THE ROLE OF UZBEKISTAN'S WOMEN IN SOCIAL AND CULTURAL SPHERES DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR

Abstract

This article describes the role of women in Uzbekistan in the fields of charity, education, science, and culture, as well as their contributions to the development and activities of various sectors. In addition to delivering essential supplies to the front, Uzbekistan's women adopted and raised many children of different nationalities during the evacuation, showing parental love. In the victory over fascism, they demonstrated not only at the front but also in the rear an example of pride, invaluable worth, and great courage characteristic of the Uzbek people.

 

 

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Urolova, M. . (2025). THE ROLE OF UZBEKISTAN’S WOMEN IN SOCIAL AND CULTURAL SPHERES DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR. International Journal of Political Sciences and Economics, 1(1), 278–282. Retrieved from https://inlibrary.uz/index.php/ijpse/article/view/84930
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International Journal of Political Sciences and Economics

Abstract

This article describes the role of women in Uzbekistan in the fields of charity, education, science, and culture, as well as their contributions to the development and activities of various sectors. In addition to delivering essential supplies to the front, Uzbekistan's women adopted and raised many children of different nationalities during the evacuation, showing parental love. In the victory over fascism, they demonstrated not only at the front but also in the rear an example of pride, invaluable worth, and great courage characteristic of the Uzbek people.

 

 


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THE ROLE OF UZBEKISTAN'S WOMEN IN SOCIAL AND CULTURAL SPHERES

DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR

Mutabar Mamarajabovna Urolova

State Museum of the History of Uzbekistan

Research Fellow

E-mail:

mutabarurolova@gmail.com

Annotation:

This article describes the role of women in Uzbekistan in the fields of charity,

education, science, and culture, as well as their contributions to the development and activities of

various sectors. In addition to delivering essential supplies to the front, Uzbekistan's women

adopted and raised many children of different nationalities during the evacuation, showing

parental love. In the victory over fascism, they demonstrated not only at the front but also in the

rear an example of pride, invaluable worth, and great courage characteristic of the Uzbek people.

Key words:

War, Charity, Science, Education, Culture, Personnel, Evacuation, Courage, Victory,

Memory.

The Second World War claimed the lives of many people around the world. The social factors of

the war had a complex impact on every family's life, disrupting the economy. As a result, the

political and socio-economic situation became tense. The people of Uzbekistan were mobilized

for the front. Along with men, many women from Uzbekistan also departed for the front lines.

The situation behind the front lines also worsened, with all complex tasks falling on women's

shoulders. During these trying times, Uzbek women emerged as resolute, strong-willed

individuals before the whole world, exemplifying the phenomenon of the "Uzbek woman." They

not only took leadership roles in agriculture, industry, and factories but also made significant

contributions to the development of education, science, and culture. The education, science, and

culture systems required improvement. Indeed, women's intelligence and sense of responsibility

became a driving force in changing these situations for the better.

As the President of Uzbekistan Sh. Mirziyoyev emphasized, "Our people worked selflessly

behind the front lines, delivering vast amounts of military equipment, weapons, medicines,

clothing, and food products to the battlefields. During those extremely difficult and challenging

years, our people demonstrated humanity and tolerance," - "in those hard times, when even a

morsel of bread was scarce, Uzbekistan provided shelter and sustenance to thousands of families

left homeless due to the war, and cared for countless orphans and widows" [1, - P.80-81].

Indeed, during the Second World War, socio-economic life, science, education, and culture were

adapted to the military situation. Addressing personnel-related issues became urgent. Women in

Uzbekistan worked hard to supply the front and contribute to the victory in the war. They

became specialists in unfamiliar professions. In a critical situation where the fate of thousands of

people was at risk, all efforts were focused on evacuation processes. The government organized

appeals, held rallies, and made decisions.

According to the resolution of the Council of People's Commissars of the Uzbek SSR and the

Central Committee of the Communist Party of Uzbekistan [2, - P. 5], evacuees were accepted as

relatives into the families of collective farmers, urban and rural workers [3, -P. 14]. As of

September 1, 1941, 5,717 people had arrived in the republic from the Ukrainian SSR alone,

while in October-November their number reached 54,029. In total, about 1 million people arrived


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in Uzbekistan, of which 200 thousand were children [4, - P. 58]. As the resettlement process to

Uzbekistan was carried out, necessary measures were taken to accommodate the evacuated

children and provide them with free meals.

