×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Monday
12
Jan 2026
weather symbol
Athens 7°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> World

For 11 years, the Soviet Union had no weekends

The socialist..."Paradise"

Newsroom June 26 10:33

For the urban workforce of the Soviet Union, September 29, 1929, was a Sunday like any other—a day of rest after six days of labor. Sunday was the prize at the finish line: a day’s holiday, where people might see family, attend church or clean their homes. But in the eyes of the Soviet government led by Joseph Stalin, Sundays represented a genuine threat to the whirr and hum of industrial progress. For one day in seven, after all, machines sat silent, productivity slumped to zero and people retreated to comforts thought to be contrary to the revolutionary ideal, like family life or religious practice.

On the following Sunday, no such collective pause for breath took place. Eighty percent of the workforce were told to go to work; 20 percent to stay home. The ordinary seven-day week now had a new bedfellow: the nepreryvka, or “continuous working week.” It was five days long, with days of rest staggered across the week. Now, the Soviet economist and politician Yuri Larin proposed, the machines need never be idle.

The nepreryvka was supposed to revolutionize the concept of labor, set a match to productivity and make religious worship too troublesome to be worth the effort. But it failed on virtually every count. Adjustments were made and in 1931, the cycle was extended to last six days. After 11 years of trial and error, the project was axed in June, 1940.

See Also:

>Related articles

Hits on Russian Lukoil oil platforms from Ukraine

Cartel de los Soles at the Presidential Palace of Caracas: The drug-trafficking network that Chávez set up with Sinaloa and that kept Maduro in power

Trump “weighs” a strike on Iran: Military not ready, fears of retaliation – “Foreign terrorists” kill civilians & burn mosques, Pezeshkian says

Spanoulis announced his retirement: “Why I am leaving basketball now”

Unlike the ordinary seven-day week, the continuous week began as a five-day cycle, with each day color-coded and marked with a symbol. The population would be carved up into as many groups, each with its own rest day. The days of the week, as familiar as family members, would gradually be stripped of meaning. Instead, each of the five new days was marked by a symbolic, politically appropriate item: wheatsheaf; red star; hammer and sickle; book; and, finally, budenovka, or woolen military cap. Calendars from the time show the days marked out in colored circles like beads on a string: yellow, peach, red, purple, green. These circles indicated when you worked and when you rested. This was shift work, on the most enormous scale in human history.

Continue reading: History

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#communism#history#Soviet Union#USSR#weekends#world
> More World

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

Passports: Deadline until January 31 for the old process — Which documents are being abolished

January 12, 2026

Iran responds to Trump: “You incite terrorists to protest for intervention” — Chaos continues with over 500 dead

January 12, 2026

Ecumenical Patriarch comments on ‘bad omen’ after knife mishap at pie-cutting ceremony

January 12, 2026

Maria Karystianou’s political move divides opinion — Criticisms after early acclaim

January 12, 2026

Golden Globes: Paul Thomas Anderson’s ‘One Battle After Another’ and Netflix’s ‘Adolescence’ dominate the awards

January 12, 2026

Rubina Aminian: The 23-year-old student who was shot at point-blank range by Iran’s security forces

January 12, 2026

Why Mitsotakis agreed to two meetings with farmers and livestock breeders

January 12, 2026

Bloodshed in Iran: Over 500 dead in protests as Trump weighs “Very strong options” for intervention

January 12, 2026
All News

> Greece

Passports: Deadline until January 31 for the old process — Which documents are being abolished

The Hellenic Police has digitized the process of collecting documents for passport issuance

January 12, 2026

Ecumenical Patriarch comments on ‘bad omen’ after knife mishap at pie-cutting ceremony

January 12, 2026

Severe cold wave hits Greece: Snow expected – Weather in Attica

January 12, 2026

Urgent Weather Alert from the Hellenic National Meteorological Service: Severe cold wave from this afternoon – Areas where snowfall is expected

January 11, 2026

Weather: Temperature plunge of up to 10 degrees from today through Tuesday – Where it will snow

January 11, 2026
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2026 Πρώτο Θέμα