Pyotr Siuda

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Pyotr Siuda
Leader of the Siberian Black Army
Details
Date of Birth7 December 1937
Place of BirthRostov-on-Don, Soviet Union
Age at start24 years old
NationalitySiberian
RolePresident pro tempore of the General Assembly (de facto)
Political PartySAS
Ideology Anarcho-Communism


Pyotr Petrovich Siuda (Russian: Пётр Петрович Сиуда) is a Russian anarchist philosopher, revolutionary, and de facto leader of the Siberian Black Army. A key organizer of the Kansk Revolution that created the Free Territory, and now currently serving as a key member of the Siberian Anarchist Council. Once just another working-class Soviet citizen, Siuda embraced Anarchism after seeing the Union decay from communist idealism into self-serving autocracy. Though his revolution liberated many from the dogmatic Soviets and the elitist Republic, his path to liberate all of Russia is far from complete yet.

In Game Description[edit | edit source]

Siberian Soviet Description.[edit | edit source]

In the wake of the Union's collapse, the people of the Angara's basin founds themselves free from the authority of Moscow. The first thing they did, in a true socialist fashion, was to assemble a committee. Many of the regional institutions were functioning without Moscow's oversight, and with some rationing and belt-tightening, many of the goods that it imported from elsewhere in the union could be forgone or replaced with local substitutes. Contact with the remnants of the Soviet government in western Russia had been lost, and they were hesitant to acknowledge the "democratic" provisional government of the Central Siberian Republic and the tyrannical regime of Genrikh Yagoda alike, forming self-defense militia squads fighting for their freedoms with blood. And thus, influenced by the influx of once ostracized anarchist thinkers from the farthest parts of the Soviet Union, they proclaimed their independence as the Siberian Anarchist Soviet, a self-governing ruling body with equal representation for all major towns and industrial unions. As their position became secure from the foreign threats, the Siberian Black Army, the military force of the free communes of the shores of Iya, became one the leading voices in the Soviet and declared the militarized anarchism as its main platform. The militia service became an essential part of every man and woman of the Free Territory, and the armed formations of free communes are assembled not merely as a means of self-defense for the free communities, but also as a means of spreading the liberating ideology abroad.The spreading militarization of the anarchist society, seemingly contradictory to anarchist ideals, caused surprisingly little tensions between the Army and the Soviet, but many of commoners fear that the ambitions of the Black Army, the protector of the independence of Siberian communes, will eventually become the undoing of their own freedoms.