MEET THE SOVIET
RUSSIANS
5
much needless duplication of topics; in some cases there is repe-
tition of subject matter taught by other departments of the
school.
much needless duplication of topics; in some cases there is repe-
tition of subject matter taught by other departments of the
school.
Soviet Union - 1944 - Meet the Soviet Russians
r\Vt2>
PREFACE
A document recently issued by the bilateral Canada-United
States Committee on Education includes paragraphs which
well suggest the background for this Workshop publication. The
Committee says,
"Of the 2,175,000,000 people in the world today, only
about 50,000,000 have remained uninvolved in World Wars
I and II. No modern nation, in defense of sovereignty or
even of existence, can live unto itself alone. Each moves
within a vast network of international relations, and its
welfare is affected by events far removed from its borders. . . .
To act with wisdom in matters of national concern and in
world affairs each nation must be wise in the ways of other
nations. Ignorance and lack of understanding provide no
safe foundation for wise action. In a democratic society
the citizens of each nation must understand other nations
and respect other peoples ever more deeply. The Twentieth
Century demands wide horizons for every citizen in a
democracy. . . . To maintain democracy in the modern
world we must have, as never before, a citizenry widely
informed on world affairs and deeply concerned with the
preservation of human freedom. "
Increasing sensitivity in the United States to the international
setting and influences of our times leads inevitably to readjust-
ments and new emphases in school programs of education for
citizenship. In recent years we have begun to increase and im-
prove our instruction about Latin America and Asia; as the
source of the above quotation indicates, we are awakening to
the need for more study about Canada. Among the most seri-
ously neglected areas in our school programs today is the Soviet
Union. We teach relatively little about the Soviets; an undue
amount of what is presented seems to be inaccurate, incomplete,
and biased; out-of-school influences tend to provide much mis-
information, to be animated by prejudgments. The net result
is that we have more misinformation than information, more
heat than light, in our total educational program about one
of the major powers of the world in which our pupils must live.
One reason why our educational program in this area falls
iii
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? SU\oi
short is the scarcity of materials directed toward the use of
teachers and pupils. This bulletin is intended to help pro-
vide some of the material needed; it presents a resume of salient
facts about the Soviet Union, a useful bibliography, and a
reservoir of pupil activities. The bulletin can be used by teach-
ers at all school levels and by pupils in the senior high school.
It embodies a "resource unit"; from it the teacher may build
a teaching unit directly about the Soviets, or may select data
and activities for use in courses in general history or the other
social studies. The bulletin does not presuppose a special
course on the U. S. S. R. ; it is useful and suggestive to teachers of
all the social studies and humanities.
The bulletin is an outgrowth of the 1944 Summer Session of
the Harvard Workshop in the Social Studies. One section of
the Workshop, which was made possible by the aid of the
National Council of American-Soviet Friendship, was focused
on the Soviet Union in the network of modern international
relations. Dr. Corliss Lamont and Dr. Dorothy Douglas di-
rected this section of the Workshop, working in full co-
operation with other staff members representing fields of pro-
fessional education. A group of teachers participating in the
program under their leadership prepared the manuscript of
this bulletin; their names appear here as authors; to them the
Harvard Workshop is deeply indebted.
Their manuscript is here made available to teachers in the
firm conviction that the area of study in which they have
pioneered is of marked significance in the adaptation of edu-
cation to the needs of our times. Their document is not a
propaganda plea; it is an effort to place facts before teachers
in an educationally useful format. It is the hope of the Harvard
Workshop that this bulletin will provide both a service and a
stimulus to further work on the part of American teachers.
Howard E. Wilson
Harvard Graduate School of Education
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? MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE
Introduction 1
I. Geography and Resources 7
II. Peoples and Population 15
III. History 20
IV. Soviet Life Today
A. Government 30
B. Nationality Policies 38
C. Economic Life 42
D. Provision for Social Welfare 50
E. Cultural Life 51
F. The Position of Women 63
G. Family Life 65
V. Foreign Relations 67
VI. Selected Annotated Bibliography 77
VII. Minimum Kit of Essential Teaching Materials . . 88
VIII. Directory of Sources of Teaching Aids 88
V
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? INTRODUCTION
HpHE Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, our ally in the
? *? present struggle against German aggression, and our
neighbor across the Bering Strait, will doubtless be the greatest
land power in Europe and Asia following the war. Soviet
Russia has great natural resources, a rapidly growing popula-
tion, and has made the swiftest strides in technology and indus-
trialization of any country since the First World War. Moreover,
here are more than two hundred million fellow human beings,
almost one-tenth of all the world's inhabitants, living in an area
which is approximately one-sixth of the total land area of the
globe, concerning whose background, struggles, present status,
aims, and interests, comparatively little is known in the United
States. American citizens must learn to understand the U. S. S. R.
because our greatest hope for world peace lies in making sound
decisions in the field of international relations. In the future
peace and in the world cooperation necessary to maintain it,
the U. S. S. R. will play an important part.
An intelligent facing of the future requires that knowledge on
the part of the students and teachers of America concerning the
U. S. S. R. be increased, to the end that greater understanding
and better international relations may result. The whole world
today is caught up in an intricate pattern of international rela-
tionships which necessitate a reassessment of the bases of civic
education in this country. We must insert in the curriculum
additional materials on the international setting in which the
United States has to operate, and of which we are now becom-
ing increasingly aware. What happens in one country affects rela-
tionships all over the world. We must study the total pattern of
those relationships and the cultures back of them. There is
probably no comparable area in the world the study of which
is more neglected in current school curricula in this country
than the Soviet Union.
