Tengiz
Simashvili
Soviet Repressions in the Villages of Telavi and Signagi
Districts in September 1924
(Based on Archival Materials)
Published in: Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University,
Proceedings of the Faculty of Humanities and the Institute of Georgian History,
2024, Vol. XX
In August 2024, one hundred years had passed since the
anti-Soviet armed uprising of August 1924 in Georgia. It is well known that
throughout the country, including in Kakheti—in the districts of Telavi and
Signagi—the consequences of the August 1924 uprising were particularly tragic.
The local Soviet repressive structures demonstrated extreme cruelty and, beyond
executing direct participants in the uprising, also sentenced to death
individuals from various social strata deemed undesirable by the regime. [See
the collection of archival documents: The
Anti-Soviet National Movement and Uprisings in Georgia, 1921–1924. Essay.
Documents, essay by Levan Jikia, prepared for publication by Levan Jikia
and Dimitri Silakadze. National Archives Publishing, 2024.]
Analysis of archival documents
we have examined confirms that, under the accusation of participation in the
August 1924 uprising, a great number of people were arrested in Kakheti. The
majority of them were executed without trial, while others were sentenced to
the highest penalty—execution by shooting—by the decrees of “extraordinary
troikas” (special tribunals). [Simashvili, Tengiz. Soviet Repressions in Telavi, 1921–1924. Part I. Meridian
Publishing, 2020.]
The Soviet authorities also
employed other forms of repression. In addition to arrests and executions, in
early September 1924—just as in other regions of Georgia—persecutions began in
the villages of Telavi and Signagi districts against representatives of the
nobility, clergy, intelligentsia, and, in general, individuals regarded as
opponents of the Soviet regime. These persecutions included eviction from their
homes and, in many cases, physical extermination. [For events in Western
Georgia during and after the armed uprising of August 1924, see: Jikia, Levan. The 1924 Uprising in Western Georgia.
Universali Publishing, 2011. This study covers the preparation and course of
the August 1924 armed uprising in Western Georgia, with particular attention to
the severe repressions implemented by the Soviet authorities following the
uprising’s defeat.]
The content of archival
materials shows that the instigators of these processes were representatives of
the Soviet security services (the political police, Cheka) dispatched from
district centers to the villages, namely the local organs of the so-called
“Political Bureau” (State Political Directorate, GPU), along with other
district-level Soviet officials.
The events that unfolded in
various Kakhetian villages in early September 1924—raids and expulsions
targeting nobles, clergy, and intellectuals—remain little known in academic
historical literature. As archival evidence shows, in Telavi and Signagi
districts, seemingly “spontaneous” peasant rallies began in early September
1924. Encouraged by Soviet representatives arriving from the district centers,
part of the village population—primarily poor peasants, who were often
deliberately intoxicated beforehand—turned against their own fellow villagers,
looting their households and, in some cases, physically destroying them.
These developments were also
reflected in the Soviet press of the time. For instance, in the newspaper Komunisti, in an article dated 7 September
1924, we read:
“From the village of Ikalto,
the following report was received from Comrade Kokhtashvili, secretary of the
Ikalto District Party Committee: ‘In the district, there is great indignation
against nobles and aristocrats. The peasants are gathering in groups and are
preparing to destroy the houses of the nobles. The district committee has given
Comrade Kokhtashvili the directive to prevent excesses, to calm the peasants,
and to assure them that the Soviet authorities, with the assistance of the
peasant apparatus, will take measures to expel from the districts those nobles
and aristocrats whom the peasants are dissatisfied with.’
At 7:30 a.m. today, another
report was received from Comrade Kokhtashvili in Ikalto: ‘At dawn this morning,
all the peasants of the village of Ikalto came out into the streets, armed with
clubs, singing revolutionary songs, shouting slogans of indignation: “Death to
the nobles! Long live Soviet power! We ourselves will cleanse our villages of
the remnants of the vile nobles!” Together with their wives and children, they
marched toward the houses of the nobles.’”
[Komunisti, 7 September 1924]
The same article also noted that although the local
authorities ostensibly tried to calm the peasants, the outcome was different:
“This morning, the peasants drove
the nobles out of their houses and set fire to part of their property. The
poorest peasants were settled in the stone houses. The expelled nobles fell
into panic and fled in the direction of Telavi. There is a possibility that the
movement will spread to other areas as well, such as Vachnadziani, Sabue,
Akhmeta, and other former nests of the nobles.”
[Komunisti, 7 September 1924]
The same theme—the expulsion of
part of the village population—is addressed in the 9 September 1924 issue of Komunisti in an article entitled “In Kakheti (A Conversation with Comrade
Matikashvili).” At the time, Matikashvili, one of the leading officials of
Telavi district who played a prominent role in the implementation of Soviet
repressions there, told readers:
“In Kakheti (Telavi and Signagi
districts), as in the whole of Georgia, the former nobles, aristocrats, and
clergy served as one of the bases for the work of the Parity Committee. … As
soon as the peasants learned that in some corners of Georgia there had been
bandit-like uprisings against the authorities, they demanded the harsh and
merciless punishment of the enemies of the workers’ and peasants’ government.
From all the villages came numerous resolutions of peasant meetings, demanding
decisive measures against those bandits who disturb the peaceful life of the
working people of Georgia. The peasants declared that if the authorities dealt
leniently with the bandits, they themselves would take revenge on their mortal
enemies.”
