Full text: Russian local government during the war and the Union of Zemstvos

256 THE ZEMSTVOS DURING THE WAR 
concentrated entirely in the hands of official institutions such as the 
Red Cross Society. There was also the Committee for the Relief of 
Russian Prisoners of War, under the patronage of the Empress 
Alexandra. These institutions were in a position to obtain funds 
from the Treasury. Nevertheless, they proved incapable of develop- 
ing the distribution of material relief on a large scale. 
Among semi-official organizations, a committee formed by the mu- 
nicipality of Moscow was the only one that attempted to do some- 
thing in this direction.® At the close of 1915 a small conference met 
at Stockholm, which was attended by representatives of the Red 
Cross Societies of Russia, Germany, Austria, and several neutral 
countries. The conference drew up regulations which greatly facili- 
tated the practical efforts that were being made to relieve the hard- 
ships of prisoners of war. On this occasion the representatives of 
the Russian Government officially acknowledged the committee of 
the municipality of Moscow among the organizations engaged in the 
relief of Russian prisoners of war. This made it possible for the 
Unions of Zemstvos and of Towns to undertake similar work and to 
form jointly with the committee of the municipality of Moscow, a 
body known as the “United Organization for the Relief of Prisoners 
of War.” A corresponding department was established under the 
Zemstvo Union on November 6, 1915. In December this department 
addressed an appeal for assistance to all the local organs of the 
Union, and in January, 1916, it was already functioning smoothly. 
The encouragement of initiative among the population was con- 
sidered in this field, as in all others, the principal task of the Zem- 
stvo Union. Needless to say, there was everywhere a sincere desire 
to come to the aid of brothers, fathers, and sons languishing in cap- 
tivity in enemy countries. The difficulty, however, was that there 
were very few people in the backward rural communities of Russia 
who knew exactly how to set about it. Gradually the Union estab- 
lished contact with 436 local organizations for the relief of pris- 
oners of war. These organizations were supplied with 60,000 free 
copies of a pamphlet describing in simple language the conditions 
ander which Russian prisoners had to live in Germany and Austria, 
and suggesting ways and means of relief. Hundreds of thousands of 
¢ See Astrov, Effects of the War upon Russian Municipal Government and 
the All-Russian Union of Towns in the volume The War and the Russian 
Government (Yale University Press, 1929), p. 258 sqq.
	        
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