In October 1941, by the decision of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of

Uzbekistan (Bolsheviks) and the Council of People's Commissars of the Uzbek SSR, the Central

Evacuation Center of the People's Commissariat of Education was established. Republican,

regional, city, and district commissions were created to assist evacuated children, providing them

with opportunities for free meals in children's canteens organized in the cities of Tashkent,

Fergana, Kokand, Andijan, Samarkand, and Namangan [5, - pp. 115-116]. As the movement to

provide comprehensive assistance to evacuated children continued, the trade union commission

of the Uzbek SSR held women's meetings in the regions, where 178 educators expressed their

desire to educate and care for the children of fallen soldiers.

This demonstrated the high level of humanitarianism of our people during the evacuation process

and greatly inspired many individuals both in the rear and at the front. Uzbek families began to

adopt many orphaned children. For example, Hamid Samadov, a disabled World War II veteran

from Samarkand, and the Shomahmudov family, blacksmiths from Tashkent, took 14 children of

various nationalities into their care, nurturing and cherishing them as they grew up.

A monument featuring a sculptural composition depicting Temirchi Shomahmudov, who

demonstrated the tolerance of the Uzbek people and exemplified high patriotism and honor,

along with his wife and children, has been erected in the central part of the Palace of Friendship

of Peoples in Tashkent. This monument of great courage has been immortalized in bronze and

granite.

Additionally, the family of Hamid Samatov from Kattakurgan, a participant in the battles near

Stalingrad, Belarus, and Moscow, cared for 13 children, while the family of Muazzam and

Sharafa Djurayev from Bukhara, and Bahrikhon aya Ashurkhojayeva nurtured 8 children [4, -

P.58-59; - P. 42].

The People's Commissariat of Education of the republic and its employees, along with the

women's departments of the Tashkent City Party Committee [2, -P. 15], were actively involved

in carrying out such crucial tasks as accepting children, placing them in orphanages and

communities, providing individual care, education, sending them to work, finding and registering

wandering, underage, and neglected children, and their planned placement. Moreover, the task

of delivering children to households and specific destinations was honorably carried out by kind,

caring community women. With the assistance of female community members, children

underwent medical examinations, were bathed, dressed in clean clothes, and fed [2, -P. 6-7].

In 1942, at an anti-fascist rally in Tashkent, Bahri khola, an Uzbek woman who deeply felt

humanitarian values, spoke and said: "We don't have orphaned children here; in my family,

Russians, Belarusians, Ukrainians, and a Tatar girl are being raised and studying at school. [2, -P.

9-12] With the intention of helping the front to quickly defeat the enemy, Uzbek women raised

children of various nationalities with affection and instilled in them a sense of worthy patriotism.

The Central Committee of the Communist Party of Uzbekistan, by its resolution of January 3,

1943, approved the appeal of Tashkent women to Uzbek women regarding the care and

upbringing of evacuated children [6, -P. 12]. To strengthen work among women, in May 1943,

the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Uzbekistan (Bolsheviks) established an

organization for political work with families of frontline soldiers, alongside efforts to improve

social welfare [7, -P. 18]. Uzbekistan made significant efforts to receive nearly 1 million Soviet

citizens from territories occupied by German fascist invaders, providing them with housing,

employment, and food. Over 200,000 children were warmly welcomed, and tens of thousands of


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children were saved from the brink of death. They were assigned to work and study in various

sectors of the national economy or reunited with their parents and relatives.

Committees and commissions were formed, involving the city's wider community, to organize

the reception and accommodation of evacuated children. They established patronage over

children's rooms and dormitories in schools across the districts[8, -P. 314]. Work related to

evacuation was organized under constant supervision. In this regard, specially created

committees for assisting street children under the city council and in all districts, as well as the

city commission for assisting evacuated children, established active oversight. The committees

and commission took care of improving the children's health and their dietary standards. They

organized canteens for children. From 1941, the republic's administration was focused on the war

effort, and there was a need to implement measures to intensify production, improve charitable

work, secure supplies and funds, and allocate them appropriately. It is known that during the war

years, the Uzbek people and members of all organizations carried out charitable work[5, -P. 152].

