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'There Is No Room in our Collective Farm for Priests and Kulaks', 1930 (print)

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PFH2562550

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'There Is No Room in our Collective Farm for Priests and Kulaks', 1930 (print)

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print

Date

c. 1930 AD - 1939 AD (C20th AD)

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Kulaks were a category of relatively affluent farmers in the later Russian Empire, Soviet Russia, and early Soviet Union. The word kulak originally referred to independent farmers in the Russian Empire who emerged from the peasantry and became wealthy following the Stolypin reform, which began in 1906. The label of kulak was broadened in 1918 to include any peasant who resisted handing over their grain to detachments from Moscow. According to the political theory of Marxism-Leninism of the early 20th century, the kulaks were class enemies of the poorer peasants. Vladimir Ilyich Lenin described them as 'bloodsuckers, vampires, plunderers of the people and profiteers, who fatten on famine'. Marxism-Leninism had intended a revolution to liberate poor peasants and farm laborers alongside the proletariat. In addition, the planned economy of Soviet Bolshevism required the collectivisation of farms and land to allow industrialisation or conversion to large-scale agricultural production. In practice, government officials violently seized kulak farms and murdered resisters; others were deported to labor camps.

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Pictures from History/Woodbury & Page / Bridgeman Images

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Largest available format 6704 × 9685 px 32 MB
Dimension [pixels] Dimension in 300dpi [mm] File size [MB]
Large 6704 × 9685 px 568 × 820 mm 31.6 MB
Medium 709 × 1024 px 60 × 87 mm 1.2 MB

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