[Komunisti, 9 September 1924]
In the 13 September 1924 issue
of Komunisti, under the general headline
“The Liquidation of the Menshevik Bandits”
and the subheading “The Peasantry Against the
Nobility, Telavi,” it was reported:
“We are informed from Telavi of
the following: Yesterday the district committee notified the Central Committee
that there is terrible indignation among the peasants of the district against
the nobles and aristocrats. Our Soviet organs in the districts could barely
restrain this indignation, which nearly took on the character of a spontaneous
uprising and vigilante justice against the nobles. Yesterday the district
committee received reports from all areas that, as soon as the peasants learned
that the uprising in Georgia against the authorities had been organized by the
Parity Committee, which united nobles, aristocrats, officers, priests, and
merchants, they demanded that the nobles and aristocrats be immediately
expelled from the villages together with their entire families, and that all
nobles capable of bearing arms be immediately arrested. The peasants threatened
that if the state did not show firmness in this matter, then the peasants
themselves would cleanse the area with an iron broom. Yesterday the district
committee, through its regional party committees, attempted to explain to the
agitated peasants that the Soviet authorities were already taking and would
continue to take the harshest measures against the organizers of the armed
uprisings and conspiracies against Soviet power. The party committees were
instructed to take every possible measure to prevent excesses, but we failed to
calm the people.”
[Komunisti, 13 September 1924]
Archival materials confirm that
it was, in fact, the Soviet authorities who were directly interested in the
expulsion of nobles and aristocrats from the villages and, more broadly, from
the territory of Georgia. Preserved in the National Archives of Georgia is a
file dated May 1929, entitled: “Case of the
All-Georgian Central Executive Committee on the Procedure for Expelling from
Georgia the Nobility Who Participated in the August Uprisings.” [National
Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, Case 374, pp. 1–2]
This file contains a “secret letter” sent by Mikha Tskhakaya,
head of the All-Georgian Central Executive Committee, to the Transcaucasian
Central Executive Committee. In the document, we read:
“After the Menshevik adventure
of August 1924, in certain districts of the Georgian SSR, the peasants
spontaneously began to expel the former nobles and aristocrats from their
habitual nests, and confiscated their movable and immovable property. At the
same time, this expulsion in most cases concerned those individuals who had
directly or indirectly participated in the counterrevolutionary movement. In
order to regulate the resettlement of former nobles and aristocrats, the
Central Executive Committee of the Georgian SSR adopted and published on 9
January 1925 a special decree on the administrative expulsion of former nobles
and aristocrats. Soon thereafter, the Central Executive Committee and the
Supreme Soviet of the USSR adopted a resolution depriving the former landlords
of the right to own land and to reside on the estates that had belonged to them
prior to the October Revolution.”
[National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, Case 374, pp. 1–2]
In the collections of the National Archives of Georgia are
preserved the materials of the “All-Georgian Central Executive Committee” of
the Georgian SSR, which contain information about the Soviet repressions that
unfolded in September 1924. [Here, we would like to express our gratitude to
the staff of the National Archives of Georgia and the Kakheti Regional Archive,
especially to Mrs. Ketevan Asatiani, for their assistance during the research
process.] Among these materials are the minutes of village assemblies held in
the villages of Telavi and Sighnaghi districts in October 1924. It appears
that, in order to give a “legal” form to the repressions carried out in
September 1924, representatives of the local authorities traveled to various
villages of Kakheti in early October of that year. They conducted meetings and
drew up minutes concerning the expulsion of the local nobility — the so-called
“issue of the expulsion of princes and nobles.” [National Archives of Georgia,
Fond 284, Inventory 3, File 11, File 42]
We should also note that, as Levan Ghoghoberidze wrote in
the newspaper Communist on October 3, 1924 [Levan Ghoghoberidze was
Deputy Chairman of the Council of People’s Commissars of the Georgian SSR in
1923–1924; he was executed in 1937], he and other “party comrades,” among them
Vano Sturua, traveled for six days at the end of September 1924 through the
villages of Sighnaghi and Telavi districts in order to ascertain “the real
reasons for the peasants’ indignation, and everywhere they encountered the same
firm and conscious spirit: the peasants unanimously and with contempt recalled
the princes and nobles, and categorically demanded their final expulsion from
Kakheti.” [Communist newspaper, October 3, 1924. Material provided by
Koki Peradze.] It seems that the visits of such high-ranking Soviet officials
were followed by the organization of these village assemblies in Kakheti
concerning the issue.
The minutes of the open session of the village councils of
Napareuli, Saniori, and Artana in Telavi district, dated October 5, 1924, read
as follows:
“The session was attended by the majority of the members of the councils of the
above-mentioned villages, a significant part of the peasantry, and a
three-member commission from the district. Agenda — discussion of the list of
nobles expelled by the peasants. They heard and decided:
·
From
Napareuli — Tamara Qaralashvili (wife of Data). The village decision by which
she had been expelled by the peasants shall be confirmed. The decision states
that, as the wife of a noble, she always oppressed the peasants and was still
an enemy of the workers’ and peasants’ power.
·
From
Saniori — Vasil and Iliko Avalishvili, sons of Nikoloz (brothers). It was
decided: the village decision by which they had been expelled shall be
confirmed. The decision states that these nobles were active participants in
the uprising and during the reaction persecuted the peasants.
·
From
Artana — Rezo (Revaz) Qaralashvili, son of Mikheil. It was decided: the village
decision by which he had been expelled shall be confirmed. He has since been
executed.” [National Archives of Georgia, Fond 284, Inventory 3, File 11, p. 9.
Revaz (Rezo) Qaralashvili was executed on September 5, 1924 in Telavi. He was
the father of Parnaoz Qaralashvili, who had been executed in 1923 on charges of
membership in the “Military Center.”]
Other persons were expelled from Artana as well, including
“Kokhta Qaralashvili, son of Gigo: during the reaction he was an officer of the
police (pristav), beat peasants, and was now an active participant in the
uprising, for which he was imprisoned.” [NAG, Fond 284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 9]
The list of expelled persons from this village mainly
includes male members of the Qaralashvili family, although women were also
expelled — for example, Talia Qaralashvili, wife of peasant Sandro Sesiashvili:
“Talia Qaralashvili mocked the peasants and still retained her customs and
habits. Her husband Sesiashvili was left on the estate,” the session decided.
