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The real intellectuals have always left a deep mark on the spiritual life of their people. They even laid down their life on this way. Especially, in the former Soviet state, where was ruled under a totalitarian regime, these nationalist, truthful intellectuals were brutally banned. The history of the whole nation has been rewritten. In the words of the famous German philosopher K. Jaspers, the twentieth century was "the most enlightened and bloodiest century in human history." The policy of repression had a profound effect, especially on the social sciences. The course "Brief History of the CPSU (b)", which was based on the decisions of the party congresses, was served as the main methodological guidelines for the study of history.
Those who thought a little differently and more freely, were exiled to the GULAGs or shot with the label "enemy of the nation." The greats of Uzbek intellectuals such as Abdurauf Fitrat, Abdulla Qodiri, Munavvar Qori, Otajon KHashim, Bolat Soliev, Cholpon, Usmon Nosir and others were declared "enemies of the nation" on various political charges and slanders, and thrown into the mill of repression. The real nationalist intellectuals were turned into "enemies of the nation." Fear and dread reigned in the society. The domination of a single ideology regulated science and literature. "Velikorus" chauvinism and atheism climaxed. The members of the "the Ungodly Society " multiplied, and the Communists were proud of their atheism. Under the mask of pseudo-internationalism - proletarian internationalism, the regions and streets of Uzbekistan were named Kirov, Kuibyshev, Orjanikivze, Frunze. If we look at the roots of the terrible tragedies of the repressions that took place at that time, various aspects of the anatomy of the Totalitarian regime are revealed. In this regime, dictatorship, repression, terror prevailed, instead of democracy.