In April 1932 a group of lamas, angered by heavy-handed persecution of Buddhist monks and government expropriations of monasteries, ignited a
revolt in
Khövsgöl Province by occupying several town centers. The uprising soon spread to four provinces in the northwest of the country and lasted until October 1932, with outbreaks reported in the east of the country as well. By June the
Mongolian People's Army had brutally suppressed large pockets of the revolt. The involvement of the Soviet Red Army in the suppression is still debated. Surprised by the breadth of the uprising, Soviet leader
Joseph Stalin ordered that the implementation of socialism in Mongolia be temporarily scaled back. At the Third Congress of the MPRP (June 29–30, 1932), top leftist politicians were blamed for creating conditions that led to the revolt. A few days later, on July 2, 1932, Jigjidjav, who was known as the chief leftist personality in Mongolia, was stripped of all of his offices. == Death and disgrace ==