ACTION UKRAINE REPORT -
AUR
An International
Newsletter, The Latest, Up-To-Date
In-Depth Ukrainian News, Analysis and Commentary
Ukrainian History, Culture, Arts, Business,
Religion, Economics,
Sports, Government, and Politics, in Ukraine and Around
the World
GENOCIDE AGAINST THE UKRAINIANS
The genocide was against the Ukrainians
as a national/ethnic group
living
within the whole Soviet empire over a period of years
1929-1938
Ukraine Remembers -The World
Acknowledges
2008 - 75th Commemoration Of The
Holodomor 1932-1933
"Induced
Starvation, Death for Millions,
Genocide"
ACTION UKRAINE REPORT - AUR - Number
909
Mr. Morgan Williams, Publisher and Editor,
SigmaBleyzer
Founder/Trustee, "Holodomor: Through the Eyes of
Ukrainian Artists"
WASHINGTON, D.C., SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER
21, 2008
INDEX OF ARTICLES
------
Clicking on the title of any article takes
you directly to the
article.
Return to Index by clicking on Return to
Index at the end of each article
Ukraine government says Soviet Union orchestrated shortage
By Russell Working, Reporter, Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, Sat,
Sep 20, 2008
Interfax Ukraine News, Kyiv, Ukraine, Thursday, September 18, 2008
Interfax Ukraine News, Kyiv, Ukraine, Friday, September 19, 2008
UNIAN, Kyiv, Ukraine, Monday, September 15, 2008
Ukrinform, Kyiv, Ukraine, Thursday, September 18, 2008
U.S. Department of State, Holodomor Exhibit Opening
Ralph J. Bunche
Library, Washington, DC, Tuesday, September 16, 2008
The Ukrainians call it the Holodomor - the Hunger.
By Simon Sebag Montefiore, award winning author of "Young Stalin"
The Mail on Sunday, London, United Kingdom, July 26, 2008
Commentary: By Professsor Roman Serbyn, Montreal, Quebec, Canada,
Sunday, July 27, 2008
The Day Weekly Digest #21, Kyiv, Ukraine, Tuesday, 8 July 2008
Interfax, Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, June 4, 2008
12
. UKRAINE IRKS RUSSIA WITH PUSH TO MARK
STALIN FAMINE AS GENOCIDE
By Daryna Krasnolutska & Halia Pavliva,
Bloomberg, Kyiv, Ukraine, New York, NY, Fri, Jan 4, 2008
Analysis & Commentary: By Peter Borisow
Kyiv Post newspaper, Kyiv, Ukraine, July 16, 2008
The Ukrainian Weekly newspaper, Parsippany, NJ, Sunday, August 17,
2008
New book edited by Lubomyr Luciuk: A series of essays by leading
scholars and
journalists on the causes and consequences of the Great Famine of 1932-33
in Soviet Ukraine.
By Morgan Williams, Publisher and Editor, Action Ukraine
Report (AUR)
Washington, D.C., Sunday, September 21, 2008
New issue of the Canadian American Slavic Studies Journal, Fall 2008
By Morgan Williams, Publisher and Editor, Action Ukraine Report (AUR)
Collection of scholarly and journalistic works entitled "Your Dead
Choose Me"
Parliament of Ukraine, Verkhovna Rada, November 28, 2006, Kyiv,
Ukraine
English translation by Action Ukraine Report (AUR), Washington D.C.,
Sun, Sep 21, 2008
An orphan in Kiev in 1934. Her parents had died of starvation and she
survived on charity from a neighbour
Tony Halpin in Kiev, The Times, London, UK, Sunday, June 22, 2008
20
. 75 YEARS LATER, HORROR
STAYS FRESH, 1930'S FAMINE IN UKRAINE MARKED
Melissa Dunne, The Windsor
Star, Windsor, Ontario, Canada, Saturday, May 24, 2008
===================================================
1. HISTORIANS, SURVIVORS HOPE
TO DRAW ATTENTION TO UKRAINIAN FAMINE
Ukraine government says Soviet Union
orchestrated shortage
By Russell Working, Reporter, Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Illinois,
Sat, Sep 20, 2008
CHICAGO - Behind Neonila Scherstiuk Lychyk's school in the Ukraine of her
childhood, there was a cemetery and, sometimes during recess, horse carts
arrived loaded with corpses. At first, Lychyk said, the teacher would shoo
the children indoors. In time, she didn't bother.
The entire Ukraine was
experiencing the horror anyway: the corpses in the streets, the villages emptied
of people, the little ones who disappeared—rumored to have been kidnapped by
cannibals.
This fall, Chicago-area Ukrainians like Lychyk of River Forest
are commemorating the 75th anniversary of the Holodomor, or death by hunger,
which the Ukrainian government says was a Soviet-engineered famine that killed
as many as 10 million people in 1932-33.
Anniversary events include
seminars, an exhibition, memorials and requiem masses. Organizers and survivors
said their efforts to spread the word are urgent. Like those who lived through
the Holocaust, survivors of what has been called the "genocide famine" are
growing fewer by the day.
Unlike the Holocaust, which was exposed and
recorded by conquering armies, the Holodomor was hidden for at least two
generations by a communist regime that had no qualms about using food as a
weapon but didn't want the world to know, historians said.
Historians
and the Ukrainian government say the famine was engineered by the Kremlin, which
sent communist thugs door to door to steal food out of pantries and off of
tables. Meanwhile, the government exported Ukrainian grain to the West
throughout the famine.
This summer, the Ukrainian government released
historical documents it says prove the Holodomor was an intentionally
manufactured genocide. Moscow has resisted the label of "genocide," saying
Russians and others in the Soviet Union—not just Ukrainians—suffered under
Stalin's iron rule.
Taras Hunczak, a Ukrainian-born history professor
emeritus at Rutgers University, has studied original documents related to the
famine. Estimates of deaths have ranged widely and are difficult to prove, but
Hunczak said he believes 7 million to 10 million people probably
died.
The Chicago-based Ukrainian Genocide Famine Foundation USA annually
memorializes the victims of the Holodomor through talks in schools and a
memorial service. But this year the foundation is making an extra push to remind
the world, foundation president Nicholas Mischenko said.
Mischenko was
born in Ukraine a year after the Holodomor. He never met two older siblings who
starved to death. "They took away our farm. Took away everything that we had:
cows, horses, chickens—everything. And after that they took away all the
foodstuffs."
During World War II, his family fled Ukraine, spending three
years traveling across central Europe before gaining refugee status in Austria
and emigrating.
Anatole Kolomayets, a Chicago artist who was born in 1927
and survived the famine with his younger brother, George, said his family lived
on a farm in a devastated rural area. His father fled out the back door as the
police arrived to arrest him. Kolomayets' father soon found a job at a Poltava
railroad station, where he received a bread ration and the family rejoined him.
Lychyk's family survived because her father was a state employee and
received a food ration. But every day as a 7-year-old, she saw the fate of
families who couldn't feed their children.
For years, Lychyk didn't tell
her children about what she had survived. But recently, she wrote down her
memories for them.
