Abstract

Based on Russian and non-Russian materials, this article examines the history of the Russian Red Cross Society during the Civil War. The ascension of the Bolsheviks to power led to the breakup of the Russian Red Cross Society (RRCS) into a multitude of national and political associations, each claiming its material and symbolic heritage. When the Civil War began, these fragments of the RRCS no longer existed as effective sanitary organisations. But in autumn 1918, as epidemics threatened troops and civil populations alike, RC institutions had to be set up again urgently. In view of their experience and infrastructure, the Moscow, Omsk, and Kiev RC organisations quickly became decisive players in the Civil War with the Red Army and the White armies of Kolchak, Denikin, and Wrangel. In many fields, these RC organisations acted as a substitute for the state. They were responsible for nursing, nutrition, and evacuation. On the external front, the material assets of the former RRC had to be recovered, Russian soldiers arrested abroad assisted, and the exclusivity of the RC emblem defended. In conclusion, this article argues that the Russian Civil War was a dramatic theatre of modern humanitarian action for the entire international RC movement (the International Committee of the Red Cross and the League of Red Cross Societies) in terms of the practices and laws that had to be invented. Given its fragmentary nature, the mix of identity, social, and ideological conflicts, the civilian populations in the foreground, and the intermingling of national and international players, the Russian Civil War was a forerunner of the “new wars” of the late twentieth century.

Highlights

  • Based on Russian and non-Russian materials, this article examines the history of the Russian Red Cross Society during the Civil War

  • The Russian Civil War (RCW) was a dramatic theatre of modern humanitarian action for the entire Red Cross movement – the national sections, the Russian Red Cross Society (RRCS), the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), and the League of Red Cross Societies founded in March 1919

  • This had appeared on the agenda of the International Conference of the Red Cross held in Washington in May 1912, but was removed after the fierce hostility of the Russian representative [Bugnion, p. 286; Moreillon, p. 36–37]

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Summary

THE RUSSIAN RED CROSS IN THE CIVIL WAR*

Based on Russian and non-Russian materials, this article examines the history of the Russian Red Cross Society during the Civil War. Л. 2], rebuild or find new buildings and means of transport, remobilise and train personnel, find funds, organise storage facilities, and set up reserves They were able to make the most of experience acquired during the Great War, in the field of vaccination due to the epidemics that had threatened the armies [Беляева, с. The RCSs from neutral countries, such as Sweden and Denmark, were deeply involved [Енсен] This was the case in the Soviet arena, where a Moscow committee responsible for assisting prisoners of war and political prisoners was to operate until summer 1919, and in White territories such as Kiev, where the Danish and Swiss RCSs supported an ICRC to relieve victims of the Civil War [ГАРФ. Most of these RCSs would return to Russia in 1921 as part of the campaign against famine

The reconquest of Red Cross assets and Russian POWs abroad
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