[NAG, Fond 284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 9]
Another expelled person from Artana was Manana Qaralashvili:
“The village decision by which she was expelled shall be confirmed. She is an
enemy of the existing authority and a supporter of Cholokashvili’s band.” [NAG,
Fond 284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 9]
The meeting of the councils of Napareuli, Saniori, and
Artana was chaired by Makhareishvili, with Kakabadze as secretary. The
three-member commission from Telavi district consisted of Khoridze, Kakabadze,
and Mamajanov. [NAG, Fond 284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 9. Presumably, “Khoridze”
was Sasha Khoridze, head of the Agitation and Propaganda Department of Telavi
district at that time, who had been wounded on the night of September 4–5,
1924, by young Komsomol member Sasha Jorjadze. Jorjadze had been forced by Kolia
Japaridze, member of the Telavi district “troika,” to execute his own father.
In revenge, Sasha Jorjadze seriously wounded Kolia Japaridze, who died a few
days later. Sasha Khoridze survived. See: Tengiz Simashvili, The Bloody
September of 1924 in Telavi, Works of the Faculty of Humanities of Tbilisi
State University and the Institute of Georgian History, vol. XVI, p. 211.]
Similar meetings were held in other villages of Telavi
district. On October 17, 1924, in the village of Kurdgelauri, a session of the
village council was held: “The majority were present, along with comrade
Mamajanov, a member of the commission established in the district, to
investigate the issue of nobles expelled by the peasants. Agenda — discussion
of nobles expelled individually from the village.” [NAG, Fond 284, Inv. 3, File
11, p. 10]
The meeting heard and confirmed various expulsions, among
them that of Nino Eristavi, because “the said Eristavi, as a noblewoman,
oppressed the peasants.” [NAG, Fond 284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 10]
From the same village, Keto Tarkhanishvili was also
expelled, although it is noted that she was not a noblewoman; rather, “she is a
land worker.” [NAG, Fond 284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 10]
Other expulsions from Kurdgelauri included “Misha Rusiev, as
a nobleman and exploiter of workers,” as well as Luka and Anastasia Niniev,
Barbare Khirseli, Data Zurabishvili, and Aleksandre (Tsutsa) Rusiev. The
minutes of this session were signed by V. Tsikhistavi, Mamajanov, Kakabadze,
and the secretary Chubinidze. [NAG, Fond 284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 10]
Expulsions took place elsewhere too. For example, according
to the minutes of the council of Khorkhli village (now in Akhmeta municipality,
then part of Telavi district), on October 26, 1924: “Council members, peasants,
and the district commission were present to investigate the issue of nobles
expelled by the peasants.” [NAG, Fond 284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 11]
At this meeting, the case of Kote Turkestanashvili was also
heard, and it was decided: “He shall return to the village as an honest working
man, having committed no wrongdoing against the workers and peasants.” [NAG,
Fond 284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 10] The same was recorded for Data
Turkestanashvili, Ilia Sakvarelidze, Pepe Dekanizishvili, Kikusha
Dekanizishvili, and Misha Sakvarelidze. [NAG, Fond 284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 10]
That is, these individuals had been expelled from the villages in September
1924, but the decision was made to allow them to return.
The minutes also mention Vano Sakvarelidze, about whom it
was said: “The said person harbored Kakutsa Cholokashvili’s band and was an
active participant in its operations. He is now a teacher, which is
inappropriate, as he is an enemy of Soviet authority. The peasants deem it
necessary that he be removed from teaching.” (Document #1) [NAG, Fond 284, Inv.
3, File 11, p. 10] The document is signed by Arsenashvili, Kakabadze, and the
secretary Mamajanov. [NAG, Fond 284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 10]
Thus, it becomes clear that, at the beginning of September
1924, not only nobles but also representatives of the intelligentsia were being
expelled from villages, and they were also being dismissed from their jobs.
Furthermore, as a document dated November 30, 1924, in the
same archival file reveals, in villages houses and land were confiscated from
people who did not in fact belong to social classes deemed unacceptable by the
Soviet authorities and who had no connection with the participants of the
August armed uprising.
For example, Mariam Rtskhiladze, a resident of Telavi and by
profession a “midwife,” sent a petition to Vano Sturua [Vano Sturua — in
1922–1924 People’s Commissar of Agriculture of the Georgian SSR, later chairman
of the Control Commission of the Regional Committee of the Communist Party
(Bolshevik) of Transcaucasia]. According to Mariam Rtskhiladze: “I have been a
widow for twenty years and the mother of two children; I have been left without
work, without pension. After the August events, my estate was confiscated along
with those of others, and I have been left in an extreme condition.” [NAG, Fond
284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 58]
M. Rtskhiladze requested the return of her confiscated
property — “one dessiatina of vineyard with a wine cellar,” which she owned in
the village of Uriatubani (Vazisubani) — seized from her by peasants during the
armed uprising of August 1924. [NAG, Fond 284, Inv. 3, File 11, p. 58]
As for the Sighnaghi district, according to the contents of
archival materials, the expulsion of individuals deemed unacceptable to the
Soviet authorities from the villages of this district was accompanied by
terrible cruelty, which manifested itself in the physical punishment of people
and their execution without any kind of trial. In fact, this was what is
commonly called "lynching," that is, murder committed by a mob.
This is confirmed by various
documents preserved in the National Archives of Georgia. According to the
minutes of the session of the Presidium of the Sighnaghi District Executive
Committee, dated February 12, 1925, the following was discussed: “Resolutions
(minutes) adopted by the Soviets regarding the expulsion of nobles and
aristocrats.” [National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, Case 42, p.
