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People's Commissariat for Nationalities
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People's Commissariat for Nationalities : ウィキペディア英語版
People's Commissariat for Nationalities
The People's Commissariat of Nationalities (abbreviation transliterated as Narkomnats), an organisation functioning from 1917 to 1924〔

in the early Soviet period of Russian and Soviet history, dealt with non-Russian nationalities. Its head, Joseph Stalin, as the People's Commissar of Nationalities (1917-1923), served as a member of the Council of People's Commissars.
==Origins==
It was established even before the October Revolution on 11 June 1917〔''Petrogradskii Sovet Rabochikh i Soldatskikh Deputatov: Protokoly Zasedanii'' (Moscow: Gosudarstvennoe Izdatel'stvo, 1935).〕 by the Petrograd Soviet as part of three measures to create state forms which would guarantee federal and autonomous solutions to national questions in the Russian Revolution:
* complete civil equality for all citizens
* the right to use the mother tongue in official business, on a par with Russian
* the formation of a Soviet of nationality affairs – Narkomnats.
This decision was made in response to the crisis triggered by the Ukrainian Rada's demands for autonomy for national territories and a seat at any peace conference. These demands were rejected by Alexander Kerensky. Narkomnats was set up as an organ of the Soviets to prepare for the Constituent Assembly, particularly as regards how Ukrainian autonomy could be handled. It provided for the organisation of a congress of representatives from all of Ukraine, which in turn would set up a Ukrainian Constituent Assembly. At this time the Bolsheviks opposed any national autonomy; however, on 13 August, Joseph Stalin published a tract that floated the idea of the Party might set up an agency for nationality affairs.〔''Revoliutsionnoe Dvizhenie v Rossii v Avgust' 1917 Goda: Protokoly'' (Moscow: Izdatel'stvo Akademii Nauk SSR, 1959) This text was omitted from the collected Works of Stalin)〕
This came at a time when Kerensky and Mensheviks like Nikolay Chkheidze were arguing for a unified state. Kerensky told Latvian representatives that they could only hope for the status of Zemstvo.〔''Revoliutsionnoe Dvizhenie v Rossii v Mae-Iun' 1917 g.'', III (Moscow: Izdatel'stvo Akademii Nauk SSR, 1959).〕
Joseph Stalin as commissar presided over five or six of the first seven meetings of the Narkomnats Collegium, but failed to attend the next twenty one.〔'Stalin as Commissar of Nationalities' by Jeremy Smith in (''Stalin: A New History'' ) by Sarah Davies (Editor), James Harris (Editor), 2005, Cambridge University Press.〕

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