(Redirected from Kombed)'Poor Peasants Committees' (, ''komitet bednoty'', commonly abbreviated as '''kombed''') were organs based on
class approach of the
communist ideology, being organs of
self-government of the poor
peasants. They were introduced by a decree of the
All-Russian Central Executive Committee of the
All-Russian Congress of Soviets of
June 11,
1918. They acted in the European parts of
Russia and
Belarus (since the second half of 1918) and in
Ukraine (since 1919).
According to the doctrine of
Bolsheviks, peasantry is stratified into three major classes: poor peasants (''bednyaks''), medium welfare peasants (''serednyaks''), and rich ones (''
kulaks''). Kombeds were considered to be a political and organizational force to struggle against ''kulaks''. They were the ''de facto'' base of the
Soviet power in
rural areas and performed various functions, such as distribution of the lands of
landlords, agricultural machinery, and industrial goods, helped to carry out the ''
prodrazvyorstka'' (food requisition) and recruitment to
Red Army, combatted with ''
meshochniks'', food hoarding and
profiteering.
By the first half of 1919 ''kombeds'' were incorporated into the local
soviets.