Belarus World War and Revolution
Figure 5. Belorussian Soviet Socialist Republic (SSR), 1923
Source: Based on information from Paul Robert Magocsi,
Ukraine: A Historical Atlas, Toronto, 1985,
9, 24.
The outbreak of World War I in 1914 turned Belorussia
into a
zone of strict martial law, military operations, and great
destruction. Large German and Russian armies fought
fiercely and
caused the expulsion or departure of more than 1 million
civilians from the country. The Russian government's inept
war
efforts and ineffective economic policies prompted high
food
prices, shortages of goods, and many needless deaths in
the war.
Discontent in the cities and the countryside spread,
leading to
strikes, riots, and the eventual downfall of the tsarist
government.
The two revolutions of 1917--the February Revolution
and the
Bolshevik Revolution--gave nationally conscious
Belorussians an
opportunity to advance their political cause. Bolshevism
did not
have many followers among the natives of Belorussia;
instead,
local political life was dominated by the Socialist
Revolutionary
Party, the
Mensheviks (see Glossary),
the Bund (see Glossary),
and various Christian movements in which the clergy of
both the
Russian Orthodox Church and the Polish Catholic Church
played
significant roles. The Belorussian political cause was
represented by the Belorussian Socialist Party, the
Socialist
Revolutionary Party, the Leninist Social Democratic Party,
and
various nationalist groups advocating moderate forms of
socialism.
In December 1917, more than 1,900 delegates to the AllBelorussian Congress (Rada) met in Minsk to establish a
democratic republican government in Belorussia, but
Bolshevik
soldiers disbanded the assembly before it had finished its
deliberations. The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk in March 1918
put most
of Belorussia under German control, but on March 25, 1918,
the
Central Executive Committee of the Rada nullified the
treaty and
proclaimed the independence of the Belorussian National
Republic.
Later that year, the German government, which had
guaranteed the
new state's independence, collapsed, and the new republic
was
unable to resist Belorussian Bolsheviks supported by the
Bolshevik government in Moscow. The Belorussian Soviet
Socialist
Republic (Belorussian SSR) was established on January 1,
1919, by
force of arms.
For the next two years, Belorussia was a prize in the
PolishSoviet War, a conflict settled by the Treaty of Riga in
March
1921. Under the terms of the treaty, Belorussia was
divided into
three parts: the western portion, which was absorbed into
Poland;
central Belorussia, which formed the Belorussian SSR; and
the
eastern portion, which became part of Russia. The
Belorussian SSR
was incorporated into the
Soviet Union (see Glossary) when
the
Soviet Union was founded in December 1922
(see
fig. 5).
The territory of the Belorussian SSR was enlarged in
both
1924 and 1926 by the addition of Belorussian ethnographic
regions
that had become part of Russia under the Treaty of Riga.
The area
of the republic was expanded from its original post-treaty
size
of 51,800 square kilometers to 124,320 square kilometers,
and the
population increased from 1.5 million to almost 5 million
persons.
The New Economic Policy
(NEP--see Glossary),
established by
Vladimir I. Lenin in 1921 as a temporary compromise with
capitalism, stimulated economic recovery in the Soviet
Union, and
by the mid-1920s agricultural and industrial output in
Belorussia
had reached 1913 levels. Historically, Belorussia had been
a
country of landlords with large holdings, but after the
Bolshevik
Revolution, these landlords were replaced by middle-class
landholders; farm collectives were practically
nonexistent. When
forced
collectivization (see Glossary) and confiscations
began in
1928, there was strong resistance, for which the peasantry
paid a
high social price: peasants were allowed to starve in some
areas,
and so-called troublemakers were deported to Siberia.
Because
peasants slaughtered their livestock rather than turn it
over to
collective farms (see Glossary),
agriculture suffered
serious
setbacks. However, the rapid industrialization that
accompanied
forced collectivization enabled the Moscow government to
develop
new heavy industry in Belarus quickly.
During the period of the NEP, the Soviet government
relaxed
its cultural restrictions, and Belorussian language and
culture
flourished. But in the 1930s, when Stalin was fully in
power,
Moscow's attitude changed, and it became important to
Moscow to
bind both Belorussia and its economy as closely to the
Soviet
Union as possible. Once again, this meant Russification of
the
people and the culture. The Belorussian language was
reformed to
bring it closer to the Russian language, and history books
were
rewritten to show that the Belorussian people had strived
to be
united with Russia throughout their history. Political
persecutions in the 1930s reached genocidal proportions,
causing
population losses as great as would occur during World War
II--
more than 2 million persons.
Data as of June 1995
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