- Virgin Lands Campaign
The Virgin Lands Campaign was an initiative by
Nikita Khrushchev to open up vast tracts of unseeded (virgin)steppe in the northernKazakh SSR and the Altay region of theRussian SFSR , started in 1954.In the first year of the programme, 190,000 km² were
plough ed; in 1955, an extra 140,000 km² were ploughed. With all this new land, a vast number of people had to be brought in from all over theSoviet Union : theKomsomol was charged with recruiting them.More than 300,000 people, mostly
Ukrainians andRussians , arrived in the Virgin Lands to begin new lives asfarmer s. Hundreds of thousands ofsoldier s,student s andcombine harvester operators would join them; however, these people would stay for only a year'sharvest . By the end of the massimmigration s to the Virgin Lands, Slavs outnumbered Kazakhs in many areas. The main town was renamed "Tselinograd", "Virgin Lands City" (today'sAstana ).For a brief time, Khrushchev inspired a
communist zeal in the peoples of the Soviet Union, and concentrated that zeal on a task that, for an equally brief time, produced the expected results.The first harvest
The first harvest on the Virgin Lands, in 1956, was a stunning success. Of the 125 million
tonne s of grain produced in theSoviet Union that year, more than half of it came from one eighth of the country. The Soviet Union was producing,per capita , twice as much wheat as the West. The scheme was therefore considered to be a huge success, as it not only enabled the USSR to feed its people but also to prove to the world that the Communist way of life was "better".Failures
Nearly all of the
collective farm s in the Virgin Lands grew one crop alone:wheat . By the 1960s, thesoil had been drained of all itsnutrient s beneficial to wheat. However, production of fertilizers in the USSR had increased during this period and so the loss of fertility was principally due to poor planning as the fertilizers were rarely available where they were needed. Before long, due to lack of any measures to preventerosion , much of that soil was simply being blown away by thewind to leave bare, useless steppe behind.Also, much of the crop that could be harvested was wasted, as there were not enough
storage silo s, so it had to be thrown away. Furthermore, the Soviet infrastructure was unable to cope and so much of the grain produced did not reach the towns, which was where it was most needed.Therefore despite the initial success of the Virgin Lands Campaign, the Soviet Union was forced to buy 20 million tonnes of grain from
Canada to meet its needs and avoid famine. This constituted a huge humiliation both for the USSR and for Khrushchev, who had boasted that the Soviet Union would oustrip US agricultural production.Legacy
Even after the end of the campaign, about six million Russian and Ukrainian inhabitants remained in the
Kazakh SSR . [BBC : [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4420922.stm Russians left behind in Central Asia] ] Their number begun to decrease after thedissolution of the Soviet Union , because of theemigration of the Slavs back to their respective countries.A
minor planet 2111 Tselina discovered in 1969 by Soviet astronomerTamara Mikhailovna Smirnova is named to commemorate the 25th anniversary of virgin soil development in theUSSR . [cite book | last = Schmadel | first = Lutz D. | coauthors = | title = Dictionary of Minor Planet Names | pages = p. 171 | edition = 5th | year = 2003 | publisher = Springer Verlag | location = New York | url = http://books.google.com/books?q=2111+Tselina+UC | id = ISBN 3540002383]ee also
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Agriculture in the Soviet Union
*Sovkhoz
*Agriculture
*Twenty-five-thousander References
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