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? MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
THE PLAN OF THE STUDY GUIDE
School authorities who desire to develop an understanding of
the Soviet Union will find difficulty in locating adequate materi-
als in school textbooks. It is in an endeaver to suggest aids
for the use of teachers and students in the junior and senior
high schools that this introduction to the study of the Soviet
Russians has been prepared. It is meant to present as objective
a picture of the Soviet Union as possible, without pretending to
pass judgment on the validity of the system. The material may
be used as a resource unit by teachers, or as a framework for
the development of a teaching unit. It is well within the scope
of high-school students, and they may find it useful as a reference.
The study guide includes (1) a content outline, (2) suggested
activities, (3) a selected, annotated bibliography, classified for
teachers and students, (4) a suggested minimum kit of mate-
rials recommended for a study of the Soviet Union, and (5) a
list of places where materials may be obtained.
The content outline is written primarily for secondary-school
teachers, and is intended to suggest certain lines of emphasis
which may be developed. Limitations of space obviously do
not permit treatment of all aspects of Soviet life. Three or four
selected reading references for more intensive study are indicated
at the end of each topic in the outline. The brief lists of activi-
ties for students are intended to suggest supplementary materi-
als and important lines of interpretation. These activities are
planned to include some "Things To Do" for students with
varying degrees of ability. Teachers will be able to develop in
the classroom many other activities which may be more suitable
than those suggested, and it is not expected nor recommended
that any teacher use all of those included.
The bibliography suggests further reading that may profitably
be undertaken by teachers and students. The suggested kit of
materials should be regarded as a minimum, and many of the
books in the general bibliography should be consulted, as well
as others that are available.
The attention of teachers is called to materials to be found in
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? MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS J
current magazines and newspapers. More is being printed about
the Soviet Union in our newspapers and magazines than ever
before. Such materials might even be used as a point of de-
parture in developing an entire study of the U. S. S. R. An
abundance of pictorial materials is available in such magazines
as Life, Look, and National Geographic. Mimeographed copies
of a teaching unit on the U. S. S. R. at the sixth- and seventh-grade
levels may be secured from the Social Studies Workshop, Harvard
Graduate School of Education.
SOVIET RUSSIA IN THE CURRICULUM
The question of how the materials in this study can be intro-
duced into social studies courses is an important one. Few
schools can offer a regular course on the Soviet Union, and then
only on an elective basis. There are, however, opportunities
in many schools for the introduction of special units of study
in some of the regular courses. This would seem to apply
especially to courses in world history, modern history, inter-
national relations, and world and economic geography. In
other courses, nitration of material on the Soviet Union into
the existing program can take place. Continuous cross-references
between developments in America and in the Soviet Union
should help students to acquire a better understanding of our
mutual problems and responsibilities. Such filtration can take
place frequently in courses in American history, problems of
democracy, economics, social problems, current events, litera-
ture, music, art, dramatics, public speaking, and debate.
A third method of developing a better understanding of the
Soviet Union is by making use of the opportunities for indirect
teaching. Attractive classroom and corridor exhibits of pictures
and other materials may be quite as effective as the spoken word.
Films may be used to promote discussion and study; outside
speakers may be invited to visit the school; student assembly
and special community programs may be developed with the
purpose of promoting better understanding of the U. S. S. R. Extra-
curricular clubs, such as discussion, current events, and inter-
national relations clubs, may profitably devote some time to
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? 4 MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
study and discussion of the place of the Soviet Union in the
world today. Three ways of inserting materials on the Soviet
Union into the curriculum have thus been suggested: the intro-
duction of special units in some courses, filtration of mater1al
into many courses, and the use of the other school facilities
for enriching experiences.
A realistic, thoughtful approach to the problem of teaching
about the Soviet Union is needed. The teacher is faced with a
lack of objectivity in much of the material at the high-school
level, both in texts and in other materials. Bessie Louise Pierce,
in her study of civic attitudes in American school textbooks,
found that textbooks present, on the whole, friendly sentiments
toward Russia before the opening of the first World War, but
that, in dealing with the period since 1917, the discussions are
apt to arouse the opposite sentiments. 1 Teachers even today
may become entangled in controversy when teaching about the
Soviet Union. In attempting to teach so as not to arouse preju-
dices, it is well to avoid value-judgments as to the superiority
or inferiority of the Soviet system, but comparisons which are
based upon purely factual materials may be made frequently,
and with profit. The purpose should be to present an objective
study of what the Soviet Union is, how it came to be what it
is, and how we can make use of these understandings in learn-
ing to work together in harmony. The obligation to undertake
the development of an understanding of the Soviet Union is
inescapable.
It may be argued that there is no space in the over-crowded
curriculum for such a study. The responsibility for the selec-
tion of materials rests upon the shoulders of the teachers and
administrators in the field of the social studies. We must re-
evaluate our points of emphasis, and drop out much of the
content material we have included in the past. This does not
imply a neglect of content material, but rather intensification at
the points of emphasis. Within the social studies field, there is
^ivic Attitudes in American School Textbooks. Chicago: The University
of Chicago Press, 1930, p. 79.
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?
MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS 5
much needless duplication of topics; in some cases there is repe-
tition of subject matter taught by other departments of the
school. A re-examination of the total curriculum of the school,
and a critical evaluation and reallocation of materials, will almost
certainly provide space for the inclusion of more study of Soviet
Russia, which has been so long neglected.
ACKNOWIJEDGMENTS
This study guide was prepared as a project of the Social
Studies Workshop of the Harvard Graduate School of Education,
under the direction of Dr. Howard E. Wilson. The planning
of the project and the preparation of the material in its initial
stages were supervised by Professor Dorothy Douglas. Dr.
Corliss Lamont directed the preparation of the main text of
the study guide. Thanks are due to Dr. Douglas, Dr. Lamont,
and Miss Catherine L. Grimshaw for the loan of books from
their personal libraries; to the Harvard College Library for
the loan of books; and to the National Council of American-
Soviet Friendship, and the Massachusetts Council of American-
Soviet Friendship, for the loan of books and other materials. -
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? MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
I. Geography and Resources
A. Extent of Land Area
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics is larger than the
combined areas of the United States, Canada, Alaska, and Cen-
tral America, nearly three times the area of continental United
States, and forty times the area of France. It possesses, in fact,
the largest continuous land mass of any single nation, covering
approximately one-sixth of the land surface of the world. Its
81/3 million square miles, extending from the North Pacific,
near Alaska, to the Baltic, and from the Arctic to Iran, com-
prise approximately half of Europe and one-third of Asia. The
U. S. S. R. is so vast in extent that New York is nearer to Moscow
than that capital city is to the important Soviet Pacific port of
Vladivostok.
B. Physical Features
The greater part of the U. S. S. R. is a plain, extending from
Eastern Poland south to Iran and Afghanistan, north to the
Arctic, and east of the Urals across Soviet Asia into western
Siberia. The general level is from three to six hundred feet
above sea level and rarely rises above 1,000 feet. The compara-
tively few high features are in the west along the foothills of
the Carpathians, in the south in the Caucasus region, the heights
of the Urals and of the Volga, and in the far eastern and south-
eastern border area. The low, wooded Urals, which have been
compared to the American Appalachians, form a separation,
though by no means a formidable one, between Soviet Europe
and Soviet Asia, stretching for 1,500 miles and rising to up-
wards of 5,000 feet. The physical formation of a large part of
the boundary of the country has had a bearing upon its history,
because, due to the lack of natural protection, it has been open
to frequent invasion, a fact which has required a strong central
government for purposes of protection.
Marshlands, largely in the forests, and including many exten-
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? 8 MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
sive peat bogs, occupy one-fifth of the total area of the Soviet
Union. Forest land extends across northern Soviet Asia for
approximately 4,000 miles, furnishing lumber, one of the im-
portant resources of the country. On the north, this great forest
thins out into the Arctic tundra, which is ice-bound for five
months of the year, and on the south, the forest merges into
the steppes, which extend to the fertile black lands of the
Ukraine in the west, and east of the Caspian Sea into semi-
desert.
The U. S. S. R. is rich in inland waterways. Its half a million
rivers, large and small, have played an important part in the trans-
portation and communication systems of the nation. Many of the
rivers have unusual length, breadth, and depth, among the most
important being the Volga, the Don, the Dniester, and the
Dnieper in Soviet Europe, and the Ob, the Yenisei, and the Lena
in Soviet Asia. Geographic obstacles to Russia's development
and trade which have affected her history have been her lack
of ice-free seaports, and the position and flow of her rivers into
inland seas or into the icebound Arctic. The Volga empties into
the Caspian Sea, the Don into the Sea of Azov, the Dniester
and the Dnieper into the Black Sea; the Ob, Yenisei, and Lena
flow northward into the icy Arctic. Murmansk, on the north-
west tip of the Kola Peninsula is, due to a warm current, ice
free the year around; this is true also of Petropavlovsk in the far
east on the Kamchatka Peninsula; Vladivostok on the Sea of
Japan is kept open by means of icebreakers. All other ports
are on inland seas or are icebound for part of the year.
C. Variations of Climate
Although the United States has great variations in climate,
they are not so extreme as those to be found in the Soviet Union.
The coldest locality in the world is in northeastern Siberia,
where the temperature falls to 960 below zero; there are sub-
tropical regions in the Crimea, where olive trees grow in abun-
dance, and desert lands of extreme heat in the Trans-Caucasus
and central Asiatic section. Eighty per cent of the area of the
U. S. S. R. is in the temperate zone, 16% in the Arctic zone, and
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? MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS g
4% in the subtropical zone; however, because of its continental
position, away from the tempering influence of oceans, the
winters are colder and the summers hotter than those of western
Europe in the same latitudes. The Black and Caspian Seas are
in the latitude of the Great Lakes; the climate of the U. S. S. R.
is more comparable to the climate of Canada than of the United
States. The winter temperatures for nearly all the country are
well below freezing, the snowfalls heavy, and many of the north-
ern rivers, lakes, swamps and seacoasts are frozen for months at a
time.
The rainfall over the continental plain is slight and irregular;
heavy rains are unknown except in the region of the Black Sea.
The climate, except in the south, is such as to restrict agricul-
ture to hardy and quickly maturing crops. However, much is
being done by way of experimentation to extend northward
grain and other crop growing, and by irrigation to develop cot-
ton cultivation in the desert-like areas of central Soviet Asia
and the Transcaucasus.
