The Virgin Lands Campaign was an initiative by Nikita Khrushchev to open up vast tracts of unplowed (virgin) steppe in the northern Kazakh SSR and the Altay region of the Russian SFSR, started in 1954.
In the first year of the programme, 190,000 km² were ploughed up, and in 1955, an extra 140,000 km² were ploughed. With all this new land, a vast amount of people would need to be brought in from all over the Soviet Union: the Komsomol was charged with recruiting them.
More than 300,000 people, mostly Ukrainians, arrived in the Virgin Lands to begin new lives as farmers. Hundreds of thousands of soldiers, students and combine harvester operators would join them; however, these people would stay for only a year's harvest. By the end of the mass immigrations to the Virgin Lands, Ukrainians outnumbered Kazakhs in many areas.
For a brief time, Khrushchev inspired a communist zeal in the peoples of the Soviet Union, and concentrated that zeal on a task that, for an equally brief time, produced the expected results.
Also, much of the crop that could be harvested was wasted, as there were not enough storage silos, and much had to be just thrown away.
Following the failure of the Virgin Lands Campaign, the Soviet Union was forced to buy grain from Canada to meet its needs.
Economy of the Soviet Union | History of the Soviet Union and Soviet Russia
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It uses material from the
"Virgin Lands Campaign".
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