The generous Uzbek people, of their own volition, began to hand over money, jewelry, and

valuable items, considered their personal assets, to the government for the defense fund. In the

selfless generosity of the Uzbek people, one could see a passionate heart and high tolerance.

Nationwide initiatives, rallies, meetings, and proposals were announced to and supported by the

people and representatives of various sectors.

The Second World War was a time of trial for the public education system, higher education

system, and research institutes. Firstly, the conscription of education sector representatives,

professors, and teachers into the war, the decline of the education system, and the reduction of

budget funds, and secondly, the placement of evacuated children in kindergartens and schools,

along with problems related to education and upbringing, awaited their solution. First and

foremost, there was a need for educators to prevent orphaned children from being left unattended.

The majority of those evacuated were children and adolescents. Accepting all children,

regulating their placement, and creating the necessary conditions for their education required the

painstaking work of the republic's party, Soviet, Komsomol, and trade union organizations,

public education bodies, and the entire public.

Women also demonstrated resilience in establishing kindergartens, nurseries, and playgrounds in

various sectors of the national economy, construction sites, large defense enterprises, and

collective and state farms. By 1941-43, day and night groups were organized in kindergartens

and nurseries, and children began to receive care and education [10, -P. 164].

During this period, from 1940 to 1942, many school buildings were repurposed for evacuated

enterprises and hospitals to support public education efforts. The inadequate implementation of

educational laws, incomplete participation of students in the educational process, and parents'

involvement of their children in labor activities led to a decline in the quality of education. As a

result, the departure of numerous public education workers to the front lines, coupled with the

expansion of schools and preschool educational institutions, necessitated an increase in teacher

training. The conscription of young adults and a portion of the population into the army during

the ongoing war, as well as the involvement of many women, elderly individuals, and

adolescents in production, social, and defense work, further heightened the responsibility of

schools and public education bodies in educating and nurturing the younger generation.

As women's participation in the development of higher and secondary specialized education in

the republic gradually became noticeable, they took part in scientific and practical processes,

conducted research in various fields of science, and made a great contribution to increasing the

potential of society. During the war years, together with the evacuated educational institutions,

higher educational institutions trained more than 10,000 specialists, while technical schools


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trained about 3,700. Women, who constituted an important part of the teaching staff of higher

and secondary educational institutions, played a significant role in the training and education of

students. They worked as initiators and organizers of such important tasks as educating young

people, achieving the fulfillment of educational plans, and nurturing future personnel in the spirit

of discipline and patriotism. It is known that the first days of the war demanded great

perseverance, courage, and hard work from cultural and art workers. Like soldiers, volunteers,

and women, artists, poets, and writers made worthy contributions both at the front and in the rear.

From the very beginning, the works of Uzbek writers and composers mobilized the masses to

fight against fascism and engage in selfless work. [10, -P. 191].

Uzbek poets, having acted with a deep understanding of the essence of the war, made significant

contributions. Poets such as Gafur Gulom, Hamid Olimjon, Uygun, Mirtemir, Zulfiya, Temir

Fattoh, Chustiy, Sobir Abdulla, Oybek, Shayxzoda, Hamid Gulom, Abdulla Qahhor, Zafar Diyor,

Turob Tula, and many other young poets embarked on creative work, writing poems to elevate

the morale of soldiers [11, - P.2].

Films depicting the painful experiences of World War II in

Uzbek cinema have been affecting everyone equally, regardless of religion, nationality, or

gender. The tolerance and high human qualities that have existed in our people for centuries are

also reflected in these films.

Uzbek women, who fought heroically at the front and worked selflessly behind the lines, played

a crucial role in the Soviets' historic victory in World War II. The Uzbek woman emerged before

the whole world as a resolute, strong-willed patriot, a person who called soldiers to arms and

great trials.

The children raised by patriotic women were of different nationalities. They shared both joy and

sorrow together. These women washed and cleaned them, provided good upbringing and

education. The adopted children grew up to obtain higher education, secondary education, and

various professions. Families provided maternal love and upbringing. They offered housing and

shelter. They shared their bread. They taught them professions and cared for their health. They

were taught professions.

During the war, women's labor acquired special significance in all spheres. The participation of

women in the food, oil, cotton ginning, and textile industries increased to unprecedented levels.

Patriotic women devoted all their strength to serving the Motherland and achieving victory.