"This is something that is very hard to discuss,
because you just don't want to take the joy of life from young generations," she
said. "But I think that's wrong. We should tell our children and grandchildren
so this doesn't happen again." [
rworking@tribune.com]
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2
. DRAFT RESOLUTION ON
HOLODOMOR FAMINE IN UKRAINE
TO BE DISCUSSED AT UNITED
NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY
Interfax Ukraine News, Kyiv, Ukraine, Thursday, September 18, 2008
KYIV - A draft resolution on the Holodomor Famine in Ukraine in
1932-1933 will be discussed at the next sitting of the General Committee of the
63rd session of the UN General Assembly, the press service of Ukrainian Foreign
Ministry reported on Thursday.
The Foreign Ministry said the draft resolution "contains an appeal to
honor the memory of the victims of the Holodomor famine in Ukraine in 1932-1933,
which took the lives of millions of Ukrainians, and people of other
nationalities who lived in Ukraine during that time."
The draft resolution also calls on UN member states "to include
information on the Holodomor famine in Ukraine in 1932-1933 in their educational
programs aimed as preventing future generations from [repeating] a sorrowful
lesson from a tragic page in global history."
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3
. RUSSIA THINKS
UKRAINE’S ATTEMPTS TO PROMOTE HOLODOMOR ISSUE IN UN GA ARE
INCORRECT
Interfax Ukraine News, Kyiv, Ukraine, Friday, September 19, 2008
MOSCOW - Moscow thinks that Ukraine's attempts to promote the
so-called Holodomor in the UN General Assembly is incorrect and flawed.
The General Committee made a decision "to postpone the inclusion of the
Holodomor issue on the agenda [of the UN General Assembly], which is actively
promoted by the Ukrainian delegation" at the UN headquarters in New York a day
earlier, a spokesman of the Russian Foreign Ministry Andrei Nesterenko told a
news conference on Friday.
"Russian representatives in the General Committee told that the
attempt of the Ukrainian side to usurp tragic pages of common history of many
USSR nations are incorrect and are flawed from a moral point of view,"
Nesterenko said.
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4
. COMMUNIST REGIME FOUGHT
AGAINST HOLODOMOR IN UKRAINE WITH RESOLUTIONS
UNIAN, Kyiv, Ukraine, Monday, September 15, 2008
KYIV - Russia
declassified some documents about the hunger in USSR in 1930-1940ies, which took
place because of the collectivization of farms and industrialization, in
particular, in Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Belarus, and Ural. Copies of the
declassified documents were posted at the official web site of the Russian
Foreign Affairs Ministry.
The declassified documents indicate that, beginning from May of 1930, the
Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks (VKP(b))
received information about hunger, deficit of grain and bread from Senior
Political Departments of Soviet Union republics.
On the basis of the received information, the Political Bureau of VKP(b)
issued resolutions on aid to suffering regions almost every day. Thus, as for
Ukraine, they made decisions to give help with seeds, to lift reservation on rye
flour and to buy additional grain from eastern regions, etc..
On the
other hand, the official web site of the Russian Foreign Ministry posted
materials showing inactivity of the Ukrainian party leadership in solving the
food crisis in the republic.
In particular, M.Zhyvanov [his position is not specified - UNIAN], wrote in
his letter to Stanislav Kosior, first secretary of the Central Committee of the
Communist Party in Ukraine: “Open your eyes to the reality. What are you doing
with your policy, you, silent slaves of Moscow? You have ruined Ukraine and its
agriculture within two years: you turned the Ukrainian party organization into a
flock of parrots, who have learnt that it’s forbidden to say “unreal”, it’s
opportunism.
"Last year these parrots left the Ukrainian economy without any slice of
bread, without potato, without corn. At least, calculate, how many children and
aged people have died from hunger here. At least you could show courage and
calculate those victims, and familiarize Moscow with the results of our carefree
and irresponsible “struggle for socialism”.
At the same time, a report
from Mendel Khatayevych, Secretary of the Central Committee of the Ukrainian
Communist Party, sent to the VKP(b), reads about a rise of epidemics in Ukraine,
as of January 2, 1933:
“A rise of epidemics, in particular, typhus, has been recorded in
Ukraine. The total number of cases for the whole year 1931 made up 8 thousand
384, during January-November of 1932 -15 thousand 458”, M.Khatayevych
wrote.
As early as on March 17, 1933, the secret political
department of the United State Political Directorate prepared a special report
about hunger in the Ukrainian SSR, with indicating cases of mass death and
cannibalism.
“Volodarskiy district of the Kyiv Oblast. In Rude village, a mother left
her three children home alone. Having absolutely nothing to eat, a 9-year old
boy, together his elder sister, killed their 3-year old younger sister. The
children cut off her head and began to eat the raw meat of the dead body”, the
special report informs. Very many such cases were listed in numerous reports
from different regions of Ukraine.
The Russian Foreign Ministry informs
that the publicized digital copies of original documents were received from
funds of Russian federal archives. “These are just a part of a huge documental
array about the hunger in USSR”, reads the preface to the declassified
materials.
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Promoting U.S.-Ukraine business
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==============================================================
5
. HEAD OF UKRAINIAN
INSTITUTE OF NATIONAL MEMORY BLAMES RUSSIA
FOR BIASED PUBLICATION OF DOCUMENTS ON
HUNGER IN EARLY 30'S
Ukrinform, Kyiv, Ukraine, Thursday, September 18, 2008
KYIV - X-file documents on the hunger of early 1930s in the USSR,
recently put on the Russian foreign ministry website, were selected
tendentiously, as among them there are no resolutions and directives most
brightly proving the deliberate character of the Great Famine (Holodomor) in
Ukraine, Academician Ihor Yukhnovskyi, acting head of the Ukrainian Institute of
National Memory, told a press conference Thursday.
“We are greatly pleased that the Russian party, particularly its
foreign ministry, showed interest in the issues of hungers in the Soviet Union
and published the documents. We were glad to use some of them that we did not
have before. Yet, I insist with authority that the set of documents is biased,”
he said.
The Russian MFA website published 200 documents, saying it was just a
small part of the mass of information about the hunger in the USSR in early 30s.
Ukrainian historians say the publication bears secondary papers and lacks
principal ones, on the real nature of famine in Ukraine that was struck most of
all.
Yukhnovskyi said his Institute would send to the Russian ministry
documents from Ukrainian archives attesting to masterminded hunger in Ukraine.
“It is up on to them whether to put those documents on the web or not,” the
Academician noted.
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6
. HOLODOMOR EXHIBIT OPENS
AT THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Presentation: David
J. Kramer, Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
U.S. Department of State, Holodomor Exhibit Opening
Ralph J. Bunche
Library, Washington, DC, Tuesday, September 16, 2008
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Ambassador Shamshur, honored guests: Thank you for the
opportunity to take part in the opening of this exhibition to commemorate the
75th anniversary of the Holodomor tragedy.
Seventy-five years ago, the
world witnessed a horrific episode of human suffering and deprivation in
Ukraine. The Holodomor is an extraordinarily sad chapter in human history, all
the more tragic because it was man-made. It is necessary that we honor the
memory of the lives lost as a result of this communist oppression. I join with
you and people everywhere in remembering the victims of this terrible tragedy,
one that never should have happened.
A year ago, we co-sponsored a
resolution on the Remembrance of Victims of the Great Famine in the United
Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, to call for
promoting awareness of the Great Famine through educational and research
programs.
We are also committed to permanently recognizing the victims in
the United States. In October 2006, President Bush signed legislation
authorizing a Holodomor memorial in Washington, D.C. This memorial will stand as
a tribute to all people who suffered from the injustices of totalitarian
regimes.
