
This is a temporary page for the resettlement section. The full section will have available data on 1939 Baltic-German resettlement, 1941 Soviet-German resettlement and 1941 Soviet resettlement. Below is a document from the OSS titled: "Wartime Population Changes in Areas Incorporated into the Soviet Union in 1939-1940".
An
OSS Report on Wartime Population Changes in the Baltic States.
[This document is taken from a 1981 issue of Lituanus magazine.
Editors note, as well as the text of the published document are reproduced below.
Misspellings of common words were corrected.
Editor's Note: In 1944 the Research and Analysis Branch of the Office of
Strategic Services (OSS), the precursor of the present CIA, circulated a
confidential study on the wartime population losses in those areas of Eastern
Europe annexed by the USSR during 1939 and 1940. This report, entitled "Wartime
Population Changes in Areas Incorporated into the Soviet Union in
1939-1940," was found among the papers of the late Col. Kazys V. Grinius, a
former Lithuanian army officer and onetime military attache in Berlin. Section
One of the 37-page study deals with some population estimates of all the areas
incorporated into the USSR during 1939 and 1940. Section Two, the major part of
the report, describes in some detail the demographic problems of eastern Poland.
Section Three concerns the formerly Romanian regions of Northern Bukovina (incorporated
into the Soviet Ukraine) and Bessarabia (now the Moldavian SSR). Section Four,
about a fourth of the document, reveals OSS data on the Baltic States and
Finland. Sections One and Four, as well as the Summary and Conclusions, are
presented below in their entirety.]
Confidential
OFFICE OF STRATEGIC
SERVICES
Research and Analysis Branch
R % No. 2325
WARTIME POPULATION CHANCES
IN AREAS INCORPORATED INTO THE SOVIET UNION IN 1939-1940
Description
A quantitative study of the
population changes that have occurred in Soviet-incorporated Poland, Bessarabia
and Northern Bukovina, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia and Finland from 1939 to July
1944
22 August 1944
THE BALTIC STATES
A. Introduction
The obstacles in the way of
securing an estimate of wartime population changes in the Baltic countries are
similar to those encountered in working with Soviet-incorporated Poland. The
Baltics have been under foreign occupation for the past four years. They have
been fought over several times during this period, and their inhabitants have
been subject to deportation, evacuation, mobilization, execution and the hazards
of battle. It should be noted that the present estimates carry the population
changes only through 1 July 1944, and do not include the drastic effects of the
subsequent Russian invasion.
B. Lithuania (See Table 1)
1. Population changes,
1939-1941. According to the Lithuanian Central Statistical Bureau, Lithuania
had a population of 2,421,570 prior to the outbreak of war. On 10 October 1939
Lithuania signed a mutual assistance pact with the Soviet Union whereby the city
of Wilno [Vilnius] and the entire Wilno [Vilnius] district, containing a
population of 457,500, were ceded to Lithuania. The total population of
Lithuania as of 31 December 1939 thus became 2,879,070.1
At the time of the
Soviet-German partition of Poland in September 1939, 14,000 Polish soldiers fled
into Lithuania and were interned there.2
About 25,000 civilian refugees from Poland, of whom 10,000 were Jews, also fled
to Lithuania.3 Under the
terms of the Soviet-German agreement of 10 January 1941, 21,343 persons in the
former Lithuanian Memel [Klaipëda] region and the once Polish district of
Suwalki opted in favor of Soviet citizenship and were transferred to the Soviet
Union. Of this number 11,995 were Lithuanians who probably settled in Lithuania
proper.4
Table
1.
POPULATION
CHANGES IN LITHUANIA, 1939 TO JULY 1944
|
Population
of Lithuania, 1939 Population
of the City of Wilno [Vilnius] and Total
population, 1939 Changes
between 1939 and June 1941: Add:
Polish soldiers interned |
2,421,570 457,500 14,000 |
2,879,070
|
|
Balance Deduct:
Repatriated Germans |
50,471 |
2,930,070
|
|
Population
of Lithuania, June 1941 Changes
between July 1941 and July 1944: Add:
Returned repatriated Germans |
|
2,814,599 20,000 |
|
Balance Deduct:
Deportation of workers to Germany |
100,000 |
2,834,599
|
|
Population,
July 1944 |
|
2,534,599 |
The agreement of 10 January
1941 also provided for the repatriation of Germans. By 25 March 1941, 50,471
persons have left Lithuania for the Reich.5An
additional 35,000 persons were evacuated or deported to the Soviet Union two
weeks before the outbreak of the Russo-German war, and another 30,000 left
immediately afterwards, among them about 10,000 Jews.6
2. Population changes
1941-July 1944.
