Lietuvių išeivijos įvaizdis sovietinio saugumo dokumentuose 1945-1991 m.

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Collection:
Mokslo publikacijos / Scientific publications
Document Type:
Straipsnis / Article
Language:
Lietuvių kalba / Lithuanian
Title:
Lietuvių išeivijos įvaizdis sovietinio saugumo dokumentuose 1945-1991 m
Alternative Title:
Image of Lithuanian exiles in Soviet state security documents from 1945 to 1991
In the Journal:
Oikos: lietuvių migracijos ir diasporos studijos [Oikos: Lithuanian migration and diaspora studies]. 2012, 13, p. 124-134
Keywords:
LT
20 amžius; Migracija / Migration.
Summary / Abstract:

LTSovietų valdžios ir lietuvių išeivijos konfliktas, prasidėjęs 1940 metais, Antrojo pasaulinio karo metu sustiprėjo, o po 1945 metų nuolatos tęsėsi iki pat 1991 metų. Sovietų saugumas, įgaliotas sovietų valdžios, vykdė slaptąją dezorganizacinę veiklą lietuvių išeivijos atžvilgiu ir kartu su kitomis sovietinėmis institucijomis formavo išeivijos įvaizdį. Pirmiausia tai atliko savuose slaptuose dokumentuose, o vėliau skleidė viešojoje erdvėje. Darbo tikslas yra panagrinėti sovietų saugumo formuotą požiūrį ir parodyti pagrindinius šio požiūrio skleidimo būdus 1945–1991 m. Šiuo laiku aktyviausiai veikė sovietų specialiosios tarnybos ir pasireiškė išeivijos antisovietinė veikla. Duomenų apie sovietų formuotą požiūrį galime rasti istorikų Arvydo Anušausko, Juozo Banionio, Geistauto Gečiausko, Arūno Streikaus ir kt. darbuose. Bet išsamiai ir išskirtinai ši tema dar nenagrinėta. Pagrindinis šaltinis yra buvę KGB archyvai, saugomi Lietuvos ypatingajame archyve (toliau – LYA). Dėl įvairių priežasčių archyvinė medžiaga, susijusi su saugumo veikla prieš išeiviją, yra negausi, todėl nepajėgi atskleisti viso slapto veikimo užkulisių. Bet suformuluotas saugumiečių požiūris archyviniuose dokumentuose atsiskleidžia gana neblogai. [Iš straipsnio, p. 124]

ENSoviet State Security, as an integral part of the Soviet system, fostered a negative and denigrating attitude toward those Lithuanian emigrants who did not approve of the Soviet system in Lithuania. This attitude began to be actively promoted from 1945 onwards, when Lithuanian war refugees arrived in Western Germany. It was in their ranks that the Soviets found many enemies of the Soviet system. At first these refugees were accused of having collaborated with the Nazi occupying regime; later they were accused of cooperating with the intelligence services of Great Britain and the United States. A similarly negative and derogatory attitude was adopted toward those organizations that joined efforts to promote the liberation of Lithuania. It was only the so-called progressive, i.e., Communist-sympathizing Lithuanians living abroad the Soviets did not attack—they held them to be their support group in the Lithuanian emigration. Among Lithuanian diaspora organizations the Soviets held their fiercest enemy to have been the Supreme Committee for the Liberation of Lithuania (best known under its Lithuanian acronym VLIK ). It was accused of collaborating with the Nazis and later of working for American intelligence. But besides the denigrating evaluation there were indications that the Soviets un derstood VLIK ’s importance in the life of the emigrant community. Still it was often emphasized that the activities of VLIK had no future.Second on the list of the Soviet Union’s enemies was the Santara-Šviesa Federation. It was seen as posing a danger because it adopted camouflaged methods of working against the Soviet system. Other organizations negatively viewed by the Soviets included the World Lithuanian Community and the Lithuanian American Council. Negative attitudes were not only recorded in internal Soviet security documents but propagated in publications as well. A rticles and books directed against the anti-Communist Lithuanian emigration were prepared on the basis of material selected by the KG B and with the help of workers from that agency. These publications displayed the same negative and derogatory attitudes. Every publication was accompanied by propaganda and publicity actions. But their results were minimal in comparison to the planned-for goals. The KG B-fashioned image of the emigration was intended to be transmitted to all potential audiences: the inhabitants of Lithuania, foreign citizens, ordinary emigrants - thereby inculcating certain stereotypes into their thinking. [From the publication]

ISSN:
1822-5152; 2351-6461
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https://www.lituanistika.lt/content/98298
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2022-10-24 15:12:45
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