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kulaks Meaning in Bengali



Noun:

উনিশ শতিকের রাশিয়ার ধনী কৃষক-জমিদার-মহাজন,





kulaks's Usage Examples:

According to Marxist–Leninist political theories of the early 20th century, the kulaks were class enemies of the poorer peasants.


repressions, including arrests, deportations, or executions of millions of kulaks (prosperous peasants) and their families in the 1929–1932 period of the.


beginning of his rule, Joseph Stalin demanded the "liquidation of kulaks as a class.


" The kulaks were peasants who were deemed "wealthy" by Stalin in 1929.


that kulaks were "to be liquidated as a class" and so they became a target for the state.


The richer, land-owning peasants were labeled "kulaks" and were.


began to take aim at the kulaks, peasants with enough land and money to own several animals and hire a few labourers.


accompanied by forced resettlement of large categories of "class enemies" (kulaks, or osadniks, for instance) to the Gulag labor camps and exile settlements.


as prodrazvyorstka (forcible requisitioning), to collect grain from the kulaks.


8 million kulaks were deported in 1930–31, 1.


The creation of collective farms essentially destroyed the kulaks as a class (dekulakization).


Ex-kulaks, criminals, and other anti-Soviet elements ~386,798 killed NKVD Order no.


intelligentsia, peasants—especially those lending out money or wealth (kulaks)—and professionals.


topics then current: education, technology, and the elimination of the kulaks.


The reported number of kulaks and their relatives who had died in labour.


Borrowing from the collectivisation experiences of the early 1930s, kulaks were named as the primary obstacle and became targets of repressions.


ugolovnikov i drugikh antisovyetskikh elementov ("About repression of former kulaks, criminals, and other anti-Soviet elements") was signed by Nikolai Yezhov.


alliance broke up in the years from 1928–1930 over strategy towards the kulaks and NEPmen.


Podkulachnik (Russian: Подкулачник, literally: "Person under the kulaks") was a political label used in the Soviet Union in the 1920s and 1930s to brand.



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