Serov Instructions

{{Short description|Soviet Union's document which gave guidelines for deporting people from Baltic states in 1940s}}

{{wikisource|Regarding the Procedure for carrying out the Deportation of Anti-Soviet Elements from Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia|Serov Instructions}}

The so-called Serov Instructions (full title: On the Procedure for Carrying out the Deportation of Anti-Soviet Elements from Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia) was an undated top secret document, signed by General Ivan Serov, Deputy People's Commissar for State Security of the Soviet Union (NKGB). The instructions detailed procedures on how to carry out the mass deportations to Siberia of June 13–14, 1941, which occurred throughout Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia during the first (1940-1941) Soviet occupation of the three Baltic countries.

The instructions specified that the deportations would be carried out as secretly, quietly and speedily as possible. Families were restricted to taking {{convert|100|kg}} of their belongings (clothes, food, kitchenware). The heads of the families were sent to Gulag labor camps, and other members were transported to forced settlements in remote areas of the Soviet Union.

Dating and confusion

While the original document is undated, sources provide various dates from October 11, 1939 to January 21, 1941.[http://www.occupationmuseum.lv/eng/services/Briefing_paper_04.html Museum of the Occupation of Latvia] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070217181501/http://www.occupationmuseum.lv/eng/services/Briefing_paper_04.html |date=2007-02-17 }} However, the NKGB was created only on February 3, 1941 and so could not have issued documents earlier.

A copy of the instructions, found in Šiauliai, had a stamp that the document was received on June 7. Therefore, the instructions must have been written sometime between February and June 1941.

The Serov Instructions are often confused with NKVD Order No. 001223, a completely different document that was signed by Lavrenty Beria on October 11, 1939, which was prepared by the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD) and listed various groups of people (anticommunists, former military or police personnel, large landowners, industrialists etc.) to be targeted by Soviet security structures according to the Article 58 (RSFSR Penal Code). The original Serov Instructions had no date or number. The confusion possibly originates from the Third Interim Report by the United States House Select Committee to Investigate the Incorporation of the Baltic States into the U.S.S.R., which published the full text of the Instructions under a misleading heading as Order № 001223.

See also

References

{{reflist|refs=

{{cite book| first=Alexander |last=Shtromas |title=Totalitarianism and the Prospects for World Order: Closing the Door on the Twentieth Century |series=Applications of Political Theory |page=292 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fTt6lJOEEFcC&pg=PA292 | publisher=Lexington Books |year=2003 |isbn=0-7391-0534-5}}

{{cite book| title=The Lesser Terror: Soviet State Security, 1939–1953 |first=Michael |last=Parrish | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NDgv5ognePgC&pg=PA262| page=262 | publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |year=1996| isbn=0-275-95113-8}}

{{cite book| first=Arvydas |last=Anušauskas |title=Lietuvių tautos sovietinis naikinimas 1940–1958 metais | pages=18–19 |location=Vilnius |publisher=Mintis |year=1996 |isbn=5-417-00713-7|language=lt}}

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Category:Government documents of the Soviet Union

Category:1941 in Estonia

Category:1941 in Lithuania

Category:1941 in Latvia

Category:1941 in the Soviet Union

Category:Forced migration in the Soviet Union during World War II

Category:World War II documents

Category:1941 documents