NUTRITION OF DEPORTEES FROM THE MOLDAVIAN SSR IN THE CONTEXT OF “YUG” OPERATION (1949)

The article inserts sequences referring to the nutrition of the Stalinist regime victims, subjects to deportation Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic, in the second wave (1949), in special regulatory localities distributed in the special areas of the Soviet Union. Testimonies of people considered by...

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Autores principales: Ion Valer XENOFONTOV, Lidia PRISAC
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
RO
RU
Publicado: Academy of Sciences of Moldova 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doi.org/10.52673/18570461.21.2-61.08
https://doaj.org/article/ed639b48360b4aff94fe72ff4f0a06ef
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Sumario:The article inserts sequences referring to the nutrition of the Stalinist regime victims, subjects to deportation Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic, in the second wave (1949), in special regulatory localities distributed in the special areas of the Soviet Union. Testimonies of people considered by the Stalinist regime to be “enemies of the people”, reflects the nutrition shortage not only in the journey from “home” to “destination”, but also in the process of adapting to the intruder environment, food security being precarious in both cases. In many ways, a large part of the memories of deported persons show similarities to the famine suffered by the population of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1946. In the destination localities, the nutrition of the deportees depended on many factors: climatic (winter temperature reaching -40° C) and living conditions, workplace, health, the presence of the head of the family and members able to work, etc. Families deported with small children, in the absence of the father (the basic maintainer) and only with the presence of the mother, were the most difficult.