President and Mrs. Bush visited the Holodomor monument in Kyiv
during their trip earlier this year, and Vice President Cheney earlier this
month paid his respects as well.
In the words of President Bush, during the Holodomor, “… millions died
because they resisted Stalin’s brutal regime. We honor their memory and pledge
to never forget their suffering. As we remember their struggle, we also condemn
all authoritarian governments who have terrorized their people in the past and
who continue to do so, thus continuing the fight for freedom and safety of all
people."
Since those dark days, Ukraine has regained its status as an
independent nation and today is marked by political freedom and economic growth.
The political situation is never dull but very importantly has remained
peaceful. The United States strongly supports Ukraine’s efforts to strengthen
democracy, rule of law, and good governance in order to better bring the fruits
of representational government to the Ukrainian people.
The opening of
this exhibition is a time for remembrance, and a time for moving forward. As we
reflect on this tragic event in history, we should also celebrate Ukraine’s
progress and look to the future with hope and confidence. Thank you. [AUR
Footnote: Your editor attended the Holodomor Exhibition event at the U.S.
Department of State.]
LINK:
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/rm/2008/109839.htm--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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7
. HOLOCAUST BY HUNGER: THE
TRUTH BEHIND STALIN'S GREAT FAMINE
The Ukrainians call it the Holodomor - the
Hunger.
By Simon Sebag Montefiore, award winning author of "Young Stalin"
The Mail on Sunday, London, United Kingdom, July 26, 2008
The demented Roman Emperor Caligula once mused that if all the people of
Rome had one neck he would cut it just to be rid of his troublesome
people.
The trouble was there were simply too many Romans to kill them
all.
Many centuries later, the brutal Soviet dictator Josef Stalin reflected
that he would have liked to deport the entire Ukrainian nation, but 20 million
were too many to move even for him.
So he found another solution:
starvation.
Now, 75 years after one of the great forgotten crimes of modern times,
Stalin's man-made famine of 1932/3, the former Soviet republic of Ukraine is
asking the world to classify it as a genocide.
The Ukrainians call it the Holodomor - the Hunger.
Millions starved as Soviet troops and secret policemen raided their
villages, stole the harvest and all the food in villagers' homes. They dropped
dead in the streets, lay dying and rotting in their houses, and some women
became so desperate for food that they ate their own children. If they managed
to fend off starvation, they were deported and shot in their hundreds of
thousands.
So terrible was the famine that Igor Yukhnovsky, director of the Institute
of National Memory, the Ukrainian institution researching the Holodomor,
believes as many as nine million may have died.
For decades the disaster remained a state secret, denied by Stalin and his
Soviet government and concealed from the outside world with the help of the
'useful idiots' - as Lenin called Soviet sympathisers in the West.
RUSSIA IS FURIOUS THAT UKRAINE HAS
RAISED THE ISSUE OF THE FAMINE
Russia is furious that Ukraine
has raised the issue of the famine: the swaggering 21st-century state of Prime
Minister Putin and President Medvedev see this as nationalist chicanery designed
to promote Ukraine, which may soon join Nato and the EU. They see it as an
anti-Russian manoeuvre more to do with modern politics than history. And they
refuse to recognise this old crime as a genocide.
They argue that because the famine not only killed Ukrainians but huge
numbers of Russians, Cossacks, Kazakhs and many others as well, it can't be
termed genocide - defined as the deliberate killing of large numbers of a
particular ethnic group. It may be a strange defence, but it is historically
correct.
So what is the truth about the Holodomor? And why is Ukraine provoking
Russia's wrath by demanding public recognition now?
The Ukraine was the bread basket of Russia, but the Great Famine of
1932/3 was not just aimed at the Ukrainians as a nation - it was a deliberate
policy aimed at the entire Soviet peasant population - Russian, Ukrainian and
Kazakh - especially better-off, small-time farmers.
It was a class war designed to 'break the back of the peasantry', a war
of the cities against the countryside and, unlike the Holocaust, it was not
designed to eradicate an ethnic people, but to shatter their independent
spirit.
RANKS AS ONE OF THE MOST TERRIBLE CRIMES
OF THE 20TH CENTURY
So while it may not be a formal case of
genocide, it does, indeed, rank as one of the most terrible crimes of the 20th
century.
To understand the origins of the famine, we have to go back to the
October 1917 Revolution when the Bolsheviks, led by a ruthless clique of Marxist
revolutionaries including Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin, seized power in the name of
the workers and peasants of the Russian Empire to create a Marxist paradise,
using terror, murder and repression.
The Russian Empire was made of many peoples, including the Russians,
Ukrainians, Kazakhs and Georgians, but the great majority of them, especially in
the vast arable lands of Ukraine, southern Russia, the northern Caucasus, and
Siberia, were peasants, who dreamed only of owning their own land and farming
it.
Initially, they were thrilled with the Revolution, which meant the
breakup of the large landed estates into small parcels which they could
farm.
But the peasants had no interest in the Marxist utopian ideologies that
obsessed Lenin and Stalin.
Once they had seized their plots of land, they were no longer
interested in esoteric absurdities such as Marx's stages in the creation of a
classless society.
The fact is they were essentially conservative and wanted
to pass what little wealth they had to their children.
This infuriated Lenin and the Bolsheviks, who believed that the
peasantry, especially the ones who owned some land and a few cows, were a huge
threat to a collectivist Soviet Russia.
LENIN'S HATRED OF THE PEASANTRY BECAME
CLEAR
Lenin's hatred of the peasantry became clear when a famine occurred in
Ukraine and southern Russia in 1921, the inevitable result of the chaos and
upheaval of the Revolution. With his bloodthirsty loathing for all enemies of
the Revolution, he said 'Let the peasants starve', and wrote ranting notes
ordering the better-off peasants to be hanged in their thousands and their
bodies displayed by the roadsides.
Yet this was an emotional outburst and, ever the ruthless pragmatist,
he realised the country was so poor and weak in the immediate aftermath of its
revolutionary civil war that the peasants were vital to its survival. So
instead, he embraced what he called a New Economic Policy, in effect a temporary
retreat from Marxism, that allowed the peasants to grow crops and sell them for
profit.
It was always planned by Lenin and his fellow radicals that this
New Economic Policy should be a stopgap measure which would soon be abandoned in
the Marxist cause. But before this could happen, Lenin died in 1924 and Stalin
defeated all his rivals for the Soviet leadership.
Then, three years
later, grain supplies dropped radically. It had been a poor crop, made worse by
the fact that many peasant farmers had shifted from grain into more lucrative
cotton production.
Stalin travelled across Russia to inspect supplies and
ordered forcible seizures of grain from the peasantry. Thousands of young urban
Communists were drafted into the countryside to help seize grain as Stalin
determined that the old policies had failed.
Backed by the young, tough
Communists of his party, he devised what he called the Great Turn: he would
seize the land, force the peasants into collective farms and sell the excess
grain abroad to force through a Five Year Plan of furious industrialisation to
make Soviet Russia a military super power.
He expected the peasants to
resist and decreed anyone who did so was a kulak - a better-off peasant who
could afford to withhold grain - and who was now to be treated as a class
enemy.
DESTRUCTION OF THE KULAKS AS A
CLASS
By 1930, it was clear the collectivisation campaign was
in difficulties. There was less grain than before it had been introduced, the
peasants were still resisting and the Soviet Union seemed to be tottering.
Stalin, along with his henchman Vyacheslav Molotov and others, wrote a ruthless
memorandum ordering the 'destruction of the kulaks as a class'.