D. Natural Resources
Like the United States, the U. S. S. R. is potentially almost a
self-sufficient nation, due to the wealth of her natural resources,
most of which, as yet, have only begun to be known and de-
veloped. Scientific prospecting parties conducting researches as
part of the nation's plan for self-development are still discovering
sources of all kinds of raw materials for the country's future
use. Her arable land is estimated at more than a billion acres,
an eighth of which is under cultivation. One-fourth of the
world's forests, three-fifths of the phosphorites, three-fourths of
the peat, and four-fifths of the potassium salts are in the U. S. S. R.
It is estimated that her coal reserves are ample for centuries
to come and her oil production is second only to that of the
United States. Reserves of water power, gold, copper, iron ore,
manganese, chrome, nickel, lead, and apatites are abundant.
Like the United States, the U. S. S. R. has had to import tin,
rubber, coffee, cocoa, and palm oil. Rubber substitutes, both
synthetically manufactured and made from the kok-sagyz plant,
are being developed. No vital resource is totally lacking.
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? io MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
E. Suggested Geographic Divisions of the U. S. S. R.
For convenience in studying the geography and resources of
this vast land, it might be helpful to divide the country into six
general areas, which, of course, might again be subdivided for
more specialized study:
1. Soviet Europe, as far south as the Caucasus: the territory
from the European borders of the U. S. S. R. west to the Ural
mountains, northward to the Arctic Circle, and southward to the
North Caucasus. Within this territorial division are the Volga
River area, and the industrial, railway, and population centers
of first importance in the country; it includes such important
cities as Moscow, Leningrad, Kiev, Kharkov, Gorki, Odessa,
Rostov-on-Don, and Stalingrad; the Ukraine contains the rich-
est soil and some of the most productive mines in the entire
Soviet Union.
2. The Caucasus and Transcaucasus: the area south of the
Maikop and Grozny oil fields, between the Black and Caspian
Seas, and bordered on the south by Turkey and Iran. This area
is the principal region of subtropical crops in the U. S. S. R. Tea,
citrus fruits, cotton, grapes, and tobacco are abundant. Import-
ant minerals are manganese, coal, and copper; the area supplies
75% of the oil produced in the Soviet Union. Population cen-
ters include Baku, oil production city on the Caspian Sea, from
which oil is piped to Batumi, oil port on the Black Sea, and
Tbilisi, where one of the Soviet Union's large hydraulic electric
plants is located.
3. Soviet Central Asia: the area stretching from the Caspian
Sea to the Pamirs, and including the Turkmen, Uzbek, Tadzhik,
Kazakh and Kirgiz Republics. On account of its dry and semi-
desert climate, it has presented a challenge to the Soviet nation
in making the land useful; this challenge is being met, and,
through irrigation, it has become an important cotton growing
area. Other products are wheat, sugar beets and kok-sagyz, the
rubber plant. Representing the plan of the government to de-
centralize industry and encourage its expansion eastward, Tash-
kent is a center of manufacture of the large tractors and com-
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? MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS n
bines which have been so vital in the mechanization of agri-
culture.
4. Soviet Siberia: the area north of the Kazakh Republic, east
of the Urals, northward to the Arctic Circle and eastward to
Lake Baikal and to the border of the Yakut Autonomous Re-
public. This area has dairying, lumbering, mining, and agri-
culture, as well as many new industries in the Ural mountain
region and in the Kuznetsk Basin. Omsk, on the Irtish River,
and Novosibirsk, on the southern Ob, are important industrial
centers.
5. The Far East: the area, traditionally part of Siberia, from
Lake Baikal to the Pacific, and bounded on the south by
Manchukuo and Outer Mongolia. The fur industry, mining,
cattle breeding, lumbering, and fishing are important in the
Republic of Yakutia; Yakutsk, on the River Lena, is a transpor-
tation and industrial center of this Republic. The far eastern
area includes the strategic Kamchatka Peninsula, as well as
the vital port of Vladivostok. On the northeast, the territory is
only fifty-six miles from Alaska, across the Bering Strait. Recog-
nizing the difficulty of defense of this distant section from the
west, the Soviet government has undertaken to increase its self-
sufficiency in manufacturing as well as in agriculture, and a grow-
ing industrial center north of Vladivostok is considered one of
the most important in the country.
6. The Soviet Arctic: all land north of the Arctic Circle; it
is suggested that the northerly port of Archangel, though slight-
ly south of the Arctic Circle, be included in a consideration of
this area. Far from disregarding this territory as useless or un-
inhabitable, the Soviets know it to be a vital section of their land.
In 1935, after much exploration and the establishment of
numerous weather and radio outposts, a summer sea route, navi-
gable from July to October, was opened across the Arctic Ocean
from Vladivostok to Archangel and Murmansk. The new route
will be important in the transportation of lumber, fish, min-
erals, and furs, which constitute the wealth of this Arctic area.
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? 2 MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
References on Geography:
Cressey, George B. , Asia's Land and Peoples, Chapter XV-XXI.
Goodall, Soviet Russia in Maps.
Mikhailov, Nicholas, Land of the Soviets.
Stembridge, Jasper H. , An Atlas of the USS. R.
Williams, Albert Rhys, The Soviets, pp. 3-4; pp. 115-134.