The feelings and thoughts of the women of Uzbekistan were expressed at numerous rallies and

meetings, where they unanimously declared their readiness and determination to defend the

Motherland, strengthen the country's defense, actively participate in public production, achieve

constant growth in labor productivity, and increase revolutionary vigilance.

During the challenging wartime conditions, the issue of providing industry with labor was

resolved through the systematic implementation of various special administrative measures and

the adoption of several legislative acts. The workforce was redistributed among different

branches of the republic's national economy in favor of the defense industry. Laws were enacted

to establish a new labor regime, which significantly reduced staff turnover. Strict penalties were

introduced for dismissal and unauthorized departure from enterprises, and enterprise managers

were permitted to implement mandatory working hours in industry.

Women of Uzbekistan played a crucial role in addressing the shortage of workers across all

sectors. Thousands of women eagerly joined factories, plants, and construction sites,

demonstrating heroic labor and successfully mastering various complex professions, some of

which required considerable physical strength. The high patriotism of the Uzbek people enabled

timely resolution of the personnel problem through organized redistribution among production

sectors, improved training through the labor reserve system, and widespread involvement of the


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working-age population, especially women, in production. Women of Uzbekistan made a

significant contribution to industrial development.

Bibliography:

1.

Karimov, I.A. The Homeland is as sacred as a place of worship. - T., 1996. T.Z. - P. 80-

81.

2.

Turdiev S. Care of Uzbekistan's workers for evacuated children during the Great Patriotic

War. - T.: Fan, 1987. - P.5-15.

3.

Sultanova T. Labor Feat of Uzbekistan's Women Cotton Growers during the War Years. -

Tashkent: "Uzbekistan," 1974. - P.14.

4.

Uzbek SSR during the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945). Volume I. Uzbekistan in the

First Period of the Great Patriotic War (1941-November 1942). - T.: "Fan," 1981. - P. 58.

5.

The contribution of the workers of Uzbekistan to the Victory in the Great Patriotic War. -

T.: "Fan," 1975. - P. 42; - P.115-116.

6.

Ismailova S. Brotherly Cooperation of the Uzbek and Ukrainian Peoples during the Great

Patriotic War (1941-1945). Abstract. Dissertation for the degree of Candidate of Historical

Sciences. - Samarkand: 1966. - P.12.

7.

Uzbek SSR during the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945). Volume II. The Turning Point

(November 1942-1943). - T.: "Fan," 1983. - P.18.

8.

Uzbek SSR during the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945). Volume III. The Turning Point

(1941-1945). - T.: "Fan," 1985. - P.314.

9.

Urazaev Sh. Tashkent City Council during the Great Patriotic War. - T.: "Uzbekistan,"

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References

Karimov, I.A. The Homeland is as sacred as a place of worship. - T., 1996. T.Z. - P. 80-81.

Turdiev S. Care of Uzbekistan's workers for evacuated children during the Great Patriotic War. - T.: Fan, 1987. - P.5-15.

Sultanova T. Labor Feat of Uzbekistan's Women Cotton Growers during the War Years. - Tashkent: "Uzbekistan," 1974. - P.14.

Uzbek SSR during the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945). Volume I. Uzbekistan in the First Period of the Great Patriotic War (1941-November 1942). - T.: "Fan," 1981. - P. 58.

The contribution of the workers of Uzbekistan to the Victory in the Great Patriotic War. - T.: "Fan," 1975. - P. 42; - P.115-116.

Ismailova S. Brotherly Cooperation of the Uzbek and Ukrainian Peoples during the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945). Abstract. Dissertation for the degree of Candidate of Historical Sciences. - Samarkand: 1966. - P.12.

Uzbek SSR during the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945). Volume II. The Turning Point (November 1942-1943). - T.: "Fan," 1983. - P.18.

Uzbek SSR during the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945). Volume III. The Turning Point (1941-1945). - T.: "Fan," 1985. - P.314.

Urazaev Sh. Tashkent City Council during the Great Patriotic War. - T.: "Uzbekistan," 1968. - P.53.

Uzbekistan during the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945) / O'zbekiston Ulug' Vatan urushi yillarida (1941-1945). - Tashkent: "Fan," 1966. - P.164.

National Archives of Uzbekistan. For the Motherland. 1945. September 2. No. 174 (6343). - P.2.