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and children of other potential careers). Generally speaking if parents wanted their child or children to go to one of these Young
Pioneer camps, they had to pay a fee to apply for accommodation in the camp. However, typically the state organization where the parent worked "sponsored" the child by
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was formed on June 16, 1925. The Young
Pioneer camp phenomenon grew in popularity and in 1973 approximately forty thousand Young Pioneer camps existed in the
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allotting the worker's child a place in the camp free of charge to the parent or parents as an incident to the parent's employment.
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Western children also sometimes attended Soviet Young
Pioneer camps, including children from Canada in the 1970s.
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The Young
Pioneer camps of the Soviet Union were the place of vacation for children from the
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Young
Pioneer camp "Alye Parusa". Dining room, in the Centre of the monument to founder
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Young
Pioneer camp "Alye Parusa". Coats of arms and flags of the Soviet republics
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Young
Pioneer camp "Alye Parusa". Monument of the Pioneers to heroes.
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built a pioneer camp (known as a "pioneer republic") in 1952 at
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State-sponsored youth camps for in many communist countries
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The main Young
Pioneer camps of the Soviet Union were
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212:The first All-Union Young Pioneer camp,
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373:. IDC Publishers. 2007. Archived from
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