Some Suggested Activities on Geography:
1. "So extensive is the Soviet Union that many of its citizens live farther
away from Moscow than do the people of New York. "
Using a globe, find the distance between Moscow and:
1. New York 6. Tashkent
2. Vladivostok 7. Helsinki
3. London 8. Petropavlovsk
4. Novosibirsk 9.
PREFACE
A document recently issued by the bilateral Canada-United
States Committee on Education includes paragraphs which
well suggest the background for this Workshop publication. The
Committee says,
"Of the 2,175,000,000 people in the world today, only
about 50,000,000 have remained uninvolved in World Wars
I and II. No modern nation, in defense of sovereignty or
even of existence, can live unto itself alone. Each moves
within a vast network of international relations, and its
welfare is affected by events far removed from its borders. . . .
To act with wisdom in matters of national concern and in
world affairs each nation must be wise in the ways of other
nations. Ignorance and lack of understanding provide no
safe foundation for wise action. In a democratic society
the citizens of each nation must understand other nations
and respect other peoples ever more deeply. The Twentieth
Century demands wide horizons for every citizen in a
democracy. . . . To maintain democracy in the modern
world we must have, as never before, a citizenry widely
informed on world affairs and deeply concerned with the
preservation of human freedom. "
Increasing sensitivity in the United States to the international
setting and influences of our times leads inevitably to readjust-
ments and new emphases in school programs of education for
citizenship. In recent years we have begun to increase and im-
prove our instruction about Latin America and Asia; as the
source of the above quotation indicates, we are awakening to
the need for more study about Canada. Among the most seri-
ously neglected areas in our school programs today is the Soviet
Union. We teach relatively little about the Soviets; an undue
amount of what is presented seems to be inaccurate, incomplete,
and biased; out-of-school influences tend to provide much mis-
information, to be animated by prejudgments. The net result
is that we have more misinformation than information, more
heat than light, in our total educational program about one
of the major powers of the world in which our pupils must live.
One reason why our educational program in this area falls
iii
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? SU\oi
short is the scarcity of materials directed toward the use of
teachers and pupils. This bulletin is intended to help pro-
vide some of the material needed; it presents a resume of salient
facts about the Soviet Union, a useful bibliography, and a
reservoir of pupil activities. The bulletin can be used by teach-
ers at all school levels and by pupils in the senior high school.
It embodies a "resource unit"; from it the teacher may build
a teaching unit directly about the Soviets, or may select data
and activities for use in courses in general history or the other
social studies. The bulletin does not presuppose a special
course on the U. S. S. R. ; it is useful and suggestive to teachers of
all the social studies and humanities.
The bulletin is an outgrowth of the 1944 Summer Session of
the Harvard Workshop in the Social Studies. One section of
the Workshop, which was made possible by the aid of the
National Council of American-Soviet Friendship, was focused
on the Soviet Union in the network of modern international
relations. Dr. Corliss Lamont and Dr. Dorothy Douglas di-
rected this section of the Workshop, working in full co-
operation with other staff members representing fields of pro-
fessional education. A group of teachers participating in the
program under their leadership prepared the manuscript of
this bulletin; their names appear here as authors; to them the
Harvard Workshop is deeply indebted.
Their manuscript is here made available to teachers in the
firm conviction that the area of study in which they have
pioneered is of marked significance in the adaptation of edu-
cation to the needs of our times. Their document is not a
propaganda plea; it is an effort to place facts before teachers
in an educationally useful format. It is the hope of the Harvard
Workshop that this bulletin will provide both a service and a
stimulus to further work on the part of American teachers.
Howard E. Wilson
Harvard Graduate School of Education
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? MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE
Introduction 1
I. Geography and Resources 7
II. Peoples and Population 15
III. History 20
IV. Soviet Life Today
A. Government 30
B. Nationality Policies 38
C. Economic Life 42
D. Provision for Social Welfare 50
E. Cultural Life 51
F. The Position of Women 63
G. Family Life 65
V. Foreign Relations 67
VI. Selected Annotated Bibliography 77
VII. Minimum Kit of Essential Teaching Materials . . 88
VIII. Directory of Sources of Teaching Aids 88
V
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? INTRODUCTION
HpHE Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, our ally in the
? *? present struggle against German aggression, and our
neighbor across the Bering Strait, will doubtless be the greatest
land power in Europe and Asia following the war. Soviet
Russia has great natural resources, a rapidly growing popula-
tion, and has made the swiftest strides in technology and indus-
trialization of any country since the First World War. Moreover,
here are more than two hundred million fellow human beings,
almost one-tenth of all the world's inhabitants, living in an area
which is approximately one-sixth of the total land area of the
globe, concerning whose background, struggles, present status,
aims, and interests, comparatively little is known in the United
States. American citizens must learn to understand the U. S. S. R.
because our greatest hope for world peace lies in making sound
decisions in the field of international relations. In the future
peace and in the world cooperation necessary to maintain it,
the U. S. S. R. will play an important part.
An intelligent facing of the future requires that knowledge on
the part of the students and teachers of America concerning the
U. S. S. R. be increased, to the end that greater understanding
and better international relations may result. The whole world
today is caught up in an intricate pattern of international rela-
tionships which necessitate a reassessment of the bases of civic
education in this country. We must insert in the curriculum
additional materials on the international setting in which the
United States has to operate, and of which we are now becom-
ing increasingly aware. What happens in one country affects rela-
tionships all over the world. We must study the total pattern of
those relationships and the cultures back of them. There is
probably no comparable area in the world the study of which
is more neglected in current school curricula in this country
than the Soviet Union.