1]
At the session, it was decided
that: “The mentioned resolutions shall be confirmed and submitted to the All-Georgian
Central Executive Committee for approval.” [National Archives of Georgia, Fund
284, Inventory 3, Case 42, p. 1]
At this session of the
Presidium of the Sighnaghi District Executive Committee, the following minutes
written by rural councils in early October 1924 were presented for
consideration: Akhashen-Chumlaki, Bakurtsikhe, Kardenakhi, Kolagi-Vejini,
Vakiri, Bodbe-Khevi, Gurjaani, and Tibaaani. [National Archives of Georgia,
Fund 284, Inventory 3, Case 42, p. 1]
In the minutes of the February
12, 1925 session, we read: “From these resolutions, it appears that, in
accordance with the wishes of the local peasant population, expulsions were
carried out as determined by the Soviets.” [National Archives of Georgia, Fund
284, Inventory 3, Case 42, p. 1]
This text is followed by lists
of expelled individuals, arranged by villages. For example, from the villages
under the Akhashen-Chumlaki rural council, the following were expelled: “Former
priest Isidore Vachnadze with family, Kola Aleksandres dze Machavariani with
wife, widow Sona Gijimqrelidze with child, Kola Mikheilis dze Gijimqrelidze,
Iliko Konstantines dze Gijimqrelidze, Niko Zaalis dze Tsinamdzghvrishvili with
children, the family of executed Giorgi Tsinamdzghvrishvili, Elene Davitis
asuli Jorjadze,” and several dozen others. [National Archives of Georgia, Fund
284, Inventory 3, Case 42, pp. 1–3]
From Bakurtsikhe, the expelled
included: “Giorgi Aleksandres dze Vachnadze, the family of stoned Giorgi
Solomonis dze Vachnadze with children, the family of stoned Mikheil Zakarias
dze Vachnadze – two sons, the family of executed Mikheil Zakarias dze Vachnadze
– wife Iulia with two children, the family of Adam Iosebis dze Vachnadze –
stoned, the family of stoned Niko Dimitris dze Vachnadze – brother Dr. Giorgi
Vachnadze with family, Irakli and Iliko Abkhazi stoned by the people, the
family of Siko (Simon) Revazis dze Vachnadze stoned by the people,” and others.
[National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, Case 42, pp. 1–3]
Among the names in this list,
we note Davit Vachnadze, about whom the following is written: “Davit Vladimeris
dze Vachnadze has fled, his mother is Elene.” This means that from Bakurtsikhe,
in August 1924, was expelled and exiled the mother of Davit Vachnadze, the
prominent public and political figure who later went into emigration. [National
Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, Case 42, p. 1]
The minutes of the Bakurtsikhe
rural council session, dated October 3, 1924, more “fully” explain the reason
for Davit Vachnadze’s “in absentia” expulsion from the village: “Davit
Vladimeris dze Vachnadze – has fled to Kakutsa Cholokashvili. His mother Elene
supports his actions and rejoices in Kakutsa’s victories.” (Document #4)
[National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, Case 42, p. 40]
[Davit (Data) Vladimeris dze Vachnadze was one of the founders and leaders of
the National-Democratic Party of Georgia. His father, Colonel Vladimer
Vachnadze, was from Bakurtsikhe, where he died in October 1919. His mother,
Elene Machabeli, was from the village of Didi Lilo.]
From Kardenakhi, the expelled
included: “The family of stoned Data Aleksandres dze (also called Ilarionis
dze) Foraqishvili – with wife, children, and daughter-in-law; the family of
Ivane Vachnadze, who was stoned; the family of executed Viktor (Vachtang)
Giorgis dze Vachnadze – mother and sister; the family of executed Levan
Samadashvili,” and others. [National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory
3, Case 42, pp. 41, 45]
In the notes accompanying the
names of expelled persons from various villages, the reasons for their
expulsion are given. For example, about one widow, it is written: “Widow Sofio
Cholokashvili. Kakutsa feasted at this widow’s house three times, for which her
son was executed, after which Sofio Cholokashvili was filled with vengeance
against the peasantry.” [National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3,
Case 42, p. 41]
As already mentioned, in these
documents the expelled are often labeled as “executed,” “stoned,” etc. By
“executed” were meant people arrested for participation in the armed uprising
of August 1924 and executed without trial. By “stoned” was meant the most
brutal form of mob justice – the killing of entirely innocent people with
stones and clubs. As emerges from the materials we found, during the expulsion
process, peasants incited by Soviet authorities in some villages killed several
dozen innocent people in this manner.
More detailed information on
those expelled and killed is preserved in the minutes of the rural councils of
Bakurtsikhe and Kardenakhi, recorded in early October 1924. The session of the
Bakurtsikhe rural council, held on October 3, 1924, was attended by:
“Representative of the Sighnaghi District Party Committee Badoshvili,
representative of the District Executive Committee, district instructor
Mkheidze, deputy head of the district militia Abuladze, rural council chairman
Bejashvili, and six members of the council.” (Document #2) [National Archives
of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, Case 42, p. 41]
At this session, the following
issue was discussed: “Regarding the return to their homes of the nobles
expelled from Bakurtsikhe for preparations for the uprising and other
anti-revolutionary activities.” According to the document: “After much debate,
the assembly resolved: From Bakurtsikhe shall be permanently, with their
families and for all generations, expelled the following nobles for various
crimes, for oppressing and tormenting the peasantry, for hereditary enmity and
unrest, with confiscation of all movable and immovable property, and that this
decision be submitted to the supreme body of the Soviet Republic of Georgia.”
[National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, Case 42, p. 41]
The list of expelled persons
follows, including:
·
“The family of stoned Giorgi Solomonis dze
Vachnadze – Taso Vachnadze with children, counter-revolutionary, relentless
enemy of the workers’-peasants’ government, provocateur and secret traitor.