a. Increases. Of the 50,471 repatriated Germans who left Lithuania in March 1941,
36,000 were ordered to return to Lithuania after its conquest by the Germans,
and by July 1943, from 18,000 to 20,000 had actually been resettled once again.7
A recent report indicates
that the registration of Lithuanians who wished to be repatriated from Russia
had been started. The total number of families slated for return was between
15,000 and 20,000.8 Since this
plan is of such recent origin, it is likely that the rapid Soviet advance
prevented its consummation.
b. Decreases. Reports on the number of Lithuanian workers deported to Germany are
in conflict. It has been stated that as of December 1943 "the total number
of Lithuanian workers, both volunteers and forced laborers, in the Reich may be
estimated at fifty thousand."9
This figure seems somewhat low in the light of other estimates which indicate
the following growth in the number of Lithuanians working in Germany: 28,000 by
February 1943, 80,000 by October 1943, and 90,000 by February 1944.10 It seems
likely that by July 1944 at least 100,000 Lithuanians had been sent to Germany
to bolster up the labor force.
German efforts to create a
Lithuanian army to be used outside the country met with little success."
However, in February 1944,11
* battalions of Lithuanian troops, comprising about 30,000 men, were forced to
fight Russian partisans in eastern Lithuania and to act as internal police.
Faced with a critical shortage of military manpower, the Germans subsequently
attempted to incorporate these battalions into the Waffen-SS,12 a move which
the troops met with armed revolt. Several battalions stationed in the Wilno [Vilnius]
area were disarmed, while the remaining battalions, stationed in northern
Lithuania, were warned in time and withdrew to the woods with their arms and
ammunition.13
Further German attempts to
transport Lithuanian conscripts to Finland were reported to have failed
completely.14 Since these
efforts at military mobilization did not result in any withdrawal of manpower
from Lithuania, there is no effect upon the population balance. The Russians
have reported the existence of a Lithuanian Division in the Red Army.15 It is not
known whether this division consists of persons evacuated from Lithuania on the
eve of the German invasion or of men who entered the Soviet Union after the
German occupation of Lithuania. The probabilities are in favor of the former, so
that no additional allowance need be made.
In April 1940 the Jews in
Lithuania proper, excluding the district of Memel [Klaipëda] which was
incorporated into Germany in March 1939, numbered 183,555.16
The cession of Wilno [Vilnius] to Lithuania added another 80,000,17 bringing the
total to approximately 263,000.
Ten thousand Jewish
refugees from Poland entered Lithuania in September 1939,18
while a like number were evacuated into the Soviet Union in June 1941.19 Thus at the
time of the German invasion there were 263,000 Jews in Lithuania. The majority
were eventually killed, total executions by the end of 1943 mounting to an
estimated 170,000.20 Additional
executions took place in 1944, so that the total number of persons executed,
including both Jews and non-Jews, may have reached 200,000 by July 1944.21
3. Natural Population
Changes. Wartime conditions have undoubtedly reduced the prewar Lithuanian
rate of natural increase, which was 8.8 per 1,000.22
It may safely be assumed that natural population factors since 1939 have
contributed insignificantly, if at all, to growth of the Lithuanian population.
C. Latvia (See Table 2)
According to official
figures, the population of Latvia in December 1938 was 1,995,000.23
Table
2.
POPULATION
CHANGES IN LATVIA, 1939 TO JULY 1944
|
Total
population, December 1938 |
|
1,995,000 |
|
Population,
June 1941 |
|
1,871,000 |
|
Population,
July 1944 |
|
1,756,000 |
1. Decreases Between 1939
and June 1941. In accordance with an agreement
concluded between Latvia and Germany on October 1939 and the resettlement treaty
of 10 January 1941 between Germany and the Soviet Union,24
about 64,000 Germans were repatriated from Latvia.
It is reliably estimated
that evacuees to the Soviet Union in June 1941 numbered 60,000, including 15,000
Jews.25 The Latvian
Red Cross has charged that during the Russian occupation, 1,488 Latvians were
executed and 34,340 deported to the Soviet Union, of whom only 2,902 succeeded
in returning home.26 If 15,000
Jews are added to the claimed number of deportees, the resultant total would be
almost 50,000 which is in substantial agreement with the figure of 60,000 given
by Kulischer.
