most were farmers.
During the collectivization program in the 1930s, the majority of people forcibly relocated to Siberia were kulaks, who were wealthier peasants that resisted collectivization, along with other groups identified as class enemies. This included not only Ukrainians and Russians but also other ethnic minorities who opposed the Soviet regime. The campaign aimed to suppress any resistance to the collectivization policies and to consolidate state control over agriculture. The brutal relocation led to significant suffering and loss of life among these communities.
The Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Seminole and Muskogee-Creek nations were forcibly relocated from the American South to Indian Territory (present day Oklahoma).
Japanese-Americans were forcibly relocated into (concentration) camps .
The USSR did while Stalin was in charge.
The Chickasaw Nation was forcibly relocated by the US federal government to Indian Territory, which is now Oklahoma. They are headquartered in Ada, Oklahoma.
The Soviet Union, under the leadership of Joseph Stalin, used collectivization in the 1920s and 1930s to forcibly take over private land and create state-controlled farms. This policy aimed to consolidate agricultural production, but resulted in widespread famine and hardship for many peasants.
The relocation and internment of Japanese-Americans who were forcibly relocated into what were essentially concentration camps . ~ see link below .
Cajun is the name given to French people settled in Louisiana. The name is a corruption of Acadian, as the ancestors of these Cajun people had been forcibly relocated from Acadia (in Nova Scotia, Canada) to Louisiana, USA.
"Japanese-American internment" where US citizens sere forcibly relocated into what was euphemistically referred to as "War Relocation Camps" : Executive Order 9066 .
The Indian Removal Act forced Native Americans away from their native homes. They were forcibly relocated, sometimes hundreds or thousands of miles away. Some died on the way and all were disenfranchised.
The Indian Removal Act forced Native Americans away from their native homes. They were forcibly relocated, sometimes hundreds or thousands of miles away. Some died on the way and all were disenfranchised.
The Indian Removal Act forced Native Americans away from their native homes. They were forcibly relocated, sometimes hundreds or thousands of miles away. Some died on the way and all were disenfranchised.