They
divided huge numbers of peasants into three categories.
[1] The first was
to be eliminated immediately; the
[2] second to be imprisoned in camps; the
[3] third, consisting of 150,000 households - almost a million
innocent people - was to be deported to wildernesses in Siberia or
Asia.
Stalin himself did not really understand how to identify a kulak or
how to improve grain production, but this was beside the point. What mattered
was that sufficient numbers of peasants would be killed or deported for all
resistance to his collectivisation programme to be smashed.
In letters
written by many Soviet leaders, including Stalin and Molotov, which I have read
in the archives, they repeatedly used the expression: 'We must break the back of
the peasantry.' And they meant it.
In 1930/1, millions of peasants were
deported, mainly to Siberia. But 800,000 people rebelled in small uprisings,
often murdering local commissars who tried to take their grain. So Stalin's top
henchmen led armed expeditions of secret policemen to crush 'the wreckers',
shooting thousands.
The peasants replied by destroying their crops and
slaughtering 26 million cattle and 15 million horses to stop the Bolsheviks (and
the cities they came from) getting their food. Their mistake was to think
they were dealing with ordinary politicians.
But the Bolsheviks were far
more sinister than that: if many millions of peasants wished to fight to the
death, then the Bolsheviks were not afraid of killing them. It was war - and the
struggle was most vicious not only in the Ukraine but in the north Caucasus, the
Volga, southern Russia and central Asia.
The strain of the slaughter
affected even the bull-nerved Stalin, who sensed opposition to these brutal
policies by the more moderate Bolsheviks, including his wife Nadya.
STALIN KEPT SELLING GRAIN
ABROAD
He knew Soviet power was suddenly precarious, yet
Stalin kept selling the grain abroad while a shortage turned into a famine. More
than a million peasants were deported to Siberia: hundreds of thousands were
arrested or shot. Like a village shopkeeper doing his accounts, Stalin totted up
the numbers of executed peasants and the tonnes of grains he had
collected.
By December 1931, famine was sweeping the Ukraine and north
Caucasus. 'The peasants ate dogs, horses, rotten potatoes, the bark of trees,
anything they could find,' wrote one witness Fedor Bleov.
By summer
1932, Fred Beal, an American radical and rare outside witness, visited a village
near Kharkov in Ukraine, where he found all the inhabitants dead in their houses
or on the streets, except one insane woman. Rats feasted on the bodies. Beal
found messages next to the bodies such as: 'My son, I couldn't wait. God be with
you.'
One young communist, Lev Kopolev, wrote at the time of 'women and
children with distended bellies turning blue, with vacant lifeless
eyes. 'And corpses. Corpses in ragged sheepskin coats and cheap felt boots;
corpses in peasant huts in the melting snow of Vologda [in Russia] and Kharkov
[in Ukraine].'
Cannibalism was rife and some women offered sexual favours
in return for food. There are horrific eye-witness accounts of mothers
eating their own children.
In the Ukrainian city of Poltava, Andriy
Melezhyk recalled that neighbours found a pot containing a boiled liver, heart
and lungs in the home of one mother who had died. Under a barrel in the
cellar they discovered a small hole in which a child's head, feet and hands were
buried. It was the remains of the woman's little daughter, Vaska.
A boy
named Miron Dolot [pen name] described the countryside as 'like a battlefield
after a war. 'Littering the fields were bodies of starving farmers who'd been
combing the potato fields in the hope of finding a fragment of a potato. 'Some
frozen corpses had been lying out there for months.'
On June 6, 1932,
Stalin and Molotov ordered 'no deviation regarding amounts or deadlines of grain
deliveries are to be permitted'. A week later, even the Ukrainian Bolshevik
leaders were begging for food, but Stalin turned on his own comrades, accusing
them of being wreckers. 'The Ukraine has been given more than it should,' he
stated.
When a comrade at a Politburo meeting told the truth about the
horrors, Stalin, who knew what was happening perfectly well, retorted: 'Wouldn't
it be better for you to leave your post and become a writer so you can concoct
more fables!' In the same week, a train pulled into Kiev from the Ukrainian
villages 'loaded with corpses of people who had starved to death', according to
one report.
Such tragic sights had no effect on the Soviet leadership.
When the American Beal complained to the Bolshevik Ukrainian boss,
Petrovsky, he replied: 'We know millions are dying. That is unfortunate, but the
glorious future of the Soviet Union will justify it.'
Stalin was
not alone in his crazed determination to push through his plan. The archives
reveal one young communist admitting: 'I saw people dying from hunger, but I
firmly believed the ends justified the means.'
Though Stalin was
admittedly in a frenzy of nervous tension, it was at this point in 1932 when
under another leader the Soviet Union might have simply fallen apart and history
would have been different.
Embattled on all sides, criticised by
his own comrades, faced with chaos and civil war and mass starvation in the
countryside, he pushed on ruthlessly - even when, in 1932, his wife Nadya
committed suicide, in part as a protest against the famine.
'It seems in
some regions of Ukraine, Soviet power has ceased to exist,' he wrote. 'Check the
problem and take measures.' That meant the destruction of any resistance. Stalin
created a draconian law that any hungry peasant who stole even a husk of grain
was to be shot - the notorious Misappropriation of Socialist Property
law.
"IF WE DON'T MAKE AN EFFORT, WE MIGHT
LOSE UKRAINE"
'If we don't make an effort, we might lose
Ukraine,' Stalin said, almost in panic. He dispatched ferocious punitive
expeditions led by his henchmen, who engaged in mass murders and
executions.
Not just Ukraine was targeted - Molotov, for example, headed
to the Urals, the Lower Volga and Siberia. Lazar Kaganovich, a close associate
of Stalin, crushed the Kuban and Siberia regions where famine was also rife.
Train tickets were restricted and internal passports were introduced so
that it became impossible for peasants to flee the famine areas. Stalin called
the peasants 'saboteurs' and declared it 'a fight to the death! These people
deliberately tried to sabotage the Soviet stage'.
BETWEEN FOUR AND FIVE MILLION DIED IN
UKRAINEBetween four and five million died in Ukraine, a
million died in Kazakhstan and another million in the north Caucasus and the
Volga. By 1933, 5.7 million households - somewhere between ten million and
15 million people - had vanished. They had been deported, shot or died of
starvation. As for Stalin, he emerged more ruthless, more paranoid, more
isolated than before.
Stalin later told Winston Churchill that
this was the most difficult time of his entire life, harder even than Hitler's
invasion. 'It was a terrible struggle' in which he had 'to destroy ten
million. It was fearful. Four years it lasted - but it was absolutely
necessary'. Only in the mind of a brutal dictator could the mass murder of his
own people be considered 'necessary'.
Whether it was genocide or not,
perhaps now the true nature of one of the worst crimes in history will finally
be acknowledged.
AUR FOOTNOTE: Simon Sebag Montefiore is the
award-winning and critically acclaimed author of the bestselling books "Young
Stalin", "Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar" and "Catherine the Great &
Potemkin." "Sashenka," a novel of love, family, death and betrayal in 20th
century Russia, by Simon Sebag Montefiore, is out now. [
http://www.simonsebagmontefiore.com/]
LINK:
http://www.mailonsunday.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1038774/Holocaust-hunger-The-truth-Stalins-Great-Famine.html
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8
. ROMAN SERBYN:
MONTEFIORE ON HOLODOMOR AND MY COMMENT
COMMENTARY: By Professor Roman Serbyn, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Sun, Jul
27, 2008
I wrote a comment on the online publication, but I don't know if it
will appear, so I am joining it here, in case someone would care to read
it.