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? MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
THE PLAN OF THE STUDY GUIDE
School authorities who desire to develop an understanding of
the Soviet Union will find difficulty in locating adequate materi-
als in school textbooks. It is in an endeaver to suggest aids
for the use of teachers and students in the junior and senior
high schools that this introduction to the study of the Soviet
Russians has been prepared. It is meant to present as objective
a picture of the Soviet Union as possible, without pretending to
pass judgment on the validity of the system. The material may
be used as a resource unit by teachers, or as a framework for
the development of a teaching unit. It is well within the scope
of high-school students, and they may find it useful as a reference.
The study guide includes (1) a content outline, (2) suggested
activities, (3) a selected, annotated bibliography, classified for
teachers and students, (4) a suggested minimum kit of mate-
rials recommended for a study of the Soviet Union, and (5) a
list of places where materials may be obtained.
The content outline is written primarily for secondary-school
teachers, and is intended to suggest certain lines of emphasis
which may be developed. Limitations of space obviously do
not permit treatment of all aspects of Soviet life. Three or four
selected reading references for more intensive study are indicated
at the end of each topic in the outline. The brief lists of activi-
ties for students are intended to suggest supplementary materi-
als and important lines of interpretation. These activities are
planned to include some "Things To Do" for students with
varying degrees of ability. Teachers will be able to develop in
the classroom many other activities which may be more suitable
than those suggested, and it is not expected nor recommended
that any teacher use all of those included.
The bibliography suggests further reading that may profitably
be undertaken by teachers and students. The suggested kit of
materials should be regarded as a minimum, and many of the
books in the general bibliography should be consulted, as well
as others that are available.
The attention of teachers is called to materials to be found in
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? MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS J
current magazines and newspapers. More is being printed about
the Soviet Union in our newspapers and magazines than ever
before. Such materials might even be used as a point of de-
parture in developing an entire study of the U. S. S. R. An
abundance of pictorial materials is available in such magazines
as Life, Look, and National Geographic. Mimeographed copies
of a teaching unit on the U. S. S. R. at the sixth- and seventh-grade
levels may be secured from the Social Studies Workshop, Harvard
Graduate School of Education.
SOVIET RUSSIA IN THE CURRICULUM
The question of how the materials in this study can be intro-
duced into social studies courses is an important one. Few
schools can offer a regular course on the Soviet Union, and then
only on an elective basis. There are, however, opportunities
in many schools for the introduction of special units of study
in some of the regular courses. This would seem to apply
especially to courses in world history, modern history, inter-
national relations, and world and economic geography. In
other courses, nitration of material on the Soviet Union into
the existing program can take place. Continuous cross-references
between developments in America and in the Soviet Union
should help students to acquire a better understanding of our
mutual problems and responsibilities. Such filtration can take
place frequently in courses in American history, problems of
democracy, economics, social problems, current events, litera-
ture, music, art, dramatics, public speaking, and debate.
A third method of developing a better understanding of the
Soviet Union is by making use of the opportunities for indirect
teaching. Attractive classroom and corridor exhibits of pictures
and other materials may be quite as effective as the spoken word.
Films may be used to promote discussion and study; outside
speakers may be invited to visit the school; student assembly
and special community programs may be developed with the
purpose of promoting better understanding of the U. S. S. R. Extra-
curricular clubs, such as discussion, current events, and inter-
national relations clubs, may profitably devote some time to
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? 4 MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
study and discussion of the place of the Soviet Union in the
world today. Three ways of inserting materials on the Soviet
Union into the curriculum have thus been suggested: the intro-
duction of special units in some courses, filtration of mater1al
into many courses, and the use of the other school facilities
for enriching experiences.
A realistic, thoughtful approach to the problem of teaching
about the Soviet Union is needed. The teacher is faced with a
lack of objectivity in much of the material at the high-school
level, both in texts and in other materials. Bessie Louise Pierce,
in her study of civic attitudes in American school textbooks,
found that textbooks present, on the whole, friendly sentiments
toward Russia before the opening of the first World War, but
that, in dealing with the period since 1917, the discussions are
apt to arouse the opposite sentiments. 1 Teachers even today
may become entangled in controversy when teaching about the
Soviet Union. In attempting to teach so as not to arouse preju-
dices, it is well to avoid value-judgments as to the superiority
or inferiority of the Soviet system, but comparisons which are
based upon purely factual materials may be made frequently,
and with profit. The purpose should be to present an objective
study of what the Soviet Union is, how it came to be what it
is, and how we can make use of these understandings in learn-
ing to work together in harmony. The obligation to undertake
the development of an understanding of the Soviet Union is
inescapable.
It may be argued that there is no space in the over-crowded
curriculum for such a study. The responsibility for the selec-
tion of materials rests upon the shoulders of the teachers and
administrators in the field of the social studies. We must re-
evaluate our points of emphasis, and drop out much of the
content material we have included in the past. This does not
imply a neglect of content material, but rather intensification at
the points of emphasis. Within the social studies field, there is
^ivic Attitudes in American School Textbooks. Chicago: The University
of Chicago Press, 1930, p. 79.
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?
MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS 5
much needless duplication of topics; in some cases there is repe-
tition of subject matter taught by other departments of the
school. A re-examination of the total curriculum of the school,
and a critical evaluation and reallocation of materials, will almost
certainly provide space for the inclusion of more study of Soviet
Russia, which has been so long neglected.
