Поведение тех советских и финских граждан, которые пошли на сотрудничество с оккупационными властями в сфере хозяйственной или культурной деятельности в военный период, можно если не оправдать, то по крайней мере понять. Большинство из них оказались на оккупированной территории помимо своей воли в силу суровых военных обстоятельств, а зачастую по вине и нерасторопности собственных органов власти и управления, не сумевших вовремя и организованно провести эвакуацию населения в начальный период военных действий. Особенно это касается вопросов эвакуации мирного финского гражданского населения в период Зимней войны 1939–1940 rr. и эвакуации советских людей в начальный период Великой Отечественной войны. Их с полным основанием можно отнести к жертвам войны. Долгие годы после ее окончания и на тех, и на других лежала «печать оккупации и плена».
SUMMARY
Summing up the results of the research, first of all, it is necessary to note that the scale of collaborationism development in Karelia and Finland during World War 11 was negligiЬle. Only а small number of caught in the Soviet occupation zone Finnish civilians and Finnish prisoners of war cooperated with the Soviet state and military authorities during the Soviet — Finnish (Winter) War (1939–1940). Due to а small number of Finnish civilians and their unwillingness to cooperate with occupation administration the Soviet authorities failed to create а broad base of support of People's Government of Finland headed Ьу Kuusinen from the local population.
The conclusion that collaborationism didn't spread widely between Finns during the Winter War is also verified Ьу the fact that from 2080 of Finish civilians appeared on the territory of the Soviet Karelia after the end of military actions only 150 people decided to stay in the USSR (7,2 %)[504], and others came back to their motherland. For the most part it was people who cooperated with the Soviet state and military authorities and were afraid to Ье punished in Finland. Only а small part of Finns refused to return home Ьу the ideological reasons.
Collaborationism of Soviet civilians and Soviet prisoners of war on the occupied territory of the Soviet Karelia and Finland during the Great Patriotic War also didn't find а wide spread. It was clearly demonstrated in the final stage of military actions in the North when during the Soviet troops' attack in summer of 1944 Finnish military units began to retreat and therefore evacuation of local people also began.
2799 people were evacuated from the occupied Karelian territory to Finland, or only 3,35 % of total population of occupied zone, among them representatives of the related to Fins peoples accounted 2196 people (1422 Karelians, 314 Veps, 214 Finns, 176 Ingrians and 70 others), other peoples — 603 (244 Russians, 259 Ukrainians and 100 others)[505]. There is also data about Petrozavodsk. In the end of June 1944 when Finnish troops left the town only 487 people from 7589 of free civilians came with them[506].
The data shows the number of people moved to Finland was negligiЫe. NotaЬly, 3,35 % of collaborationists includes both people actively cooperated with occupation regime as well as people sympathized to the enemy. The data is significantly lower than those quoted Ьу V. 1. Boyarsky in the book "Partisans and army: the history of lost opportunities" ("Partizany i armiya: istoriya uteryannyh vozmozhnostei") and those the author noted in the introduction: "After several years of occupation 10 % of population can become traitors (3 % — active and 7 % — sympathized to the enemy)"[507]. Thus, we can confidently assert that the scale of collaborationism on the occupied territory of Karelia was significantly lower than in other country's regions that caught in the occupation zone.
lt is primarily explained Ьу the fact that there was no social base for а wide development of collaborationism in the occupied Karelian regions. The background of the base during the Great Patriotic War consists of people offended Ьу the Soviet authority (dispossessed kulaks, people suffered from religion persecutions, people repressed in the period of mass repressions in the second half of 1930s for political and national reasons etc.). Such people appeared to Ье very few in the occupied zone.