This is a welcome addition to popular literature on the Great Famine.
The author is right to stress the ruthlessness of Stalin, his henchmen and
the
Bolsheviks, who were not afraid to kill people by the million.
The author accurately identifies the goals of collectivization: “to break
the backbone of the peasantry”, “to shatter their independent spirit” and with
the stolen grain from the starving peasants to industrialize and “make Soviet
Russia a military super power”.
Montefiore’s description of “the Great
Turn” - the destruction of the peasantry, the horrors of the famine, with
dekulakization, deportation, starvation, cannibalism, and so forth - can be
appreciated.
There are, however, errors in his historical narrative that
should be pointed out, and unwarranted assertions that must be challenged.
Stalin’s musings about deporting Ukrainians revealed by Khrushchev refer to the
post WW II period and not to the time of the famine. Ukrainians, according the
1926 census numbered 28.5 million (as citizens of Ukr. SSR) and 31 million
(as an ethnic minority in USSR). If anything, the figures would be a million or
so higher in 1932.
NEP was introduced in the beginning of 1921 because
agriculture was collapsing, and not in response to the famine, which began only
towards the end of that summer and continued until 1923. The first famine
(1921-1923) was, to a large extent, due to the requisitions practiced by the Red
Army during the Russian civil war (and wars of reconquest of the seceding
republics like Ukraine); peasants’ delight over the Bolshevik seizure of power
was rather short-lived.
Some of the author’s descriptions and claims lack
precision or completeness. The author fails to take into account that while “the
Cossacks” formed a more or less homogenous social group, they belonged to two
different nationalities.
MOST KUBAN COSSACK WERE OF UKRAINIAN
BACKGROUND
Most of the Kuban Cossack were of Ukrainian background and in the
deportation of the Kuban Cossack stanytsias (settlements) the national factor
played a decisive role. At the beginning of the famine there were some 8,000,000
ethnic Ukrainians living in RSFSR, mostly along the Ukrainian border: the Kuban
was 62% Ukrainian, the Don about 40 %.
The rise of Ukrainian national
consciousness, and the “infiltration” of the party and state institutions in
these regions by “Ukrainian nationalists” was blamed for the problems in grain
procurement (read confiscations).
As a result, on 14 December 1932, the Ukrainian language was banned in all
schools, local administration, mass media throughout the RSFSR. This and other
national factors in 1932-1933 tragedy are ignored by the author, thus giving the
whole presentation a rather lopsided interpretation.
Montefiore states
that train tickets were restricted and internal passports were introduced so
that it became impossible for peasants to flee the famine areas.
Here he confuses two different issues:
1) passport system whose
purpose was to the main urban centres from growing and which came into effect
towards the end of the main period of the famine, and
2) a
Stalin/Molotov directive of 22 January 1933 closing cordoning off Ukrainian SSR
and the North Caucasus Territory (chiefly aimed at the Kuban) from the rest of
the Soviet Union to any peasant movement. This directive had a specifically
anti-Ukrainian factor which is completely ignored by the author.
PRESENTS ARGUMENT HEARD FROM RUSSIAN
DENIERS
The author presents the argument often heard from
Russian political and academic deniers of the Ukrainian genocide, namely that,
“because the famine not only killed Ukrainians but huge numbers of Russians,
Cossacks, Kazakhs and many others as well, it can’t be termed genocide — defined
as deliberate
killing of large numbers of a particular ethnic group.” What is
surprising, is that the author then defends this illogical position: “It may be
a strange defence, but it is historically correct.”
Well, I beg to
differ: it is not correct, either logically or historically. Logically, the
question of the Ukrainian genocide has to be decided on its own merit.
Whether Russians and Kazakhs (ethnically the Cossacks were either Russians
or Ukrainians – there was no Cossack nationality) were victims of genocide has
no bearing on Ukrainian genocide, any more than the destruction of Gypsies and
Poles had any influence on the recognition of the genocide of the Jews.
Each
case has to be decided on its own merit. Bringing Russians and Kazakhs into the
discussion of Ukrainian genocide is to confuse the issue.
Historically, the Russians’ argument is incorrect for the simple reason
that the famine was not the sums total of the genocidal atrocities and the
Ukrainian peasantry was not the sum total of the Ukrainian victims of the
genocide. The genocide was against the Ukrainians as a national/ethnic group
living within the whole Soviet empire.
MONTEFIORE LEAVES OUT MILLIONS OF
UKRAINIANS
Montefiore leaves out not only the 8 million
Ukrainians in the RSFSR but also the other segments of the Ukrainian population
(national elites, professional class etc,) that were also part of the overall
target of Stalin’s genocidal policies.
We cannot go into detail here, and I shall make just two short comments.
[1] First, concurrently with the destruction of the village elites in
1929-1930 (“dekulakization”) the regime began the elimination of the
national elites with the roundup of hundreds of intellectuals accused of
organizing a Union for the Liberation of Ukraine (Soiuz Vyzvolennia Ukrainy).
One of their “crimes” was organizing cells in the countryside. There was no
corresponding witch-hunt of Russian elites accused of Russian
nationalism.
[2] Second example. Montefiore (mis)quotes Stalin’s letter
to Kaganovich (whose role in Ukraine Montefiore underestimates, in favor of
Molotov),
"Unless we begin to straighten out the situation in Ukraine, we may lose
Ukraine” and leaves it dangling because two paragraphs further he insists that
“not just Ukraine was targeted – Molotov … headed to the Urals, … Kaganovich …
crushed the Kuban”.
It is what Montefiore leaves out that gives sense to the Stalin’s reference
to Ukraine. “Keep in mind that the Ukrainian Communist Party (500,000 members,
ha-ha) has quite a lot (yes, quite a lot!) of rotten elements, conscious and
unconscious Petliura adherents … As soon as things get worse, these elements
will waste no time opening a front inside (and outside) the party, against the
party.”
The sequence to this declaration was the second series of elimination of
Ukrainian elites, this time from the faithful party cadres, suspected of siding
with the Ukrainian peasantry “as soon as things get worse” (no better indication
that Stalin was anticipating widespread starvation). The national factor always
present in Stalin’s genocidal policies in the 1930s. It behooves the
commentators on those years to present the full picture of events.
AUR FOOTNOTE: Roman
Serbyn, is a leading and well known Canadian professor, scholar, researcher,
author (Universite du Quebec a Montreal). He is one of the world's
foremost authorities on the history of Soviet Ukraine from 1920 through 1939. He
is the editor with Bohdan Krawchenko of a book entitled "Famine in Ukraine
1932-1933" published by the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, University
of Alberta, Edmonton, 1986. He is the author of the book "The Famine of
1921-1923 [Ukraine] and the Canadian Press in Canada." The book was
published in Ukrainian by the Ukrainian Canadian Research and Documentation
Centre, Toronto, 1995.
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9
. OSCE PARLIAMENTARY
ASSEMBLY (PA) RECOGNIZED HOLODOMOR OF 1932-1933
The Day Weekly Digest #21, Kyiv, Ukraine, Tuesday, 8 July
2008
KYIV - The 17th session of the OSCE [Organization for Security
and Co-operation in Europe] Parliamentary Assembly (PA) passed a resolution on
the Holodomor of 1932-1933 in Ukraine last Sunday in Astana.
