Russia, but quite a few remained in Soviet Asia.

Although the post-Stalin Soviet state no longer persecuted ethnic Germans as a group, no effort was made to create new ethnic national institutions for them, and this group of over a million was quietly assimilated into mainstream Russian society over the next two generations. There were some 2 million ethnic Germans in the Soviet Union in 1989, but most of them could not speak German and did not think of themselves primarily as Germans.

Perestroika opened the Soviet borders and witnessed the beginnings of a massive emigration of Germans from the Soviet Union. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, large numbers of Russian Germans took advantage of Germany's liberal law of return to leave the harsh conditions of the Soviet successor states. By 1999 about 1.7 million former Soviet citizens of German origin had immigrated to Germany. About 6,000 settled in Kaliningrad Oblast (former East Prussia).

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Decline of the Russian Germans", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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