REHABILITATION (SOVIET)
'Rehabilitation' () in the context of Soviet or Russian topics is often a linguistic false friend used to translate the Russian term ''reabilitatsiya'' as applied to convicted persons (as opposed to the political rehabilitation of party officials). The appropriate terms would be "exoneration" or "exculpation".
Mass rehabilitation of the started after the death of Joseph Stalin. Initially, in 1953, it was in the form of amnesty for those who had been sentenced for a term of at most 5 years. The regular release of political prisoners from Gulag labor camps started in 1954. This release became coupled with exonerations after the Khrushchev's denunciation of Stalinism in his 1956 speech ''On the Personality Cult and its Consequences''.
In many cases, the persons were released with an insulting version of the corpus delicti: "due to the lack of a proof of guilt", rather than "due to the lack of a criminal matter". Many rehabilitations occurred posthumously.
Adler, N. ''The Gulag Survivor: Beyond the Soviet System''. New Brunswick, USA/London: Transaction Publishers, 2002.
Iakovlev, A. (ed.) ''Reabilitatsiia: politicheskie protsessy 30-50-kh godov''. Moscow: Politizdat, 1991.
Smith, K. ''Remembering Stalin’s Victims: Popular Memory and the End of the USSR''. Cornell University Press, 1996.
| Contents |
| Rehabilitation of the victims of Soviet repressions |
| Further Readings |
Rehabilitation of the victims of Soviet repressions
Mass rehabilitation of the started after the death of Joseph Stalin. Initially, in 1953, it was in the form of amnesty for those who had been sentenced for a term of at most 5 years. The regular release of political prisoners from Gulag labor camps started in 1954. This release became coupled with exonerations after the Khrushchev's denunciation of Stalinism in his 1956 speech ''On the Personality Cult and its Consequences''.
In many cases, the persons were released with an insulting version of the corpus delicti: "due to the lack of a proof of guilt", rather than "due to the lack of a criminal matter". Many rehabilitations occurred posthumously.
Further Readings
Adler, N. ''The Gulag Survivor: Beyond the Soviet System''. New Brunswick, USA/London: Transaction Publishers, 2002.
Iakovlev, A. (ed.) ''Reabilitatsiia: politicheskie protsessy 30-50-kh godov''. Moscow: Politizdat, 1991.
Smith, K. ''Remembering Stalin’s Victims: Popular Memory and the End of the USSR''. Cornell University Press, 1996.
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