OSCE PA “pays tribute to the innocent lives of millions of Ukrainians who
perished during the Holodomor of 1932 and 1933 as a result of the mass
starvation brought about by the cruel deliberate actions and policies of
totalitarian Stalinist regime”, “welcomes the recognition of the Holodomor in
the United Nations, by the United Nations Educational and Scientific
Organization and by the national parliaments of a number of the OSCE
participating States,” “endorses the Joint Statement of 31 OSCE participating
States on the 75th anniversary of the Holodomor of 1932-1933 in Ukraine,
delivered at the 15th Meeting of the OSCE Ministerial Council,” the resolution
says in particular.
Besides, OSCE PA “supports the initiative of Ukraine to reveal the full
truth of this tragedy of Ukrainian people, in particular, through raising public
awareness of the Holodomor at international and national levels, organizing the
commemorations of the Holodomor as well as academic, expert and civil events
aimed at discussing this issue.”
OSCE PA “invites the parliamentarians of the OSCE Member States to
participate in the events, commemorating the 75th anniversary of the Holodomor
of 1932-1933 in Ukraine” and “strongly encourages all parliaments to adopt acts
regarding recognition of the Holodomor.”
COMMENTARY
--
Stanislav KULCHYTSKY , Deputy Director, Institute of the
History of Ukraine (National Academy of Sciences):
“For the world community to recognize the 1932-1933 Holodomor as
genocide, we should cooperate more with unbiased foreign historians. As it has
already been reported, the book "Why Was He Destroying Us? Stalin and the
Holodomor in Ukraine" of The Day Library series was recently launched in
Bucharest.
Speaking at this ceremony, member of the Rumanian Academy of Sciences
Florin Constantinium noted that it is strange that the polemics, which has
lasted for 20 years now since the publication of Robert Conquest’s Harvest of
Sorrow , is inadequately based on the findings of Ukrainian historians.
As is known, in this polemics the Ukrainian side does not deny the fact of
an all-USSR famine in 1932-1933, but it speaks about something entirely
different - the Holodomor in Ukraine, and it has enough facts to differentiate
between the two phenomena. As for the attitude of Russia to this subject, we
should react to the way it treats this ticklish question by way of third
countries’ mediation.”
LINK:
http://www.day.kiev.ua/203967/
The OSCE [Organization for Security
and Co-operation in Europe] Parliamentary Assembly [PA]
Seventeenth Annual Session, Astana,
Kazakhstan, June 29 - July 3, 2008
RESOLUTION ON THE HOLODOMOR OF
1932-1933 IN UKRAINE
1. Reiterating the crucial
role of the OSCE in the promotion of human rights and values,
2.
Reminding that parliamentary institutions play a decisive role in defining
humanitarian policies and legislation and represent the will of the people of
relevant countries,
3. Emphasizing that raising public awareness of
humanitarian tragedies of our history is an important tool of restoring the
dignity of victims through acknowledgment of their suffering and preventing
similar catastrophes in the future,
4. Reminding the OSCE participating
States of their commitment to "clearly and unequivocally condemn
totalitarianism" (1990 Copenhagen Document),
5. Recalling that the rule
of the totalitarian Stalinist regime in the former USSR had let to tremendous
human rights violations depriving millions of people of their right to
live,
6. Recalling also that crimes of the Stalinist regime have been
already revealed and condemned and some still require both national and
international recognition and unequivocal condemnation,
The OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly:
7. Pays tribute to the innocent lives of
millions of Ukrainians who perished during the Holodomor of 1932 and 1933 as a
result of the mass starvation brought about by the cruel deliberate actions and
policies of totalitarian Stalinist regime;
8. Welcomes the recognition of
the Holodomor in the United Nations, by the United Nations Educational and
Scientific Organization and by the national parliaments of a number of the OSCE
participating States;
9. Endorses the Joint Statement of 31 OSCE
participating States on the 75th anniversary of Holodomor of 1932 and 1933 in
Ukraine, delivered at the 15th Meeting of the OSCE Ministerial
Council;
10. Supports the initiative of Ukraine to reveal the full truth
of this tragedy of Ukrainian people, in particular, through raising public
awareness of the Holodomor at international and national levels, organizing the
commemorations of the Holodomor as well as academic, expert and civil events
aimed at discussing this issue;
11. Invites the parliamentarians of the
OSCE Member States to participate in the events, commemorating the 75th
anniversary of the Holodomor of 1932-1933 in Ukraine;
12. Strongly
encourages all parliaments to adopt acts regarding recognition of the
Holodomor.
Click on Read More then click on 2008 Astana Declaration available
here in English
Go to page 45 and you will get the RESOLUTION ON THE
HOLODOMOR OF 1932-1933 IN
UKRAINE
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10
. SERBYN:
REGARDING RESOLUTION OF OSCE ON THE HOLODOMOR IN
UKRAINECommentary: Professor Roman Serbyn, Montreal,
Quebec, Canada, Thursday, July 3, 2008
From: Roman Serbyn
To: Orysia
Tracz; Stefan Romaniw & Members of the International Holodomor Committee
(IHC)
Sent: Thursday, July 03, 2008 1:28 PM
Subject: Re: OSCE
Resolution
MONTREAL - OSCE RESOLUTION: This is not the full recognition
of genocide that the Ukrainians want to hear. However it can be a step in the
right direction if properly pursued. The substitution of Holodomor for Famine in
the declaration is of great significance. The notion of “Famine” (even if called
the Great Famine or man-made famine) was too limitative, the Holodomor is more
open-ended.
GENOCIDE AGAINST THE
UKRAINIANS
However, it should NOT be treated as only a more
monstrous Holod, but a more encompassing catastrophe of which HOLOD was the main
part in terms of human lives lost but not the only component of the GENOCIDE
AGAINST THE UKRAINIANS.
In this sense, THE HOLODOMOR must be seen in the same way that THE
HOLOCAUST is conceived: a genocide against a ethno/national group, in one case
the Jews and in the other case the Ukrainians. This means treating as part of
the genocidaires’ target and as part of the genocide victims.
[1] ALL the
Ukrainians that were killed during the genocide not only by forced starvation
but by other means (execution, exposure, etc) from among the other sectors of
Ukrainian population (intellectuals, liberal professions, workers).
[2]
Secondly, the whole Ukrainian population under the rule of Stalin’s communist
regime (including the 8 million ethnic Ukrainians in Kuban’ and elsewhere in the
RSFSR) must be included in this notion of victims of Holodomor.
Until Ukrainian scholars, Ukrainian politicians and the Ukrainian
community in general begins to view and speak about the Holodomor in these terms
(which then fit into the UN Convention and its definition of genocide), we shall
not be able to convince the world academic community and the politicians on the
highest echelons of power that Ukraine had been victim of a
genocide.
Ukraine must start speaking about the Ukrainians in the RSFSR,
who were 8 million according to the census of 1926 but were reduced to 4 million
by the census of 1937.
In this sense, the most interesting articles of
this OSCE resolution are points 9 to 12:
10. Supports the initiative of
Ukraine to reveal the full truth of this tragedy of Ukrainian people, in
particular, through raising public awareness of the Holodomor at international
and national levels, organizing the commemorations of the Holodomor as well as
academic, expert and civil events aimed at discussing this issue;
The
Ukrainian people in 1932-1933 included the 8 million Ukrainians in the RSFSR,
and the whole truth cannot be revealed by leaving them out of the tragic
picture.