·
The family of stoned Mikheil Solomonis dze
Vachnadze, which included only two sons, Kola and Shasho – deceitful, vengeful,
and sowers of fear among the peasantry.
·
Adam Iosebis dze Vachnadze, already stoned by
the peasants, with family – relentless enemy of the peasantry. He threatened
the peasants, saying that soon their skins would be flayed again, that “Kakutsa
with his band will wipe you out.” This family was malicious and restless in
matters of seizing peasant lands.
·
The family of Siko (Simon) Revazis dze
Vachnadze, stoned by the people – supporters of the monarchical system, former
colonel under Nicholas. Tirelessly sought ways to oppose the Red Army and to
suppress the oppressed peasantry. Best host and financial supporter of Kakutsa,
for which one son, Siko Revazis dze, was executed.” [National Archives of Georgia,
Fund 284, Inventory 3, Case 42, pp. 39–40]
The list is extensive and, as
mentioned above, includes other names of those “stoned” to death – killed by
peasants through lynching – in Bakurtsikhe. [National Archives of Georgia, Fund
284, Inventory 3, Case 42, pp. 39–40] (Documents #3, 4)
It should be noted that this
text is followed by the signatures of the chairman of the assembly and the
members of the Bakurtsikhe rural council. However, it is also written there:
“Chairman of the assembly N.B., since he cannot sign, signs instead Z.A.” (we
do not write full surnames here – T.S.). In the list of members of the council,
for three individuals it is noted that someone else signed in their place.
[National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, Case 42, p. 40]
Archival materials also
preserve the minutes of the session of the Kardenakhi rural council, held on
October 5, 1924, in the Sighnaghi district. [National Archives of Georgia, Fund
284, Inventory 3, Case 42, pp. 42–45] This session, attended by about twenty
people, including the district instructor and district militia representative,
discussed: “Regarding the return to their homes of nobles and their families
expelled from Kardenakhi for supporting the preparations for the conspiracy and
the uprising against Soviet power in August–September 1924.” [National Archives
of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, Case 42, p. 42]
The document states:
“Taking
into consideration the crimes listed below, committed to the detriment of the
village’s working people, and given their continuous oppression, unrest, and
other harmful actions, the meeting decided: the following residents of the
village of Kardenakhi, who are harmful to the peaceful life of the peasants,
together with their families, are to be expelled and banished from among the
inhabitants of the village of Kardenakhi, with the confiscation of their
immovable property, to be transferred to the supreme body of the Soviet
Socialist Republic of Georgia.”
[National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42, p. 42] (Document
#5)
This text is followed by a list
of the people expelled from the village:
·
“The late Data
Aleksandresdze, also called Uncle Ilarion, the family of Foraqishvili, Tako
Foraqishvili with children and daughters-in-law. Data Foraqishvili was a former
feudal oppressor of the peasants, arrogant, and a staunch opponent of the
workers’ and peasants’ government. His family were spreaders of malicious
rumors and provocations of every kind. They gave comfort to enemies. They loved
seizing the lands of peasants.
·
The late Davit
Aleksandresdze Vadzhnadze, this top counter-revolutionary and provocateur left
no heirs. Only his movable and immovable property is to be transferred, like
that of each other expelled, to the construction fund of the commune.
·
The late Iase
Vadzhnadze’s family – wife and children, unreliable and restless, enemies of
the peasantry, counter-revolutionaries.
·
The executed
Viktor (Vakhtang) Giorgisdze Vachnadze’s family, his sister, and also his
mother. This family was a nest of anti–workers’ and peasants’ gatherings and
was noted for its ties with Kakutsa [Cholokashvili]. They treated peasants
disdainfully and threatened them.
·
Nene Iagoras
asuli Vachnadze – a gossip among the peasant women, a sower of all kinds of
evil. A fervent defender of feudal principles and a devotee of Kakutsa.
·
Varo Solomonis
asuli Vachnadze – her house was in a remote place in the forest, and she sewed
linen for Kakutsa. She supported the Mensheviks.
·
Asiko (Siko)
Vachnadze, a former officer of the time of Nicholas, his children: one followed
Jordania, another fled recently. Dangerous citizens, activists of
counter-revolution, etc.
·
The wife and
children of the recently executed Levani Samadashvili, who was shot for
conspiracy, as supporters of their husband/father and sworn enemies of the
workers’ and peasants’ government. Provocateurs and spreaders of evil. Simon
Samadashvili – supporter of Kakutsa and a prominent old activist.”
(Documents #6, 7)
[National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42, pp. 42–45]
[It is officially recorded that
65 people were executed in the Sighnaghi district, among them the
above-mentioned Levan Samadashvili. In the list of those executed, attached to
the decision of the “Extraordinary Troika” of Sighnaghi district dated
September 2, 1924, he is listed as: “Samadashvili
Levan Giorgisdze. 44 years old. Active Menshevik, member of the district Parity
Committee from the Mensheviks.” [Archive of the Ministry of Internal
Affairs, Fund 12, Inventory 1, File 10, p. 252]. This document is signed by
members of the Sighnaghi district “Extraordinary Troika”: the responsible
secretary of the Communist Party of Sighnaghi district M. Varamashvili, deputy
head of the district executive committee Ayvazov, and head of the district “Political
Bureau” Gegechkori. It is noteworthy that M. Varamashvili himself was executed
on July 12, 1937.]
This list contains several
dozen names. It is worth noting that in the minutes of the meeting, next to the
names of some signatories, it is also recorded that they were illiterate and
someone else signed on their behalf.
[National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42, p. 45]
There are many similar minutes
of village council meetings dated to the beginning of October 1924, which are
of interest to our research, but we will not analyze them here due to the
limits of the article format.