ACKNOWIJEDGMENTS
This study guide was prepared as a project of the Social
Studies Workshop of the Harvard Graduate School of Education,
under the direction of Dr. Howard E. Wilson. The planning
of the project and the preparation of the material in its initial
stages were supervised by Professor Dorothy Douglas. Dr.
Corliss Lamont directed the preparation of the main text of
the study guide. Thanks are due to Dr. Douglas, Dr. Lamont,
and Miss Catherine L. Grimshaw for the loan of books from
their personal libraries; to the Harvard College Library for
the loan of books; and to the National Council of American-
Soviet Friendship, and the Massachusetts Council of American-
Soviet Friendship, for the loan of books and other materials. -
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? MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
I. Geography and Resources
A. Extent of Land Area
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics is larger than the
combined areas of the United States, Canada, Alaska, and Cen-
tral America, nearly three times the area of continental United
States, and forty times the area of France. It possesses, in fact,
the largest continuous land mass of any single nation, covering
approximately one-sixth of the land surface of the world. Its
81/3 million square miles, extending from the North Pacific,
near Alaska, to the Baltic, and from the Arctic to Iran, com-
prise approximately half of Europe and one-third of Asia. The
U. S. S. R. is so vast in extent that New York is nearer to Moscow
than that capital city is to the important Soviet Pacific port of
Vladivostok.
B. Physical Features
The greater part of the U. S. S. R. is a plain, extending from
Eastern Poland south to Iran and Afghanistan, north to the
Arctic, and east of the Urals across Soviet Asia into western
Siberia. The general level is from three to six hundred feet
above sea level and rarely rises above 1,000 feet. The compara-
tively few high features are in the west along the foothills of
the Carpathians, in the south in the Caucasus region, the heights
of the Urals and of the Volga, and in the far eastern and south-
eastern border area. The low, wooded Urals, which have been
compared to the American Appalachians, form a separation,
though by no means a formidable one, between Soviet Europe
and Soviet Asia, stretching for 1,500 miles and rising to up-
wards of 5,000 feet. The physical formation of a large part of
the boundary of the country has had a bearing upon its history,
because, due to the lack of natural protection, it has been open
to frequent invasion, a fact which has required a strong central
government for purposes of protection.
Marshlands, largely in the forests, and including many exten-
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? 8 MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
sive peat bogs, occupy one-fifth of the total area of the Soviet
Union. Forest land extends across northern Soviet Asia for
approximately 4,000 miles, furnishing lumber, one of the im-
portant resources of the country. On the north, this great forest
thins out into the Arctic tundra, which is ice-bound for five
months of the year, and on the south, the forest merges into
the steppes, which extend to the fertile black lands of the
Ukraine in the west, and east of the Caspian Sea into semi-
desert.
The U. S. S. R. is rich in inland waterways. Its half a million
rivers, large and small, have played an important part in the trans-
portation and communication systems of the nation. Many of the
rivers have unusual length, breadth, and depth, among the most
important being the Volga, the Don, the Dniester, and the
Dnieper in Soviet Europe, and the Ob, the Yenisei, and the Lena
in Soviet Asia. Geographic obstacles to Russia's development
and trade which have affected her history have been her lack
of ice-free seaports, and the position and flow of her rivers into
inland seas or into the icebound Arctic. The Volga empties into
the Caspian Sea, the Don into the Sea of Azov, the Dniester
and the Dnieper into the Black Sea; the Ob, Yenisei, and Lena
flow northward into the icy Arctic. Murmansk, on the north-
west tip of the Kola Peninsula is, due to a warm current, ice
free the year around; this is true also of Petropavlovsk in the far
east on the Kamchatka Peninsula; Vladivostok on the Sea of
Japan is kept open by means of icebreakers. All other ports
are on inland seas or are icebound for part of the year.
C. Variations of Climate
Although the United States has great variations in climate,
they are not so extreme as those to be found in the Soviet Union.
The coldest locality in the world is in northeastern Siberia,
where the temperature falls to 960 below zero; there are sub-
tropical regions in the Crimea, where olive trees grow in abun-
dance, and desert lands of extreme heat in the Trans-Caucasus
and central Asiatic section. Eighty per cent of the area of the
U. S. S. R. is in the temperate zone, 16% in the Arctic zone, and
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? MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS g
4% in the subtropical zone; however, because of its continental
position, away from the tempering influence of oceans, the
winters are colder and the summers hotter than those of western
Europe in the same latitudes. The Black and Caspian Seas are
in the latitude of the Great Lakes; the climate of the U. S. S. R.
is more comparable to the climate of Canada than of the United
States. The winter temperatures for nearly all the country are
well below freezing, the snowfalls heavy, and many of the north-
ern rivers, lakes, swamps and seacoasts are frozen for months at a
time.
The rainfall over the continental plain is slight and irregular;
heavy rains are unknown except in the region of the Black Sea.
The climate, except in the south, is such as to restrict agricul-
ture to hardy and quickly maturing crops. However, much is
being done by way of experimentation to extend northward
grain and other crop growing, and by irrigation to develop cot-
ton cultivation in the desert-like areas of central Soviet Asia
and the Transcaucasus.