WE MUST RECONCEPTUALIZE THE CONCEPT OF THE
HOLODOMOR
Ukrainian academics must RECONCEPTUALIZE the Holodomor to include:
a) Ukrainian victims of the RSFSR, and
b) the other sectors of the Ukrainian society of those years who became
victims of the Soviet regime by other means of destruction than
starvation.
11. Invites the parliamentarians of the OSCE Member States to
participate in the events, commemorating the 75th anniversary of the Holodomor
of 1932-1933 in Ukraine;
In these commemorations Holodomor must be
presented as an all encompassing genocide. If Ukraine cannot speak openly about
the all encompassing Holodomor on its own turf, then where can it do
so?
12. Strongly encourages all parliaments to adopt acts regarding
recognition of the Holodomor.
The lobbying of parliaments to adopt such
acts is an excellent opportunity to educate, first of all the Ukrainian
community (most people have very vague knowledge about the famine, and almost
none about the rest of the genocide. The Act passed by the Canadian Parliament
can serve as a model, but it can be improved upon.
The door has been
opened just a little more, will we be able to take advantage of this opportunity
to push it still wider?
AUR FOOTNOTE: Roman
Serbyn, is a leading and well known Canadian professor, scholar, researcher,
author (Universite du Quebec a Montreal). He is one of the world's
foremost authorities on the history of Soviet Ukraine from 1920 through 1939. He
is the editor with Bohdan Krawchenko of a book entitled "Famine in Ukraine
1932-1933" published by the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, University
of Alberta, Edmonton, 1986. He is the author of the book "The Famine of
1921-1923 [Ukraine] and the Canadian Press in Canada." The book was
published in Ukrainian by the Ukrainian Canadian Research and Documentation
Centre, Toronto, 1995.
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Promoting U.S.-Ukraine business &
investment relations since
1995.
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11
. EX-SOVIET
LEADER CRITICIZES UKRAINE FOR CALLING FAMINE GENOCIDE
Interfax, Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, June 4, 2008
MOSCOW
- The former Soviet president, Mikhail Gorbachev, has said that the
attempts of Ukrainian politicians to qualify the famine of the 1930s as the
genocide of Ukrainian people are politically motivated.
"I think there
are certain political accents here," Gorbachev said today at a news conference
held at the Interfax news agency. In particular, he emphasized that the famine
affected not only Ukraine but other Soviet regions, too.
"What was the
famine of the 1930s? It was on the south of Russia. I will tell you that 40 per
cent of population in my native village of Privolnoye (Stavropol Territory)
perished. Three of six children of my paternal grandfather died of hunger,"
Gorbachev said. He said that the famine was caused by severe draught and
collectivization.
The head of the Memorial society, Arseniy Roginskiy,
held a similar opinion. "Memorial's position is very simple. It was a series of
terrible crimes. But the concept of genocide seems to us somewhat inaccurate,"
Roginskiy
said.
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12
. UKRAINE IRKS RUSSIA WITH
PUSH TO MARK STALIN FAMINE AS GENOCIDE
By Daryna
Krasnolutska & Halia Pavliva, Bloomberg, Kyiv, Ukraine, New York, NY,
Fri, Jan 4, 2008
Maksym Kravets remembers watching hunger kill
his father, then his mother.
Kravets, who was 14 when famine struck Ukraine in 1932, says he
survived by eating a dog. About a third of the 1,000 people in his village,
Lozova, perished as Soviet leader Josef Stalin cut off food supplies to force
peasants onto collective farms.
"A special group of people was in the village taking away all the food
we had,'' says Kravets, now 89, sitting in his kitchen in Kamyanets-Podilsky,
300 kilometers (186 miles) from where he almost starved to death. "There were
cases when people ate their dead children and parents.''
The yearlong famine, which killed at least 7 million people, is now the
focus of books, exhibitions and documentaries marking the 75th anniversary.
Ukraine's government is asking the United Nations to recognize the disaster
as an act of genocide, worsening already frosty relations with Russia, which
says the famine resulted from drought.
Russian nationalists vandalized an exhibit at the Ukrainian embassy in
Moscow in November. While the Russian government didn't condone the attack, it
called Ukraine's depiction of the famine a "one-sided falsification of
history.''
"It's completely impossible to treat it as genocide,'' says Dmitry
Peskov, spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin. "What happened there
happened not only in Ukraine but in many parts of the former Soviet Union.''
STATE OF DENIAL
Ukraine's famine was kept out of official history until
1991, when the country of 47 million won independence. It is recognized as
genocide by countries including the U.S.
"Russian society is, broadly speaking, still in a state of denial about
the crimes of the communist past,'' says Robin Shepherd, a senior research
fellow at the Royal Institute of International Affairs at Chatham House in
London. Putin and his government see the drive to label the famine genocide as
``an insult to Russian pride.''
Ukraine didn't do much to put the famine on the historical map until
the pro-European Union President Viktor Yushchenko took power in the 2004 Orange
Revolution. Ukraine commemorated the victims for the first time two years ago.
Yushchenko now plans to make it an offence to deny the famine was an
act of genocide. Violators would be subject to as much as two years in jail and
a fine of 5,100 hryvnia ($1,020). The move would mirror Germany, where it's a
crime to deny the Holocaust.
POLITICAL BATTLE
Communist Party leader Petro Simonenko says Yuschenko is
"stirring up hatred'' as Ukrainian and ethnic Russian politicians battle for
control of the government.
Putin openly supported the pro-Russian candidate in the 2004
presidential election before the result was overturned as rigged by a Ukrainian
court. Russia is opposed to the policies of the Orange coalition now in
government, which is seeking closer ties to the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization and the EU.
The anniversary events started Nov. 24, when
thousands of people gathered in Kiev and on the main squares of other cities.
"The main killer was the totalitarian communist regime,'' Yushchenko
told the crowd in the capital. "Fear is at the root of today's political and
social problems.''
In 1929, Stalin decreed that all agricultural workers had to join
collective farms, bringing with them their livestock and tools. They were to
plant and harvest together, so that the state could ship food to industrial
areas. Some farmers resisted leaving their land, and many were sent to labor
camps. Those who remained risked death from starvation.
GRAIN
SEIZED
Across the Soviet Union, more than 10 million
people died from hunger during the collectivization drive, according to research
by historian Robert Conquest. The majority of the deaths were in Ukraine, the
second most populous republic in the Soviet Union and the largest grain producer
after Russia.
Stalin wrote in August 1932 to one of his politburo members expressing
concern that Ukraine wasn't complying and must be forced into submission. "If we
don't fix the situation in Ukraine immediately, we may lose Ukraine,'' he wrote.
The letter was published by Russia's Nezavisimaya Gazeta in 2000.
While the harvest was poor because of drought, as much as half of the
grain was shipped out, says Vasyl Marochko, head of the Center for Ukrainian
Genocide Studies in Kiev.
"The 1932 harvest was swept away completely,'' says Halyna Mendzyak,
who was 9 and lived in Mynkivtsi, western Ukraine. "When they put it in rail
wagons, an orchestra was playing with slogans like `Let's give all grain to our
state!'''
Kravets says peasants in his area refused five orders to collectivize
their farms in the years before the famine began. His parents finally went to
work on a state farm in 1932, leaving him alone in their house.