2. Decreases Between June
1941 and July 1944.
a. It is estimated that
60,000 persons were deported from Latvia for work in Germany.27
b. German efforts at
military mobilization resulted in the formation of a Latvian Legion, which was
expanded into two divisions early in 1943. During the winter of 1944 many of
these troops saw heavy action on the Volkhov and Narva fronts.28 While there
are no data on casualties among these troops, it is not unlikely that the number
of men killed and captured reached 5,000.
It is also known that the
Germans ordered the calling up of the classes of 1906 to 1914 and 1919 to 1921
in the beginning of February 1944, which was completed by the end of the month.29
However, Latvian circles are reported to believe that many of these men have
deserted,30
so that it is not known how many actually became members of military units.
There was also some recruitment of boys 14 to 16 years of age chiefly for police
batallions.31
Latvian political youth leaders who received special training in Germany were
reported returning to Lativa to lead these battalions.32
Whatever the number mobilized, there is no indication that they were taken out
of Latvia, and thus did not constitute a population drain.
c. There were 93,479 Jews
in Latvia in 1935, representing 4.79 percent of the entire population.33 On this
basis the number of Jews in Latvia as of December would have been approximately
95,600. Deducting the 15,000 Jews evacuated into the Soviet Union, an estimated
80,000 were left when the Germans entered. Some 24,000 Jews were executed by the
Germans by November 1942.34 On the
assumption that executions continued at the same rate after 1942, the number of
Jews killed by July would reach 50,000.
There are only scattered
data on the execution of non-Jews. It was reported in May 1944 that a village in
northeastern Latvia had been razed and it(s) 300 inhabitants killed as a German
reprisal for partisan activities. This is allegedly the sixth "Lidice"
action in Latvia, although the German-controlled press has confirmed the razing
of only three other villages.35
Soviet sources claim that the German governor destroyed 150,000 Latvians by
March 194436 but there
appears to be little substantive confirmation of this charge. In the absence of
specific information relating to large scale executions of non-Jews, no
allowance is made.
3. Natural Increase. The peacetime Latvian rate of population growth was quite low: 4.6
per thousand in 1939 and 3.4 per thousand in 1941.37
It was probably subject to a further decrease between 1941 and 1944, and thus
would not have been a significant factor in population change.
D. Estonia (See Table 3)
The population of Estonia
on January 1 1939 was 1,134,000.38
1. Decreases in Population
Between 1939 and June 1941. As a consequence of
treaties concluded between Germany and Estonia on 15 October 1939 and between
Germany and the Soviet Union on 10 January 1941, 16,000 Germans were repatriated
from Estonia.39 It is
generally agreed that about 61,000 persons, including 5,000 Jews, were evacuated
into the Soviet Union shortly before the outbreak of the Russo-German war.40
2. Decreases in Population
Between June 1941 and July 1944.
a. It is reliably estimated
that about 15,000 Estonians were working in Germany at the beginning of 1944.41 There is
some indication that deportation of Estonian workers to Germany continued during
the Spring and Summer of 1944,42
but there are no quantitative estimates of the total deported by July 1944. In
any event the additional number could not have been more than a few thousand.
By April 1944, the Germans
had deported 2,000 political prisoners from Estonia. Of these 700 were Estonians
and the rest Estonian citizens of Russian origin.43
Table
3.
POPULATION
CHANGES IN ESTONIA, 1939 TO JULY 1944
|
Population,
1 January 1939 |
|
1,134,000 |
|
Population,
June 1941 |
|
1,057,000 |
|
Population,
July 1944 |
|
1,017,000 |
It has been reported
recently that Estonian youths were being mobilized for labor service in Germany.
The 1926 and 1927 age groups had been called up, and the former were supposed to
leave for Germany during June 1944. Preparations for the mobilization of younger
age groups were also being made.44
While the total number of
persons included within these groups of deportees is not available from any
single source, an allowance of 20,000 to cover civilian workers, political
prisoners and mobilized men seems to be reasonable.
b. Recruiting of volunteers
for military service began in 1941, and resulted in the formation of an Estonian
Legion, said to number 20,000 men, which has seen considerable action on the
eastern front.45 Parts of the
Legion, such as the SS Narva Battalion, are known to have sustained heavy
casualties.46 Although
there is no precise information on the total number of casualties sustained, a
figure of 5,000 appears reasonable in view of the length of service of these
units.
c. The Germans introduced
military conscription in October 1943 for the purpose of raising 15,000 men,
primarily for internal police duty. Whether this goal was reached is not known,
but it is reported that half the men mobilized were sent home for lack of arms.47 Mobilization
was apparently resumed in 1944 to raise units which could be thrown against the
advancing Russians. There are reports of a new unit being sworn in and
dispatched immediately to the front, while others were to be trained and sent to
the Narva and Peipus fronts when available.48
Whatever the success of these mobilization(s), there seems to have been no
withdrawal of the units from Estonia.
