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Text Chapter 520: Intrigue during handover

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    To the gathered Belarusian family members, each person was given a ticket indicating a certain amount of flour, sugar, grease and other materials they could receive each month. The Soviet Union specially issued war tickets to military families during the wartime economic control period.  After receiving the material supply vouchers, they were all left in the centralized military camp without taking any of them away.

    All these old people, women, and children were thrown into the hands of the anti-union personnel who were in charge of the handover at the time. The anti-union personnel who were stunned by the Soviets' move looked at the actions of the Soviets who came to receive this batch of Belarusian people. No matter how many times the anti-union handover personnel repeatedly negotiated,  The Soviets only responded to Moscow's orders as long as they were suitable for military service and those on a special list.

    As for those Soviet expatriates who have little use value to them now and need to be specially detained when they return, the Soviet side, which is currently engaged in a cruel war, is really unable to accept them all. It also asks Chinese comrades to help take care of them for a period of time. After the war is over, the Soviet side  We will choose the right time to receive these compatriots back home.

    As for the material supply certificates that the Soviets issued to the old, weak, women and children after the young and strong men were taken away, it was just to appease the military morale of those who were taken away. As for the one with the seal of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Soviet Far East Military Region,  It turns out that supplies sufficient for a three-year ration can only be used within the Soviet Union as stated in the material supply voucher.

    In a foreign country like Harbin, the Soviets did not have to worry about where to get necessary living supplies. This material supply voucher was not recognized at all in the Anti-Japanese Alliance base area. The North Manchu Anti-Union base area was the Anti-Japanese War.  It was defeated by the Soviet Union itself, and it is not a puppet state of the Soviets. It has no obligation or responsibility to bear these burdens even when it is also facing difficulties.

    Although the number of tens of thousands of Belarusians is not a large number, over time, the materials needed to feed these people are also a large number for the Anti-Japanese Alliance. The Soviets' intentions are obvious.  With family members fighting in the country to restrain them, these people cannot escape even if they want to.

    And when the Soviet Union itself was in extremely difficult times, these people should be kept alive by the Anti-Japanese Alliance to reduce the burden on the Soviets. Therefore, the Soviets only took away those who were suitable for military service this time, and even the general international  Nationality and customs were not taken into account, and the Sino-Soviet mixed-race people also had to forcefully ask for it, but the old, weak, women and children were left to the Anti-Japanese Alliance. The Chinese comrades would not let them starve to death anyway.

    After several negotiations with the Soviets but ignored them at all, the Northeast Bureau could only send these people back to their homes in Harbin. Otherwise, what else could they do and leave the old, weak, women and children in that military camp?  No matter what, let them fend for themselves wherever they go.

    Naturally, the Anti-Japanese Alliance could not recognize the material supply cards provided by the Soviet Union. However, when the Soviet Union agreed to offset part of the debt owed to the Soviet Union, it was regarded as acquiescence. However, the return of Belarus to the country did not occur until after the war.  Complete solution.

    However, although the two parties reached an agreement on the issue of personnel exchange that they could generally abide by, apart from this matter, there were constant disputes over other matters during the exchange, and there were even several cases where  When it comes to key issues, because the two sides refused to give in, it came to the point where the Anti-Japanese Alliance wanted to disarm the regiment of the Soviet Ministry of Internal Affairs that entered Harbin to take over.

    In fact, the biggest disagreement between the two sides on this matter was not the placement of the old, weak, women and children, but the Orthodox clergy distributed throughout Harbin. Yang Zhen was worried that the Soviets would use these clergy as a tool to break into the resistance after the Belarusian evacuation.  They are a wedge within the base area, so they insist on repatriating them all or exerting influence on the base area.

    There is no precedent for using religious issues to attack other countries. The Soviets have also done it before. When the Soviets intervened in Xinjiang, they used some religious excuses. Although they were in Central Asia and targeted China  The original religion of the sub-ethnic people adopted a high-pressure policy.

    But this does not prevent them from using religion as an excuse to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries. In order to completely cut off the Soviet Union's excuse to interfere in the Anti-Japanese War, Yang Zhen firmly demanded that all Orthodox clergy in the North Manchu base be handed over.  To the Anti-League.

    Although Yang Zhen is a person who pays attention to freedom of religious belief and does not interfere with religious beliefs, he is quite wary and sensitive to other countries using religion as an excuse to interfere in his internal affairs, especially the Orthodox Church in the North Manchu base area and the Soviet Union.  The Orthodox Church in the country has not completely severed ties.

    On the surface, they are independent of the Soviet Church, but in fact the connection is quite close. In fact, without the support of the Soviets, these Orthodox churches cannot exist at all. Even during the Japanese occupation, the Japanese were more or less independent because of these Orthodox churches.  There was a shadow of the Soviet Union behind it, and strict restrictions were imposed on the Harbin Orthodox Church, which strictly prohibited the Harbin Orthodox Church from developing believers among Chinese people.

      Therefore, Yang Zhen requested that all Russian clergymen of the Orthodox Church in Northern Manchuria be repatriated to the country, except for three remaining in Harbin to continue serving the Belarusians who stayed in the base area. The three remaining in Harbin were  The Soviet side was not allowed to replace it until the end of the war.

    The Soviet Union is not allowed to continue to provide financial assistance to the remaining clergy and churches. The Northeast People's Government will allocate a part of the financial funds every year for its activities and church maintenance. In exchange, the Anti-Japanese Alliance will not interfere with the Chinese people.  Regarding the issue of faith of Orthodox Christians in the Middle East, this is Yang Zhen¡¯s firm attitude and it is also an attitude that cannot be changed.

