English: This photo depicts three deported Koreans in Uzbekistan, Sept.-Oct. 1937. The three had just been deported from the Russian Far East. The photo was used to show that the thousands of deported Koreans were alive and well. This is because Japan at the time controlled the Korean peninsula and had made diplomatic and media (by newspaper) inquiries about what had happened or was happening to the (Soviet) Koreans in the Russian Far East in September 1937. This photo was a response to that. Photo was digitized by this author (me, the person uploading) on Aug. 12, 2008 while doing research in Uzbekistan at the Kim Pen Khva Museum. The museum director, Emilia Ten showed this researcher around and allowed me to peruse and scan the photos, photos previously belonged to Kim Pen Khva collective and the Soviet state.
It is an anonymous or pseudonymous work and 50 years have passed since the date of its publication
It is a posthumous work and 70 years have passed since the date of its publication
It is another kind of work, and 70 years have passed since the year of death of the author (or last-surviving author)
It is one of "official documents (laws, resolutions, decisions, and etc.), as well as their formal translations; official symbols and marks (flags, emblems, orders, banknotes, and etc.); works of popular art"
Bu faylın nəyi təmsil etdiyinə dair bir sətirlik izahat əlavə et
Soviet Propaganda Photo- Three Deported Soviet Koreans in Uzbekistan, Sept.-Oct. 1937. Koreans were told to smile while standing in the middle of a swamp.
Bu faylda fotoaparat və ya skanerlə əlavə olunmuş məlumatlar var. Əgər fayl sonradan olunubsa, bəzi parametrlər bu şəkildə göstərilənlərdən fərqli ola bilər.