Health Care and Education in Kashkadarya Villages in 20-30 Years of the XX Century

Main Article Content

Muminova Gavkhar Esanovna, Akmamatov Otabek Yodgorovich

Abstract

In the 1920s, the khanate of Bukhara and the Khiva khanate in Central Asia were abolished and Soviet power was established. These states were replaced by the Khorezm People's Soviet Republic (XXSR) and the Bukhara People's Soviet Republic (BSSR). The Soviets, which had become stronger in the country, made a number of changes in order to take control of the economic, social and political life in these republics. In order to take full control of the agricultural sector, a policy of collectivization was implemented in the villages. This process, in turn, has led to a number of complications. As the Soviet government intensified its policy of collectivization in the countryside, it felt a strong need for educated personnel in the first place. Because the merger of individual farms into collective farms has shown changes in rural social life, in particular, in the areas of education, health, housing and the like, the lack of staff. When the Kashkadarya oasis was part of the Bukhara Republic, the work of establishing a health care system was not commendable. and it is in this article that they begin to teach secular knowledge more widely.

Article Details

Section
Articles