    But for the Soviets, they had already received orders to exclude Russian Orthodox clergy except for the elderly, weak, women and children. It is obvious that the Soviet Union, which is currently engaged in war with all its strength, is also worried that these people will cause trouble for them when they return.  , although many Orthodox churches in the Northeast have the shadow of the Soviets behind them.

    However, it is one thing to put them in China, and it is another thing to bring them back to the country. Even because of the current war period, the Soviet Union has appropriately relaxed its control and suppression of the domestic Orthodox Church in order to boost morale, but they obviously do not  I hope these clergy will return home.

    Since the Soviet Union is now unable to take care of how to deal with these people, it is safer to keep them in China. At least they don't have to worry about them causing trouble after returning to China. As for whether there are other reasons for keeping these clergy in China, that is  Yang Zhen doesn¡¯t know yet.

    In the end, Yang Zhen got angry and warned the Soviets who came to accept them not to take these people away, not to take away any White Russians they needed. Only then did the Soviets agree to accept all the clergy repatriated by the Anti-Japanese Federation. As for these leaders in the Soviet Union  No one knows what happened to the staunch anti-Soviet element after he returned to China, and for Yang Zhen, he didn't even want to know.

    Not only the transfer of clergy, but also confrontation and conflicts between the two countries. The Soviets even forced the transfer of all the mixed-race children of White Russians who had been exiled to China, had children after marrying Chinese, and had reached the so-called military service age.  to the Soviet Union.

    This is in line with the original plan of the Anti-Japanese League. For the offspring of these transnational marriages, the children of these cross-border marriages have the freedom to come and go. Those who consider themselves to be Soviets and are willing to return to the Soviet Union must provide formalities.  Nationality, and local resettlement, except for certain restrictions on employment, the rest are subject to certain conflicts in accordance with the Chinese policy of equal treatment.

    There were also a lot of troubles when it came to handing over those Poles who were determined not to go to the Soviet Union, but were determined to go to the United States or stay in the Northeast. After several secret negotiations, mutual threats, and countless private exchanges, the whereabouts of these people had to be solved.  Only then can it be solved step by step.

    The Soviet Union no longer requires these Poles to resolutely go to the Soviet Union, but can allow them to transfer to Europe and the United States via mainland China. However, the Anti-Japanese Alliance must ensure that these Poles are sent away in the shortest possible time, and there must be no anti-Soviet opposition in China.  things, or publish some anti-Soviet remarks.

    As for the more than 1,000 Jews who stayed in Harbin compared to the Polish expatriates, the Soviets did not ask too much about it. The Anti-Japanese Federation refused to hand over, and they did not insist on it. They only asked the Anti-Japanese Federation to restrict their speech and not prohibit it.  They participated in or launched anti-Soviet activities, but others did not make as many demands as they did with those Poles.

    Although the Soviet Union gave up its demands on the Poles, it still insisted on transferring all the expatriates from the three Baltic countries to the Soviets. Although there were only a hundred or so expatriates from the three former Baltic countries in the North Manchu Anti-Union Base Area, and most of them were  They moved here with the White Russians, but the Soviets did not let these people go.

    When the Soviets asked for Belarus, they handed over a detailed list of names, including newborn babies, to the Anti-Japanese Alliance and asked them all to return to the country. When it came to treating the expatriates from the three Baltic countries, the Soviets had an unprecedentedly tough attitude, even far worse.  Far more than tough on the Poles.

    After secret negotiations and intrigues, the Soviet Union finally gave up its demands on this group of Jews, and the Anti-Japanese Federation also agreed to treat the expatriates from the three Baltic countries as Soviet expatriates and repatriate them all. Maybe they knew what they might encounter after returning to the Soviet Union.  Expatriates from the three Baltic countries boarded the train with tears in their eyes.

    Regarding the Soviet Union's tough attitude, Yang Zhen had no choice but to think of a way to detain these middle-aged expatriates under the pretext of intermarriage with Chinese people under the nose of the Soviet consulate, which closely monitored these people.  Women, and all children, were protected.

    After receiving the request from the Soviets and under the secret request of their superiors, the civil affairs systems of the Anti-Japanese Federation in various places handled the case for those people at an unprecedented speed.They went through the marriage procedures, applied for Chinese citizenship for these now stateless persons in the shortest possible time, and found new husbands for them to build new families in the shortest possible time.

    Those expatriates from the three countries who knew the outcome of going to the Soviet Union, under the work of leaders of their respective societies who had been secretly notified in advance by the Anti-Japanese League, silently accepted the Anti-Japanese League's approach in order to ensure the lives of their families. Except for a few who were emotionally determined and were willing to marry their husbands  Except for the women who went to the Soviet Union to live and die together, most of the women among this group of expatriates were protected in disguise by the anti-Union resistance.

    Faced with Yang Zhen¡¯s resolute attitude, perhaps he had achieved his goal, or perhaps he believed that the remaining women and children could not pose a threat. The Soviets, who had always emphasized eradication in ethnic policies, made a rare concession this time.

    Regarding this approach of the Anti-Japanese Alliance, after receiving Yang Zhen's guarantee that these people would not be sent to a third country, but could only stay in China for life, they and their descendants would not be allowed to do anything in China.  After the anti-Soviet activities, the Soviets did not pursue the case.

    In addition to these women and children who were deliberately protected by Yang Zhen, the rest, especially the expatriate leaders named by the Soviet Union, were eventually repatriated to the Soviet Union together with the Czech expatriates who volunteered to go to the Soviet Union in Harbin to form a Czech army to fight for the liberation of the motherland.  The first release of the book comes from 17K Novel Network, so you can read the original content immediately!
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