The Jewish emigration from the USSR in the KGB documents
Oglądaj/ Otwórz
Autor:
Danyliv, Nataliia
Źródło: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 313, Studia de Securitate 10 (2) (2020), s. [6]-20
Język: en
Słowa kluczowe:
Związek Radzieckiemigracja Żydów
„odmowa”
dokumenty KGB
Departament Wiz i Rejestracji (DVAR)
ograniczenia i prześladowania
Soviet Union
Jewish emigration
“refusnik”
KGB documents
the Department of Visas and Registration (DVAR)
restrictions and persecution
Data: 2020
Metadata
Pokaż pełny rekordStreszczenie
The activity of the KGB aimed at controlling the next wave of Jewish emigration from the Ukrainian SSR has been
traced back based on the declassified materials of the Sectoral State Archives of the Security Service of Ukraine.
The intelligence services were constantly improving their working methods to prevent the mass exodus of the Jews,
which was disadvantageous to the Soviet Union, by using another state structure – the Department of Visas and
Registration (DVAR). The majority of the refusals received by the applicants had unclear and incorrect explanations
such as: “for reasons of the regime”; “for operational reasons”; “availability of valuable specialists” in the
field of medicine, science, culture; “the presence of conscripts and conscripts”; “unreasonable requests for
“family reunification”; classified “inappropriate”. The duties of the KGB officers included monitoring people who,
after receiving a refusal to leave, embarked on a path of struggle under their newly formed status of “refusnik”.
For this reason, the KGB, to prevent “anti-Soviet manifestations”, used forms of intimidation, harassment, beating,
and dismissal. People who were “particularly dangerous” were jailed in a psychiatric hospital, detention center, or
labor camps. In some cases, the state security agencies listened to “apartment meetings”, sent their agents, staged
provocations, etc.