We should also note that the
minutes of the October 3, 1924, meeting of the Kolagi–Vejini Village Council in
the Sighnaghi district preserve information about the expulsion of Giga
Vachnadze, father of Elizbar Vachnadze – a close comrade-in-arms of Kakutsa
Cholokashvili and active participant in the August 1924 armed uprising. The
document states:
“Giga Nikolozisdze Vachnadze – father of Elizbar Vachnadze, who
fought alongside Kakutsa Cholokashvili, constantly supported Kakutsa and his
son Elizbar’s wrongdoing. His house was on the outskirts of the village near
the forests, and it was precisely in this house that Kakutsa’s and Elizbar’s
group would often gather for conspiracies with the intent to kill. During
searches by local government officials and working peasants, bombs and other
weapons were repeatedly found in this house.”
[National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42, p. 35]
It is noteworthy that in the
above-mentioned minutes of the Kolagi–Vejini Village Council, there is no
mention of people being “stoned to death.” According to the still-unpublished
memoirs of Giorgi Mirianashvili, a member of the Presidium of the Sighnaghi
district committee at the time, the men of Kolagi and possibly Vejini had fled
into nearby forests, so the peasants could not kill them. Mirianashvili writes:
“Upon arriving in Kolagi, it turned out that the noblemen had
sensed danger earlier and fled into the nearby forests, while the women and
children were driven to the edge of the village, and discussions were underway
on how else to punish them.”
[Public Archive of the Soviet Past Research Laboratory. Giorgi Mirianashvili, “Selected Memoirs Collection,” p. 113.
Memoirs provided by Davit Khvadagiani]
G. Mirianashvili also refers to the tragedy that unfolded in
the village of Bakurtsikhe. In his memoir, it is written that he was informed: “The
chairman of the village council is calling for help urgently, the village has
rebelled, they have carried away the flag from the village, they are entering
the nobles’ houses, and killing people.” [Public Archive of the Soviet Past
Research Laboratory. Giorgi Mirianashvili. Selected Memoirs. p. 105]
An eyewitness to this event told G. Mirianashvili: “The
people are in Upper Bakurtsikhe, above the church. They are issuing a village
‘prigavor’ [sentence] to execute the wives and children of the nobles, who are
locked up nearby in barns, and advised me not to approach them: many of them
are drunk, and they might harm you too.” [Public Archive of the Soviet Past
Research Laboratory. Giorgi Mirianashvili. Selected Memoirs. p. 105]
Nevertheless, G. Mirianashvili went to Bakurtsikhe: “Upon
my arrival, I saw that indeed five or six men were lying dead, beaten with
clubs and cold weapons. A crowd of people was swarming around the long stable
of the former shopkeeper like flies. With endless noise and shouting, they were
urging each other to sign the ‘prigavor’.” [Public Archive of the Soviet
Past Research Laboratory. Giorgi Mirianashvili. Selected Memoirs. p.
105]
He witnessed the same horror in the village of Kardenakhi: “Upon
my arrival at the Kardenakhi council, it became clear that indeed almost the
entire village had risen against the nobles. Four had already been killed,
beaten with clubs and stones. The houses of one or two had been burned, and the
vengeful crowd had now moved in another direction.” [Public Archive of the
Soviet Past Research Laboratory. Giorgi Mirianashvili. Selected Memoirs.
p. 101]
Regarding Giorgi Mirianashvili, Levan Ghoghoberidze wrote in
the newspaper Communist on October 3, 1924: “Another case, no less
characteristic, took place in Bakurtsikhe. There, Comrade Mirianashvili, who
enjoyed great popularity and love among the peasants, tried to calm the
agitated peasants, but they told him: ‘We peasants know you well, we love you
and do not want to quarrel with you, but if you interfere in our just, sacred
cause and defend the nobles, we will be forced to treat you harshly.’” [Communist
newspaper, October 3, 1924]
Accounts of these events in Kakhetian villages in September
1924 are also found in the memoirs of other contemporaries. For example, in the
unpublished memoir preserved in the personal archive of the old Bolshevik T.
Baindurashvili, a native of the village of Upper Khodasheni (then in Telavi
district, now in Akhmeta municipality), we read: “In the autumn of 1924, the
peasants themselves seized all the property and remaining lands of the nobility
and drove them out of the villages.” [T. Baindurashvili’s personal archive
materials, Kakheti Regional Archive, Akhmeta district, Autobiography, Fund 192,
Inventory 1, Case 35, pp. 1–322]
In our research, the archival materials cited above were
tabooed during the Soviet era and transmitted orally from person to person.
Only from the late 1980s did people begin to speak more openly about the brutal
repressions carried out by the Soviet authorities, and these began to be
reflected in various journalistic writings. One such example is the article by
eyewitness Nino Abashidze, “Time and Punishment”, published in the
journal Kldekari, where she describes in detail the tragic stories
preserved in the memory of the descendants of those expelled and killed in
Kakhetian villages. [Abashidze, Nino. “Time and Punishment”, Kldekari
journal, 1997, #2(11), pp. 124–144. Material provided by Ms. Ketevan Lomize]
The author recounts in detail the stories of these raids.
Interestingly, she confirms that some people managed to survive. Some were
warned and left their homes before the raids began, while others escaped by
other means. For example, an 18-year-old youth, Zurab Abashidze, escaped in the
following way: “They dressed him in old clothes, gave him a hoe, and sneaked
him out of the house at dawn.” [Abashidze, Nino. “Time and Punishment”,
Kldekari journal, 1997, #2(11), pp. 124–144]
As the article shows, before the raids on the population
began, the local representatives of Soviet authority had gathered residents of
several villages in Bakurtsikhe and held a meeting, at which local nobles were
also brought. After the meeting, the persecution and looting of their homes
began. The author describes the terrible fate of a noble-born disabled man, a
deaf-mute named Vachnadze: “The deaf-mute Vachnadze resisted, refused to
follow them for punishment... until stones and rocks silenced him forever.”