D. Natural Resources
Like the United States, the U. S. S. R. is potentially almost a
self-sufficient nation, due to the wealth of her natural resources,
most of which, as yet, have only begun to be known and de-
veloped. Scientific prospecting parties conducting researches as
part of the nation's plan for self-development are still discovering
sources of all kinds of raw materials for the country's future
use. Her arable land is estimated at more than a billion acres,
an eighth of which is under cultivation. One-fourth of the
world's forests, three-fifths of the phosphorites, three-fourths of
the peat, and four-fifths of the potassium salts are in the U. S. S. R.
It is estimated that her coal reserves are ample for centuries
to come and her oil production is second only to that of the
United States. Reserves of water power, gold, copper, iron ore,
manganese, chrome, nickel, lead, and apatites are abundant.
Like the United States, the U. S. S. R. has had to import tin,
rubber, coffee, cocoa, and palm oil. Rubber substitutes, both
synthetically manufactured and made from the kok-sagyz plant,
are being developed. No vital resource is totally lacking.
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? io MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
E. Suggested Geographic Divisions of the U. S. S. R.
For convenience in studying the geography and resources of
this vast land, it might be helpful to divide the country into six
general areas, which, of course, might again be subdivided for
more specialized study:
1. Soviet Europe, as far south as the Caucasus: the territory
from the European borders of the U. S. S. R. west to the Ural
mountains, northward to the Arctic Circle, and southward to the
North Caucasus. Within this territorial division are the Volga
River area, and the industrial, railway, and population centers
of first importance in the country; it includes such important
cities as Moscow, Leningrad, Kiev, Kharkov, Gorki, Odessa,
Rostov-on-Don, and Stalingrad; the Ukraine contains the rich-
est soil and some of the most productive mines in the entire
Soviet Union.
2. The Caucasus and Transcaucasus: the area south of the
Maikop and Grozny oil fields, between the Black and Caspian
Seas, and bordered on the south by Turkey and Iran. This area
is the principal region of subtropical crops in the U. S. S. R. Tea,
citrus fruits, cotton, grapes, and tobacco are abundant. Import-
ant minerals are manganese, coal, and copper; the area supplies
75% of the oil produced in the Soviet Union. Population cen-
ters include Baku, oil production city on the Caspian Sea, from
which oil is piped to Batumi, oil port on the Black Sea, and
Tbilisi, where one of the Soviet Union's large hydraulic electric
plants is located.
3. Soviet Central Asia: the area stretching from the Caspian
Sea to the Pamirs, and including the Turkmen, Uzbek, Tadzhik,
Kazakh and Kirgiz Republics. On account of its dry and semi-
desert climate, it has presented a challenge to the Soviet nation
in making the land useful; this challenge is being met, and,
through irrigation, it has become an important cotton growing
area. Other products are wheat, sugar beets and kok-sagyz, the
rubber plant. Representing the plan of the government to de-
centralize industry and encourage its expansion eastward, Tash-
kent is a center of manufacture of the large tractors and com-
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? MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS n
bines which have been so vital in the mechanization of agri-
culture.
4. Soviet Siberia: the area north of the Kazakh Republic, east
of the Urals, northward to the Arctic Circle and eastward to
Lake Baikal and to the border of the Yakut Autonomous Re-
public. This area has dairying, lumbering, mining, and agri-
culture, as well as many new industries in the Ural mountain
region and in the Kuznetsk Basin. Omsk, on the Irtish River,
and Novosibirsk, on the southern Ob, are important industrial
centers.
5. The Far East: the area, traditionally part of Siberia, from
Lake Baikal to the Pacific, and bounded on the south by
Manchukuo and Outer Mongolia. The fur industry, mining,
cattle breeding, lumbering, and fishing are important in the
Republic of Yakutia; Yakutsk, on the River Lena, is a transpor-
tation and industrial center of this Republic. The far eastern
area includes the strategic Kamchatka Peninsula, as well as
the vital port of Vladivostok. On the northeast, the territory is
only fifty-six miles from Alaska, across the Bering Strait. Recog-
nizing the difficulty of defense of this distant section from the
west, the Soviet government has undertaken to increase its self-
sufficiency in manufacturing as well as in agriculture, and a grow-
ing industrial center north of Vladivostok is considered one of
the most important in the country.
6. The Soviet Arctic: all land north of the Arctic Circle; it
is suggested that the northerly port of Archangel, though slight-
ly south of the Arctic Circle, be included in a consideration of
this area. Far from disregarding this territory as useless or un-
inhabitable, the Soviets know it to be a vital section of their land.
In 1935, after much exploration and the establishment of
numerous weather and radio outposts, a summer sea route, navi-
gable from July to October, was opened across the Arctic Ocean
from Vladivostok to Archangel and Murmansk. The new route
will be important in the transportation of lumber, fish, min-
erals, and furs, which constitute the wealth of this Arctic area.
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? 2 MEET THE SOVIET RUSSIANS
References on Geography:
Cressey, George B. , Asia's Land and Peoples, Chapter XV-XXI.
Goodall, Soviet Russia in Maps.
Mikhailov, Nicholas, Land of the Soviets.
Stembridge, Jasper H. , An Atlas of the USS. R.
Williams, Albert Rhys, The Soviets, pp. 3-4; pp. 115-134.
Some Suggested Activities on Geography:
1. "So extensive is the Soviet Union that many of its citizens live farther
away from Moscow than do the people of New York. "
Using a globe, find the distance between Moscow and:
1. New York 6. Tashkent
2. Vladivostok 7. Helsinki
3. London 8. Petropavlovsk
4. Novosibirsk 9.
