2025 ജൂൺ 4, ബുധനാഴ്‌ച

608. What Stalin Actually Did for the USSR (1928–1953).

                                              608. What Stalin Actually Did for the

USSR (1928–1953).
A Fact-Based Overview :
🍀 1.Eradicated Illiteracy
🔸 In 1926, over 56% of the Soviet population was illiterate.
🔸 By 1953, literacy exceeded 90% nationwide.
🔸 Massive adult education programs like Likbez taught tens of millions to read and write.
🍀 2. Built a World-Class Free Education System
🔸 Free, universal, and compulsory education from primary school to PhD level.
🔸 By 1953:
- 170,000 schools
- 847 universities
- Over 1.4 million students
🔸 Strong emphasis on STEM: engineering, mathematics, physics, chemistry.
🔸 The USSR produced more engineers per capita than any capitalist country.
🔸 Students from rural and working-class backgrounds had full access via state stipends, dormitories, and entrance exams.
🔸 The Soviet education system was so effective that NATO labeled it a strategic threat, pushing Western nations to reform their own science and math programs.
🍀 3. Free Universal Healthcare
🔸 Built over 10,000 hospitals and 40,000 clinics
🔸 Life expectancy rose from 44 to 60 years (1926–1953)
🔸 Free vaccination campaigns, free maternal care, and free treatment revolutionized public health.
🍀 4. Ended Systemic Famines
🔸 Post-1932 reforms introduced grain reserves, mechanization, and irrigation, which stopped famines for 14 years
🔸 From 1947 onward, the USSR never again experienced mass famine a first in Russian history.
🍀 5. Industrial Superpower from Scratch
🔸 Built over 9,000 large factories between 1928–1940
🔸 GDP growth averaged 13–14% per year - a global record
🔸 Share of global industrial output rose from 3% in 1913 to 20% by 1953
🔸 Became the second-largest economy in the world
🍀 6. Entire Economic Sectors Created
🔸 Aviation: Yak, MiG, IL, and Tu aircraft: from fighters to bombers to transports
🔸 Automotive: GAZ, ZIS/ZIL: cars, trucks, tanks
🔸 Metallurgy: Magnitogorsk, Kuznetsk, Azovstal: world-class steel and alloys
🔸 Chemicals: synthetic rubber, plastics, industrial reagents
🔸 Energy: USSR became self-sufficient in coal, oil, and electricity.
🍀 7. Massive Energy Infrastructure
🔸 Hydroelectric Power Plants (GES)
- DneproGES – Europe’s largest at the time (1927–1932)
- Rybinsk, Uglich, Ivan’kovo, Svir, Volkhov GES – electrified Russia’s heartland
- Provided power to factories, cities, and railways
🔸 Thermal Power Plants (GRES & TEC)
- Kashira GRES, Shatura GRES, Moscow TEC-1 & TEC-2
- Built to power Moscow, Ural, and Siberian industries
🔸 Nuclear Power Program Began
- In 1949, the USSR successfully tested its first atomic bomb
- Construction began on the Obninsk Nuclear Power Plant, launched in 1954 as the world’s first civilian nuclear plant
- The USSR became the second nuclear power on Earth.
🍀 8. Built Cities from Nothing
🔸 Over 1,200 new cities and towns were built from scratch
🔸 Entire cities were constructed in previously uninhabited areas to support industry, including:
- Magnitogorsk - steel capital
- Norilsk - mining and metallurgy above the Arctic Circle
- Novokuznetsk - coal and steel hub
- Komsomolsk-on-Amur - aircraft and shipbuilding
- Zaporizhzhia, Temirtau, Nizhny Tagil, and many more
🔸 After WWII, over 100 destroyed cities and more than 1,700 towns and settlements were rebuilt from ruins, often modernized in the process.
🍀 9. Scientific and Technological Breakthroughs
🔸 1949: USSR develops its own atomic bomb, breaking the U.S. monopoly
🔸 Early computers: MESM, BESM among the first in Europe
🔸 Breakthroughs in physics (Kapitsa, Landau), aeronautics, synthetic materials, radar, jet propulsion
🔸 Soviet scientists laid the groundwork for the future space programme.
🍀 10. Record Gold Reserves
🔸 The USSR accumulated one of the largest gold reserves in the world under Stalin
🔸 Massive exploration and extraction in Kolyma, Magadan, and the Altai
🔸 Gold backed the ruble and ensured financial independence from Western institutions.
🍀 11. Defeated Fascism and Rebuilt Rapidly
🔸 The USSR inflicted 75–80% of all Nazi military losses, breaking the backbone of the Wehrmacht
🔸 Despite catastrophic WWII devastation, Soviet industry was rebuilt to prewar levels by 1950
🔸 No Marshall Plan. No Western aid. Just central planning and national effort.
🍀 12. Transformation of Everyday Life and Family Welfare
While Western workers were still fighting for basic rights, Soviet families experienced a massive material and cultural uplift:
🔸 Free housing provided by the state. Millions moved from shared huts and barracks to separate apartments with electricity, running water, and central heating
🔸 Paid vacations became standard, with access to state-run resorts and sanatoriums in Crimea, the Caucasus, and river regions
🔸 Maternity leave, child allowances, and subsidized childcare enabled women to join the workforce without sacrificing family life
🔸 Women’s rights expanded. Women became doctors, engineers, pilots, and factory directors, with equal pay guaranteed by law
🔸 Access to culture. Every district had libraries, theaters, cinemas, and “Houses of Culture”
🔸 Mass sports and physical culture. Stadiums, swimming pools, and gymnastics programs were free and promoted healthy lifestyles
🔸 Children’s development. Music schools, youth clubs, and technical hobby centers like airplane and radio modeling were free and widespread
🔸 Families could afford books, radios, clothing, and even musical instruments, all subsidized by the state.
📌 For the first time in Russian history, millions of ordinary people could live with dignity, stability, and hope for their children’s future. 🛑
📌 From 1928 to 1953, Stalin turned a backwards, agrarian empire into a nuclear superpower, industrial giant, scientific leader, and socially educated society. 🛑
📌 The West feared the USSR not for its repression, but because it worked it proved that a planned economy could eliminate illiteracy, hunger, unemployment, and foreign debt and beat fascism and poverty in one generation. 🛑
Rina Lu
@rinalu_

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