[Abashidze, Nino. “Time and Punishment”, Kldekari journal, 1997,
#2(11), pp. 124–144]
The article also recounts other details of the bloody
reprisals, describing the tragic fate of those who survived the initial
massacres—some deprived of income, expelled from their homes and estates, later
died in terrible misery of hunger. [Abashidze, Nino. “Time and Punishment”,
Kldekari journal, 1997, #2(11), pp. 124–144]
Interestingly, the author also writes that one “party
member” from the village of Akhasheni, who witnessed the raids, even left the
party in protest and departed the village. Meanwhile, a peasant who had
participated in the raids was refused entry into his own house by his father
when he tried to bring home a looted item. Another poor peasant woman reportedly
gave her old shoes to a robbed old man. [Abashidze, Nino. “Time and
Punishment”, Kldekari journal, 1997, #2(11), pp. 124–144]
This story about the “party member” from Akhasheni seems
somewhat realistic, since according to Levan Ghoghoberidze: “Both district
and county authorities, as well as Communards and Komsomol members, wherever
they could and managed to arrive, actively defended the expelled nobles, and in
some places clashes nearly broke out between local authorities and the
peasants. Thus, for example, in the village of Akhasheni, Signagi county, when
the chairman of the district executive committee and the secretary of the
district party committee learned of the unrest, they set out with a detachment
of seven mounted Communards to stop the movement.” [Communist
newspaper, October 3, 1924]
The same theme appears in the article “The Book of
Barbara Vachnadze’s Fate”, published in the October 1990 issue of Georgian
Newspaper, which recounts a horrifying story. It contains the testimony of
contemporary Barbara Vachnadze, who recalled the tragedy that unfolded in
Signagi county at the beginning of September 1924. According to Barbara
Vachnadze, her younger brother, S. Vachnadze, personally witnessed these
events: “At that time, danger could befall you anywhere. My brother did not
survive either—he was tied up with his peer Archil, Tosia’s son, and forced to
watch as Iliko was stoned to death. They hurled stones at him mercilessly.”
[Georgian Newspaper, October 1990. Material provided by Koki Peradze]
Similarly, in the memoir book “Heard and Seen” by
contemporary Sofio Chijavadze-Kedia, the expulsion of the population from the
village of Kisiskhevi during this period is described. Among those expelled was
the famous toastmaster Kote Bakhutashvili, who, left homeless, sheltered in a
shack in the yard of the “Gvtaebis” (Holy Trinity) Church in Telavi: “Kote
Bakhutashvili, the renowned toastmaster of the county, was supported by Telavi
merchants with food and drink, and during those difficult times they never let
him go hungry. He lived in the churchyard of the Holy Trinity until his death.”
[Sofio Chijavadze. “Heard and Seen”. Georgian-European Institute. Paris,
2002. p. 379]
Sofio Chijavadze recalls not only the tragic and horrific
stories of people expelled from Telavi county, but also those from villages of
Signagi county, including cases of violence against women. [Sofio Chijavadze. “Heard
and Seen”. Georgian-European Institute. Paris, 2002. pp. 379–381]
However, regarding expulsions, she also writes that in September
1924, in the village of Kisiskhevi, it was a peasant family that sheltered her
own female relatives: “My mother and my sister-in-law Sasha immediately
moved into a neighboring peasant’s house, and they spent the whole night there.
One of the peasant’s young sons comforted them, saying: ‘Don’t worry, madam, we
will not let anyone harm you.’” [Sofio Chijavadze. “Heard and Seen”.
Paris, 2002. p. 379]
It appears, however, that the women still had to leave the
village, because: “The next day the village commissioner came and told my
mother: ‘You must leave; the Armenian boys from Telavi are very agitated. They
will commit many outrages… To avoid any disaster, it is better for you to leave
this place.’” [Sofio Chijavadze. “Heard and Seen”. Paris, 2002. pp.
379–381]
The shocking events of the expulsion of the population from
Ikalto in early September 1924 are also depicted in the well-known novel by Ms.
Zaira Arsenishvili, “Ah, My Village... Kakhetian Chronicles”. [Zaira
Arsenishvili. “Ah, My Village... Kakhetian Chronicles”. Bakur Sulakauri
Publishing, 2019]
Archival materials also contain documents about the measures
taken by Soviet authorities in the aftermath of these raids. For example, a
letter dated February 11, 1925, from the Signagi County Executive Committee
to the All-Georgian Executive Committee. A copy of this letter was sent
to the “Commission for Reviewing Complaints on the Expulsion of Nobility.”
[National Archives of Georgia, Fund 284, Register 3, Case 42, pp. 4–6]
The author of the letter, chairman of the Executive Committee
of Signagi District, wrote to the Central
Executive Committee of Georgia that, “based on your correspondence of 15
December 1924,” he traveled to the village councils of Signagi District and
summoned peasants. Together with them, he reviewed “complaints regarding the
expulsion of nobles.” These were petitions from the expelled individuals
themselves. According to the chairman of the Signagi District Executive
Committee:
“After clarifying the situation
in detail for each case, appropriate resolutions were adopted, which have
already been implemented. Namely:
1.
To Mariam Abashidze, resident of the village of Vejini,
livestock, a mirrored wardrobe, and a vineyard plot in the village of Gurjaani
were returned.
2.
To Giorgi Vachnadze, son of Simon, resident of the
village of Bakurtsikhe, all surviving household items were returned except for
three chairs and one table. In addition, those household goods he had deposited
with Sasha Qumsiashvili, resident of Bakurtsikhe, were to be handed back to
him. His house, however, could not be restored to him since it had already been
sold.
3.
To Konstantine Vachnadze, son of Luarsab, resident of
Bakurtsikhe, and to widow Maria Vachnadze, daughter of Mikheil, no property was
returned, as nothing had survived.