d. An Estonian Rifle Corps
was incorporated into the Red Army in February 1942, composed of officers and
men of the prewar Estonian army who either retreated with the Russians in 1941
or subsequently found their way into the USSR.49
In all probability the majority of these men are already included among the
evacuees who entered Russia in 1941.
e. There were 4,302 Jews in
Estonia in 1934, constituting 0.38 percent of the entire population.50 If this
ratio is applied to the 1939 population, the estimated Jewish population of
Estonia in 1939 was 4,309. Some 5,000 Jews were evacuated into the Soviet Union,51 including
some Polish Jewish refugees. It thus appears that the bulk of the Estonian Jews
managed to escape the Germans.
There are indications,
however, that significant executions have occurred among the non-Jews. The
Russians assert that up to February 1942 over 20,000 Estonians had been killed
by the Germans.52 Another
report states that between 1 February and 31 March 1944 over 10,000 farmers and
other resistance elements were shot on orders from Himmler.53 In May 1944
a Riga newspaper reported the extermination of a large underground organization,
twenty of whose leaders were executed.54
In sum, it appears that as many as 15,000 Estonians have been executed by the
Germans for oppositionist activities.
3. Natural Population
Change. In 1939 the rate of increase of the Estonian population was 1.2 per
thousand; in 1940 the statistics show a net decrease of 4.1 per thousand.55 While there
may have been a further decline after 1941, the total effect upon population
would have been negligible.
E. Finland
The Soviet-incorporated
portions of Finland contained a population of approximately half a million prior
to the Soviet occupation.56 After the
treaty of peace between Russia and Finland, 479,000 Karelians left their homes
and moved to unoccupied Finland.57
The Finns claim that by
July 1943, some 260,000 persons had been resettled in Karelia.58 It is likely
that these people will be forced to move once more, and that the Soviets will
gain little in terms of population from the permanent incorporation of Finnish
Karelia.59
[Sections 2 and 3 removed
by Lituanus editors]
WARTIME POPULATION CHANGES IN AREAS INCORPORATED INTO THE SOVIET
UNION IN 1939-1940
Summary and Conclusions
1.
During 1939 and 1940 the three Baltic countries, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia,
and parts of Poland, Rumania and Finland were incorporated into the Soviet Union.
The total population of these areas in 1939 was 22.7 million persons. It is
estimated that by 1944 the total population in the same territory had decreased
by 4.9 million persons, leaving a balance of 17.8 million.
2.
The population loss was unevenly distributed among the different areas.
Soviet-annexed Poland, where the war had the most profound repercussions,
suffered the greatest proportionate loss: more than a quarter of its prewar
population. Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, also hard hit, lost more than a
fifth of their prewar populations. The Baltic countries, which were relatively
unscathed until the current Soviet offensive, emerged with a population
one-tenth less than at the time of annexation. Still further decreases may be
expected as a result of military activities after July 1944.
3.
From the Soviet point of view, not all of the 4.9 million population decline
represents a loss.60 It is
estimated that 1.8 million persons entered the pre-1939 Soviet Union either as
evacuees or as military or political prisoners. Furthermore, many of the labor
deportees and prisoners of war taken to Germany and other Axis territory,
estimated to total 1.5 million persons, may be repatriated after the war.
4.
The incorporated areas have suffered irreparable population losses of 1.9
million persons, consisting of about 1.1 million executions, an excess over
births of 500 thousand civilian dead from natural causes, 250,000 repatriated
Germans and 60,000 military casualties.
POPULATION OF ALL INCORPORATED AREAS
Table 4 sets forth the
population changes in each of the incorporated areas from 1939-1940 to July
1944. The prewar figures were taken from Wirtschaft und Statistik, October
1940, No. 19, p. 450, with a slight change to adjust for the transfer of Wilno [Vilnius]
from Poland to Lithuania in 1939.
Table
4.
POPULATION
CHANGES IN THE AREAS INCORPORATED INTO THE SOVIET UNION IN 1939-1940, TO JULY
1944 (in millions of persons)
|
|
Prewar population |
Population, July 1944 |
|
Poland |
13.0 |
9.6 |
|
Total |
22.7 |
17.8 |
There were originally
500,000 inhabitants in the Soviet-annexed portion of Finland. Practically all
were evacuated to Finland when Russia assumed sovereignty over the area.
Although some may have returned subsequently, it is likely that they will be
re-evacuated should the area be ceded permanently to Russia.
