Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations

Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations (A.B.N.) was a co-ordinating center for anti-Communist émigré political organizations from Soviet and other socialist countries. The A.B.N. formation dates back to an underground conference of representatives of non-Russian peoples that took place on November 1943, near Zhytomyr on the initiative of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists. During the conference, a platform of joint revolutionary struggle against what the participants called Russian communism was formulated. The goal of the A.B.N. was to remove communists from power, abolish the Soviet Union and divide it into national states. Given an organizational structure in Munich in 1946, the A.B.N. extended its range of activity and began to include Eastern European emigration from other countries apart from Ukraine.

Member organisation for various times:

The most active groups among the Bloc were the Ukrainian national organizations.

The A.B.N. was headed by Yaroslav Stetsko, a Ukrainian war-time Nazi collaborator and anti-Soviet politician, from the time of foundation until 1986, the year of his death. Stetsko was succeeded by his widow, Slava Stetsko. The chairmen of the A.B.N. Peoples' Council included V. Bērziņš, V. Kajum-Khan, F. Ďurčanský, F. Farkas de Kisbarnak, and R. Ostrowski. The long-time general secretaries were Dr. Niko Nakashidze[1] and C. Pokorný.

The headquarters and cells of the A.B.N. organized mass anti-Soviet rallies, protest demonstrations, press conferences, and international congresses, and the distribution of various memoranda. The A.B.N. co-operated with the World Anti-Communist League (WACL) and the European Freedom Council (EFC). Representatives from the A.B.N. and related organizations participated in the congresses of the WACL and EFC.[2]

The Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations was disbanded in 1996 after the collapse of the USSR and Soviet communism.

See also

References

  1. "The Truth About A.B.N." by Niko Nakashidze, A.B.N. Press, Munich, 1960
  2. Encyclopedia of Ukraine.

External links

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