Name
Tsutsulaeva Sapiyat Saypuddinovna
Scholastic degree
•
Academic rank
associated professor
Honorary rank
—
Organization, job position
Chechen State University
Web site url
—
Articles count: 1
The article attempts to highlight the problems of
restoring the autonomies of the repressed peoples of
Russia during the Great Patriotic War. Karachais,
Kalmyks, Chechens, Ingush, Balkars and other
peoples were forcibly relocated to the eastern regions
of the country, and their autonomies were abolished.
And only after the death of Stalin began the process
of softening the special settlement regime for
deported peoples. However, the decisive role was
played by the 20th Congress of the Party, held in
February 1956. At a closed meeting of the congress,
the eviction of peoples, NS. Khrushchev called "a
gross violation of the national policy of the Soviet
state." The Twentieth Party Congress proposed
reviving the illegally abolished national autonomies
of repressed peoples. Public condemnation of mass
repressions against the peoples of the North Caucasus
was of great importance for the fate of deported
ethnic groups, facilitated a number of measures to
restore justice