The prewar population data
shown in Table 4 correspond closely to the figures cited by Molotov at the
Seventh Congress of the Supreme Soviet:
The entry of the Baltic
republics into the USSR means that the Soviet Union is increased by the 2.880
million population of Lithuania, the 1.950 million population of Latvia, and the
1.120 population of Estonia. Thus, together with the population of Bessarabia
and Northern Bukovina, the population of the Soviet Union is increased by
approximately 10 million persons. If to this is added the more than 13 million
population of Eastern (?) Ukraine and Eastern (?) Belorussiya, the result is
that during the past year the Soviet Union increased by more than 23 million
persons.61
*
Actual transcription in the Lituanus text. Appears to be a typographical error.
1 R and A No. 1735, p. i.
2 Kulischer, Eugene M. The Displacement of Population in Europe, Montreal,
1943, p. 50.
3 R and A No. 1735, p. i.
4 R and A No. 1735, p. 17.
5 Ibid., pp. i-ii.
6 Kulischer, op. cit., p. 63.
7 R and A No. 1735, p. ii and p. 12.
8 Airgram A-543, Stockholm, 9 June 1944.
9 R and A No. 1735, p. ii.
10 R and A No. 1623.
11 News Digest, 28 June 1944.
12 R and A No. 1785.15, p. 20, and News Digest, 7 June 1944.
13 News Digest, 7 June 1944 and Airgram A-531, Stockholm, 6 June 1944.
14 News Digest, 3 July 1944.
15 Joint Press Reading Service, 3 June 1944.
16 Scandinavian-Baltic Section, Survey Report, 1942.
17 The American Jewish Committee, Statistics of lews 1940, p. 598.
18 R and A No. 1735, p. i.
19 Kulischer, op. cit., p. 63.
20 R and A No. 1735, p. ii.
21 Cable No. 2525, Moscow, 12 July 1944.
22 F. W. Notestein and Others, The Future Population of Europe and
the Soviet Union, League of Nations, 1944, p. 87.
23 Scandinavian-Baltic Section, Survey Report, 1942.
24 Kulischer, op. cit., pp. 12-13.
25 Kulischer, op. cit., chart facing p. 170.
26 News Digest, 17 September 1943.
27 Material in files of Labor Supply Section, Economics Subdivision,
Europe-Africa Division, OSS.
28 R and A No. 1785.16, p. 19.
29 R and A No. 1785.15, p. 19.
30 R and A No. 1785.16, p. 22.
31 R and A No. 1785.15, p. 20.
32 Cable No. 2508, Stockholm via London, 7 July 1944.
33 The American-Jewish Committee, Statistics of Jews 1940, p. 602.
34 PM, 26 November 1942, report of Stephen S. Wise, president of the
American Jewish Congress.
35 R and A No. 1785.16, p. 22.
36 War and the Working Class, No. 5, 1 March 1944.
37 Notestein, op. cit., p. 87.
38 Scandinavian-Baltic Section, Survey Report, 1942.
39 Kulischer, op. cit., pp. 12-13.
40 Ibid., chart facing p. 170; News Digest, 21 Sept. 1943.
41 Material in Labor Supply Section, Europe-Africa Div., OSS.
42 Daily Digest of World Broadcasts, 7 February 1944.
43 News Digest, 6 July 1944, 10 July 1944.
44 News Digest, 6 June 1944.
45 R and A No, 1785.15, p. 18.
46 News Digest, 28 June 1944.
47 R and A No. 1785.15, pp. 18-19.
48 News Digest, 6 July 1944.
49 R and A No. 1785.17, p. 24.
50 The American-Jewish Committee, Statistics of Jews 1940, p. 602.
51 Kulischer, op. cit., chart facing p. 170.
52 Cable No. 2015, Moscow, 22 November 1943.
53 OSS No. 33345, 1 June 1944.
54 R and A No. 1785.16, pp. 20-21.
55 Notestein, op. cit., p. 87.
56 Wirtschaft und Statistik, October 1940, No. 19, p. 450.
57 Cable No. 1319, Helsinki, 7 December 1943.
58 FCC, Daily Report, 17 July 1943.
59 Cable No. 1157, Stockholm, 5 April 1944.
60 The losses actually total 5.2 million persons. The difference of .3 million
represents refugees and other migrants who entered the incorporated area after
1939.
61 S. Sulkevitch, Territoriya i Naseleniye, 1940, p. 6.
Link
to Prewar Baltic Page
(íà
ñòðàíèöó Äîâîåííîé Ïðèáàëòèêè)
Research, Design and Development – The OS History Project, 2004.