Although a
titular ruler, Sayid Abdullah had no real power because the Khanate was effectively controlled by the
Basmachi leader
Junaid Khan, a
Turkmen general, following a
coup in 1918. By 1920, the
Bolsheviks had defeated Junaid Khan, overthrown the
Khanate of Khiva and deposed Sayid Abdullah. He was sent to
Ukraine, where he died 13 years later at a hospital. Ukrainian writer
Grigory Jamalovich Huseynov in the early 1980s met with the descendants of Said Abdullah Khan, and conducted a study about the descendants of the Khan in Ukraine. In particular, he interviewed the nephew of Said Abdullah Khan,
Abdurasul Mukhammedyarovych Madiyarov, who lived in
Krivoy Rog, who told in detail the history and life of the Khan's descendants in Ukraine. Grigory Huseynov outlined the results of his research in the essay “How the Khan Worked at the Mine”. After abdicating the throne on February 2, 1920, Said Abdullah Khan and his family were arrested by the Bolsheviks. The trial of the Khan and his family began on June 12, 1920. Said Abdulla Khan and nine (according to other sources seven) of his closest male relatives were deported and exiled from the
Khorezm People's Soviet Republic for a period of 3 to 5 years. The remaining members of the Khan's large family, the less influential men, the women, old people and children, were separated from them and left in the republic itself. In addition, all property, money, jewelry, houses, lands and estates of the royal family were confiscated. The nine people sentenced to exile were; Said Abdulla Khan himself, his three sons Said Abdulla, Rahmatulla and Yakub Yusuf, his brother Muhammadyar, as well as his nephews Abdurasul, Madyar, Nasyr and Ibadulla. They were first taken from
Khiva to
Tashkent, where they were held for two days, and from there, under guard, they were taken by train to
Samara, where they stayed for three weeks. From Samara they were all taken by train to
Moscow. For two further weeks they were kept in the Horde camp, then in the Andraikovsky camp for ten months, followed by another two months in the Ivanovo camp. On February 12, 1922, all of them, including Said Abdullah Khan himself, were unexpectedly released and instructed to find work for themselves. They were first sent to
Yekaterinoslav (now Dnipro), but could find no work there and moved to nearby
Verkhovtsevo, where they began working at a local state farm. In July 1924, everyone - with the exception of Abdurasul Mukhamadyarovich who entered the local police school - arrived in
Krivoy Rog at the Oak Balka mine (later renamed the Bolshevik mine). Three of them began working at the mine as
watchmen and grooms. At the time, there was high unemployment in central Ukraine and the rest were unable to find work. They did not speak Russian or Ukrainian, nor did they have any useful skills characteristic of the inhabitants of this region. Bad news reached them from Khorezm that the former Khan's family, forcibly divided and left in Khiva, now lived below the poverty line, starved, and lived literally on alms and the help of neighbors, even the small children forced to begin begging. Upon learning of this, in July 1925 they applied to the Krivoy Rog department of the
GPU, the
Council of People's Commissars of the Ukrainian SSR and the
All-Ukrainian Central Executive Committee for permission to return home to Khorezm. In early August, the Secretariat addressed the People's Commissariat with a proposal to familiarize themselves with a copy of the request of the exiles and send their proposals. In a cover letter, the head of the administrative department of the
NKVD wrote that "if there are no obstacles, then take all measures to satisfy their request." However, the Ukrainian GPU decided to play it safe and forwarded all materials to the
OGPU under the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR. Their response stated that any return to their homeland was undesirable because of "the possibility of any influence on the masses". In 1926, Abdurasul joined the exiles when he retired from the police. He came to Krivoy Rog with his wife named Olimpiada, and his large family lived in one of the mine barracks. Later he married a local resident named Vlada Zhitkovskaya. == Death ==