4.
To Margalita Abkhaz, resident of Kardenakhi, the
harvest from her vineyard could not be returned, as it had been sold.
5.
To Shakro Natsvlishvili, resident of Bodbe-Khevi,
permission was granted to live in the village, and one room, a mill, an orchard,
and furniture were given to him.
6.
To Kote Natsvlishvili, resident of Bodbe-Khevi,
permission to return to the village and to reclaim property was denied.
7.
To the widow Elene Vachnadze, daughter of Vakhtang,
resident of Bakurtsikhe, property that had been entrusted to the former
chairman of the Bakurtsikhe village council, Batsashvili (now imprisoned), was
ordered to be restored to her. As for the vineyard harvest (wine), since it was
under the disposal of the District Executive Committee and required by them, it
was denied.”
(Document No. 8, Georgian National Archives, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42,
pp. 4–6)
The list also mentions other
individuals who were refused the return of their property:
“To Tamara Vachnadze, daughter
of Konstantine, resident of the village of Kolagi, no property was returned, as
nothing had survived.”
(Georgian National Archives, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42, p. 6)
A priest was likewise not
allowed to return to his village:
“Regarding the complaint of the
former priest of Akhasheni, Isidore Vacheishvili—currently under review with
the Assistant Prosecutor of Eastern Georgia—half of the village community
desires his return, while the other half opposes it.”
(Georgian National Archives, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42, p. 4)
Particularly noteworthy is the
information contained in the above-mentioned letter, dated 11 February 1925,
from the Signagi District Executive Committee.
It reveals who in fact decided on the reinstatement of expelled villagers. The
document states:
“In addition, the Special
Troika attached to the Information Point of the Signagi District reviewed
complaints regarding various expelled persons, for which copies of the
resolutions are attached herewith. Annex: 1. Mariam Vachnadze 2. Giorgi
Vachnadze, son of Solomon 3. Konstantine Vachnadze, son of Luarsab; Maria
Vachnadze, daughter of Mikheil; and her daughter, Elene Natsvlishvili 4.
Margalita Abkhaz 5. Elene Vachnadze, daughter of Vakhtang”
Other expelled individuals from
different villages are also listed.
(Georgian National Archives, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42, pp. 4–6)
The document is signed:
“Copy, Special Troika at the
Signagi District Information Point.”
(Georgian National Archives, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42, p. 6)
[This refers to the notorious
“Special Troika” of Signagi District, composed of Varamašvili, Aivazov, and
Gegechkori—the same body that handed down death sentences to those accused of
participating in the August 1924 armed uprising.]
The archival materials preserve
the tragic stories of expelled villagers in the form of petitions addressed to
the chairman of the Central Executive
Committee of Georgia. For example, in a petition dated 14 October 1924
from Shakro and Kote Natsvlishvili of Bodbe-Khevi village, titled “Request”, they wrote:
“At the end of August this
year, following the unrest, on 12 September, we two brothers were expelled from
our house, after our movable property was destroyed and immovable and livestock
confiscated. Later some items were returned, but then taken again. It is true
that our father and ancestors were clergymen, but our family’s origins are
peasant, which can be confirmed by questioning our relatives, and we have no connection
to the nobility, which historically did not exist in the Kiziki region.”
(Georgian National Archives, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42, p. 14)
The petitioners, 80 and 70
years old, stressed that they had always remained distant from politics.
They also added:
“If any cultural or educational
work has begun in our village, we have always stood at its head, never sparing
our knowledge and ability for the benefit of the village and its residents. It
was through our initiative that a library-reading room, a theater hall, and a
school building were established, irrigation water was brought, a cooperative
shop was organized, and performances were staged.”
(Georgian National Archives, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42, p. 14)
Another petition, dated 3
November 1924, was submitted by Zakaria Natsvlishvili, describing his family’s
suffering:
“My past—small public
activity—was supposed to guarantee that no harm would come to me in September
of this year, when local residents began expelling nobles from the villages…
Nevertheless, my family and I could not escape the common fate of the nobility,
and today we too have been driven out… At present all my property has been
confiscated, my house destroyed, and as an old man I wander hungry with my
family in Signagi. It seems that my misfortune lies in the fact that my father
was a priest, and we are his descendants.”
(Georgian National Archives, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42, p. 15)
As noted earlier, the
authorities’ responses to such petitions are reflected in the same official
documents: Shakro Natsvlishvili was allowed to return and given some property,
while his brother Kote was denied both property and the right to resettle in
the village.
(Georgian National Archives, Fund 284, Inventory 3, File 42, p. 5)
It is significant that
expulsions of villagers continued in subsequent years. For instance, in the “disenfranchised” voter lists (khmachamortmeulebi) of Telavi town from
1928, alongside individuals of various social origins and occupations, expelled
villagers are also listed explicitly as “expelled.”
(Kakheti Regional Archive, Telavi District Executive Committee, General
Department, File 5, pp. 1–20)
We have sought to present this
material without deep analysis, from a neutral perspective, so that readers
themselves may draw conclusions about the Soviet repressions in Kakheti’s
Telavi and Signagi districts during and after the August 1924 uprising.
In conclusion, we note only
this: in our view, the expulsions of villagers during the August 1924
anti-Soviet armed uprising were not spontaneous events. They were orchestrated
by the Soviet authorities. On the one hand, by mobilizing peasants, the regime
terrorized and intimidated those deemed opponents of Soviet power; on the other
hand, the active expulsion of villagers from Kakheti served to deprive Kakutsa
Cholokashvili’s detachment of local support bases and supplies from the
villages.
The archives also contain
additional documents whose content cannot be fully covered or analyzed within a
single study. Although the materials cited above are grim and harrowing, we
believe that in order to shed light on the diverse forms of Soviet repression,
further research on this subject is essential.