Published online: 06 Jun 2008When analysing dekulakisation little attention has been paid to the fact that almost 40% of the total number of the deported were children younger than 16 years of age. By examining the experiences of a small number of kulak children this article discusses various strategies of surviving. When unravelling their childhood experiences, kulak children tend to dwell on their suffering and victimisation. The findings of this article are, nonetheless, that kulak children were much more than passive victims—in fact they actively took an enormous responsibility for their own survival
abstract: Between 1941 and 1953, thousands of Lithuanians were deported by the Soviet Union as far f...
Warfare, epidemics, and famine left millions of Soviet children homeless during the 1920s. Many beca...
The article deals with the issues related to the evacuation of children from the front-line territor...
In the years of 1940-1942 the Soviet authorities conducted mass deportations of Polish population fr...
This article is an attempt to reconstruct the daily life of children evacuated from besieged Leningr...
In August and September 1987 demonstrations in Riga, Latvia, and in the other Baltic states, Estonia...
Conflict and political instability during the Second World War led to the massive displacement of pe...
This groundbreaking book offers a comprehensive documentary history of children whose parents were i...
This book introduces ten people who were survivors of childhood trauma during the Soviet era and who...
The article undertakes the topic of forced population displacement seen through the eyes of a child ...
The article features a comparison of two very different collections of stories. What binds these nar...
Drawing on a corpus of accounts written by survivor children in 2006, this article looks at the Tuts...
The Deportation of the Polish Population in the Light of the NKVD Directives and Testimonies of the ...
In the latter half of 1941, over 100,000 Polish children lived in an area extending from Arkhangelsk...
The thesis deals with interpretations of the memories of Ruthenians and Jews who fled to the Soviet ...
abstract: Between 1941 and 1953, thousands of Lithuanians were deported by the Soviet Union as far f...
Warfare, epidemics, and famine left millions of Soviet children homeless during the 1920s. Many beca...
The article deals with the issues related to the evacuation of children from the front-line territor...
In the years of 1940-1942 the Soviet authorities conducted mass deportations of Polish population fr...
This article is an attempt to reconstruct the daily life of children evacuated from besieged Leningr...
In August and September 1987 demonstrations in Riga, Latvia, and in the other Baltic states, Estonia...
Conflict and political instability during the Second World War led to the massive displacement of pe...
This groundbreaking book offers a comprehensive documentary history of children whose parents were i...
This book introduces ten people who were survivors of childhood trauma during the Soviet era and who...
The article undertakes the topic of forced population displacement seen through the eyes of a child ...
The article features a comparison of two very different collections of stories. What binds these nar...
Drawing on a corpus of accounts written by survivor children in 2006, this article looks at the Tuts...
The Deportation of the Polish Population in the Light of the NKVD Directives and Testimonies of the ...
In the latter half of 1941, over 100,000 Polish children lived in an area extending from Arkhangelsk...
The thesis deals with interpretations of the memories of Ruthenians and Jews who fled to the Soviet ...
abstract: Between 1941 and 1953, thousands of Lithuanians were deported by the Soviet Union as far f...
Warfare, epidemics, and famine left millions of Soviet children homeless during the 1920s. Many beca...
The article deals with the issues related to the evacuation of children from the front-line territor...