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DESTRUCTION OF THE ESTONIAN STATE


Fate of the Members of Estonia’s Governments


During the summer of 1940, soon after the occupation of the Republic of Estonia, the repressive structures of the USSR initiated a campaign of persecution, the brunt of which was directed against members of the military leadership and the police structures of Estonia, and the political leadership, including former government members.

The only former Head of State (the Estonian word for President at the time was “Riigivanem” –State Elder) who was left untouched by these repressive measures was August Rei, who succeeded in escaping to Sweden at the end of July in 1940. Konstantin Päts, who was the first President of Estonia and who had served several terms as State Elder, was deported to Ufa in the USSR at the end of July in 1940 along with his family, where they lived in banishment. After the outbreak of war between the USSR and Germany, Konstantin Päts was arrested, tried, found guilty, and sent to a prison camp. In 1954 Päts was brought to the Jämejala Mental Institution in Estonia for some time, but was later transferred back to Russia. He died on January 18, 1956 in the Burashevo Mental Hospital near Kalinin.
Otto Strandman committed suicide on February 16, 1941 at his farm near Kadrina, after having received a summons telling him to report to the People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs. The remaining 8 former State Elders were arrested during the first year of occupation. Friedrich Akel and Jüri Jaakson were condemned to death and shot. Akel was executed on July 3, 1941 in Tallinn, and Jaakson was killed on April 20, 1942 in Russia. It is believed that Jaan Tõnisson and Jaan Teemant were condemned to death on July 2 and were shot on the following day in Tallinn. Ado Birk, who had also been condemned to death, died in a prison camp on February 1942 before the sentence could be carried out, and Ants Piip died on October 1, 1941 in the Perm Prison Camp, before being brought to trial. Both Kaarel Eenpalu and Juhan Kukk, who had received prison sentences, died in 1942 in Russia.
The governments of Estonia during the 1918–1940 period consisted of 105 men, in addition to the 11 State Elders. By the time Estonia was occupied, some of them were no longer among the living, while others had departed from Estonia, in some cases as part of the organized emigrations of the Baltic Germans. 70 former cabinet members remained within the reach of the Soviet occupation forces, of whom Theodor Rõuk committed suicide on July 21, 1940 in Tallinn. 47 former ministers were arrested within a year, and almost all of them (44) were shot to death or died in prison.
During the first year of occupation, almost all of the eleven members of the last Estonian government were also arrested. The only one who escaped arrest was Prime Minister Jüri Uluots. Nine of the members of the last government were executed or died in the prison camps.
In the fall of 1944, immediately after the return of the Soviet occupation, the repressions continued. Since part of the group of ministers who had remained at liberty up until that point had left the country during the war or had perished as a result of the war, only 13 former ministers were still in Estonia after the end of hostilities. Ten of them were arrested within a short time, and only 4 survived their terms in confinement. All in all, of all of the members of Estonia’s governments who had been in the clutches of the occupying force, only 3 escaped direct personal persecution.

Liquidation of local government in Estonia


By 1940, Estonia had developed a two-tiered system of local government, based on county governments, and town and municipal governments, which had a long tradition, although the legislative basis was only a few years old. Soviet public law, however, did not recognize the concept of local governments, and in the Soviet Union these were replaced by so-called local state bodies of power, which, unlike democratic local governments, did not decide on how to deal with local matters with the participation of the local residents, but were totally under the control of the central government. It is understandable that local governments, as institutions characteristic of the rule of law, were a problem for the new authorities from the beginning of the occupation. Reorganization was also hastened by the fact that the influence of Soviet power in the countryside was particularly weak, and Soviet land reform had been instituted, but this could not be carried out under the rule of the existing municipal governments, the majority of which consisted of farm owners. It could even be said that the Sovietization of local governments started somewhat earlier than that of the central government.

By the end of June-beginning of July, all the county elders and mayors of the larger towns had already been replaced. The next fundamental step was taken on July 25th when the local government councils were disbanded; this, in turn, provided a formal legal basis for the rapid replacement of the executive bodies – town and municipal governments – appointed by the councils
During the first days of August, the purges reached the municipal governments when, in one fell swoop, Interior Minister Maksim Unt discharged all the municipal elders and appointed new ones. The overwhelming majority were new people; municipal elders were not replaced in only 15% of the municipals. Beginning in September, the municipal secretaries were also replaced. The municipal elders, who according to the Municipal Act, which was prepared during, and in the spirit of, an authoritarian regime, possessed great power, as well as real authority in the eyes of the local residents, and the municipal secretary was usually one of the most influential men in his municipal. The majority were educated and experienced people, who had held these jobs for years, even decades, many throughout the entire period of independence.
The last independence-era municipal elders and municipal secretaries were forced out during the elimination of municipal and county governments and their replacement by executive committees, which was carried out as part of continued Sovietization in January-February of 1941.
The destruction of the local governments was accompanied by personal repressions of the leaders of local governments. The repressions primarily affected county elders, but also municipal elders and secretaries. Since many of these men had also held positions of authority in the local chapters of organizations that were declared to be so-called hostile to the people – the Defense League and Fatherland League – this provided the authorities with reasons for their repression.
The last five men, arrested as county elders, were detained in 1940–1941 and they all perished in Russian prison camps. Immediately after the war, four more county elders were arrested and only two men succeeded in escaping abroad. Forty municipal elders (16% of the total) are known to have been repressed in 1940–1941, of these 36 were shot or perished in prison. After the war, the Soviet authorities additionally repressed at least 73 former municipal elders. The fate of the municipal secretaries was similar to that of the municipal elders: of the last independence-era municipal secretaries, 45 men (about 20%) were imprisoned during the first years of the Soviet occupation and only ten managed to survive their imprisonment.

Fate of the Estonian Armed Forces


One of the most important tasks that the Soviet occupation forces faced up until the summer of 1940–1941 was bringing the Estonian Armed Forces under control and neutralizing them. At the same time that the Soviets grabbed power, their propagandists spread the rumor that the Republic of Estonia would be given a status similar to that of Outer Mongolia, and that Soviet garrisons would not interfere in the internal affairs of Estonia. Initially the rumor served to pacify the Estonian Army, and thereby fulfilled its main goal: to avoid possible large-scale revolts by the army. It was possible to allow Estonian officers to continue to serve in their positions thanks to the fact that beginning from the time that Soviet bases were allowed into Estonia – intelligence units of the NKVD and Red Army started to collect information about all career officers and non-commissioned officers. On June 21, 1940, after the coup d’etat carried out by the Soviets, the intelligence-gathering efforts of the special units were still underway. As a result, Politburo member Andrei Zhdanov gave the order that no soldiers were to be allowed to retire before the investigations were completed. (From the book “The Estonian People’s Year of Suffering”, without reference to exact sources.)

Of the 14,000 men on active duty in the Estonian Armed Forces in 1939 – at the beginning of World War II – 12,533 were transferred to the Red Army and formed into the 22nd Territorial Corps. Some officers, non-commissioned officers and soldiers had already been arrested before June of 1941, but their exact number is not known. In June of 1941, 323 officers were arrested or sent to Russia. In July of 1941, when the 22nd Territorial Corps was sent to Russia, 1,120 men (120 officers, 200 non-commissioned officers, 800 enlisted men) deserted or simply remained behind. 5,573 Estonians are reported to have reached the front.

654 political workers were sent to the Corps from the Leningrad party organization to improve the fighting ability of the 22nd Territorial Corps. 30–40 Communists mobilized by the Party were sent to every unit. These, together with the political workers, took up positions behind the fighting units and fired upon all who attempted to retreat.

From July 3rd until September 1941, 4,201 Estonian soldiers (316 officers, 397 non-commissioned officers, 3,488 enlisted men) who had been in the Red Army went missing (the majority deserted, but some were taken prisoner). By August 27th, 2,305 soldiers of the 22nd Territorial Corps had fallen. (85 officers, 220 non-commissioned officers, 1,800 soldiers. It is unclear how many were soldiers of Estonian extraction, and how many were replacements from the USSR). More than 500 Estonian soldiers continued to serve in the Corps. On September 28, 1941, 1st Rank Army Commissar Lev Mehlis – the Head of the Main Political Administration Directorate of the Red Army – issued a directive sending them to work battalions in the GULAG. After the first months of the war between the Soviet Union and Germany, Estonian units consisting of trained career servicemen ceased to exist in the Red Army.


Elimination of the Officer Corps


The cream of the crop of the Estonian officer corps was eliminated in two stages. The effects of the destruction of the Estonian officer corps and its traditions can be felt to this day.

Officers who had retired or had been assigned to the reserves before June of 1941 were included in the deportation lists compiled by the NKVD (based on the intelligence previously gathered) and sent to prison camps in northern Russia and the Urals. With a few exceptions, they were all shot or they perished (about 200 men).
In order to eliminate the career officers in the Summer Training Camp with the Territorial Corps near Pechori, a different kind of plan was worked out, because these officers had their personal weapons, and they remained in command of Estonian troops. On June 3rd and 4th, NKVD workers presented the Corps Commissars with lists of men to be deported in the first order. On June 7th, notification was made that the Corps had been assigned a new staff. At the same time, new commanders were also assigned to both divisions of the Corps. The former cadre was then sent to training courses in higher institutions of military education in Moscow. 24 of the Corps’ senior officers were separated from the unit in this way. 19 of them were arrested at the purported training courses and sent to prison camps, where almost all of them perished.
The officers and some non-commissioned officers remaining in the Summer Camp were arrested and deported along with other Estonian citizens and residents during the mass deportations of June 1941. The Pechori Home Guard building was designated as the site where the arrests would take place, and it was staffed with a special company of sentries for this purpose.
On June 13th, a training demonstration was organized for one of the divisions, which the unarmed division was taken to view. After a few hours, messengers appeared with lists, and the officers listed were called to headquarters immediately. When the enlisted men returned to their billets, they were told that the officers had been taken to training in Latvia. At the same time, they were told that some type of epidemic had broken out in the nearby settlement of Pechori, and that they were forbidden to leave the camp.
The officers of the other division were summoned to Headquarters after the evening roll call, and were told to take along their personal weapon, map case and a suitcase with personal belongings. The more than 200 officers and non-commissioned officers to be arrested were sent by car to Pechori, where they were confined to the Home Guard building. Armed NKVD guards were posted in front of the building. At the kangaroo court that was then held, the officers were informed that they had been degraded and that they stood accused of organizing counterrevolution and sabotage. The arrested officers were taken to the Pechori train station, which was surrounded by NKVD units, and loaded on a train. The train was routed through Latvia and Lithuania, taking on arrested officers from these countries along the way. The prisoners were sent on to the Juhnovo camp near Katyn. After the beginning of the war, the prisoners were transported beyond the Polar Circle to the 7th Strict Regime Special Camp in Norilsk, were the prisoners were forced to mine metal ore. Due to the inhuman living and working conditions there, only 24 of the more than 300 officers, (less than 10%) finally returned home. Some of the senior officers were taken to the shores of Lake Lama, where they were made to erect a rest home for the top workers of the Norilsk factory and camp complex. Living conditions on the shores of Lake Lama were somewhat better than in Norilsk. 22 (54%) of the 41 senior officers brought from the Baltic States died there or were shot.