When two aunts came to his parents' home to check for survivors, they
found only his emaciated body. Kravets recalls hearing them say he wouldn't last
the night before they walked away, leaving the door ajar.
"A dog then entered and started to lick me, so I got up very slowly,
tied him to a bed with a towel and then took an axe and killed him,'' he says.
"I still can't understand where I got the energy. I was eating that dog for
several days.''
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13
. RUSSIA: 1930'S FAMINE
MAINLY IN SOVIET UKRAINE WAS NOT GENOCIDE
By
Steve Gutterman, Associated Press Writer, AP, Moscow, Russia, April 2, 2008
MOSCOW - The 1930s famine that killed millions of peasants, mainly in
Soviet Ukraine, should not be considered genocide, Russia's lawmakers said in a
resolution Wednesday.
Renowned writer and Soviet-era dissident Alexander Solzhenitsyn backed
the Kremlin line on the divisive issue, dismissing Ukrainian claims that the
famine was genocide as a "fable."
The 370-56 vote in Russia's lower parliament house and the rare comment
from the 89-year-old Solzhenitsyn were a pointed rejection of claims by
Ukrainian leaders that the Soviet authorities engineered the famine to target
Ukrainians.
They came amid Russian anger over the pro-Western Ukrainian
leadership's drive to join NATO, which will decide at a summit this week whether
to grant the nation a road map for membership.
Russia has opposed the Western alliance's eastward expansion and is
particularly concerned about potential membership for Ukraine, a large country
with far closer cultural and historical ties to Russia than any other that has
joined NATO.
Historians agree that the 1932-33 famine was engineered by Soviet
authorities under dictator Josef Stalin to force peasants to give up their
private plots of land and join collective farms.
Ukraine, with its rich farmlands, suffered the most. Authorities
confiscated grain from village after village and prohibited residents from
leaving, effectively condemning them to starvation.
Some are convinced the famine targeted Ukrainians as an ethnic group.
Others argue authorities set out to eradicate private landowners as a social
class and say the Soviet Union sought to pay for its rapid industrialization
with grain exports at the expense of starving millions of its own people.
"There is no historical proof that the famine was organized along
ethnic lines. Its victims were million of citizens of the Soviet Union,
representing different peoples and nationalities living largely in agricultural
areas of the country," the Russian State Duma resolution said.
Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko is leading a bid to gain
international recognition of the famine as an act of genocide.
Solzhenitsyn criticized that effort in a front-page comment in the
daily Izvestia, writing that the famine also affected Russia's neighboring Kuban
region.
"This provocateur's cry of 'genocide' began to germinate decades
later -- first secretly, in the moldy minds of chauvinists maliciously set
against (Russia), and now elevated to government circles of today's Ukraine," he
wrote.
Solzhenitsyn suggested the Ukrainian appeal might be supported by
Western governments for geopolitical purposes. "They have never understood our
history, all they need is a ready fable, even if it is an insane one," he
wrote.
In Ukraine on Tuesday to stress U.S. support for its leaders' NATO
aspirations, President Bush visited a memorial honoring famine victims along
with Yushchenko and their wives.
A document signed during Bush's visit said that "Ukraine and the United
States will closely cooperate to promote remembrance and increase public
awareness of the 1932-33 man-made Great Famine (Holodomor) in Ukraine, including
within the framework of the international organizations." Holodomor, or death by
hunger, is what Ukrainians call the famine.
The Duma warned the West to stay away from the issue. "This tragedy
does not have -- and cannot have -- any internationally recognized indications
of genocide and should not be used as a tool for modern political speculation,"
it said.
President Vladimir Putin's government has clashed with former Soviet
bloc nations over interpretations of 20th century events, accusing them of
seeking to rewrite history and cast Moscow as a culprit.
Yushchenko has said up to 10 million Ukrainians died of hunger in 1932
and 1933. Stanislav Kulchitsky, a respected Ukrainian historian, believes the
number is closer to 3.5 million.
Under Stalin, who ruled from 1922 until his death in 1953, some 20
million people are estimated to have been executed, imprisoned or deported to
other parts of the former Soviet Union under Stalin, and more than 10 million of
those are believed to have died. [Associated Press writer Mike Eckel contributed
to this report.]
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14
. VLAD AND THE
SPINMEISTER: THE ABC'S OF HOLODOMOR DENIAL
ANALYSIS & COMMENTARY: By Peter Borisow
Kyiv Post newspaper, Kyiv, Ukraine, July 16, 2008
The Ukrainian Weekly newspaper, Parsippany, NJ, Sunday, August 17,
2008
By 2003 the movement for Holodomor recognition has gathered enough steam to
draw serious attention from non-Ukrainian quarters. Walter Duranty's
Pulitzer was a major issue: Important exhibits and major conferences were held
from Columbia to UCLA.
Ukrainians were beginning to gain momentum and ambitions plans were laid
for 2008, the Holodomor's 75th anniversary. With few exceptions, the big
bang everyone expected for 2008 has turned out to be a whimper. The torch came
and went without notice; the conferences have been at significantly lesser
venues; there is no memorial in Kyiv or anywhere else. What
happened?
I submit that this year's failure to meet many Ukrainians' expectations and
promises is neither the result of Ukrainian incompetence nor the result of the
world's general lack of interest. I submit it is the result of a campaign
by those behind the Holodomor in the first place to dull, divert, diminish and
extinguish Ukrainian efforts.
I suggest the anti-Holodomor efforts may have been hatched in discussions
such as an exchange of fictional letters along the following lines. And,
of course, as they say, any resemblance to any person living or dead is purely
coincidental. However, if the shoe fits......... [Peter Borisow]
----------------------------------------
December, 2004
My Dear Dr. Spinmeister,
Last year we had a close call with this Holodomor business. These pesky
Ukrainians have started to get some serious attention and almost got our beloved
Duranty’s Pulitzer Prize revoked. We must make sure this momentum does not bring
serious consequences in 2008 when they will try to push even harder on their
75th “Anniversary.”
Can you imagine what would happen if these Ukrainians actually managed
to convince the world the Holodomor was Genocide? Even if it is all blamed on
the USSR and the Party, we are still the Successor State. When the USSR fell
apart, we took all the assets. Someone is bound to say we should take the
liabilities as well. And, look at me – I’m KGB, successor to the NKVD that did
the dirty work! Can you imagine Nuremburg trials for senior Party members?
We could even be held accountable in some crazy civilian court in the
USA or Europe! I’ll be damned if I’m going to send my petrodollars to some
Ukrainian Victims and Survivors’ Fund! We need to bring Ukraine back into the
Russian Empire, not finance its independence! Without Ukraine there is no Empire
anyway! What can we do to make sure this Holodomor stuff doesn’t mess up all our
futures?
Yours faithfully,
Vladimyr Volodymirovich
-------------------------------
Moscow
January, 2005
My Dear Vladimyr Volodymirovich,
We need not fret too much. This is a rather straightforward matter
which we can handle with existing resources. After all – History is written by
the Victors – and we, or I should say, our dear Comrade Stalin, did win the
Great War! If Hitler had won the war, who would have ever heard of the
Holocaust? The advantage is ours. Here’s what we need to do:
A frontal assault denying the genocide will NOT work. It may, in fact,
backfire as the core sentimentality of the public will always bond with the
image of starving babies. Rather than challenge that sentimentality, we must
redirect it – away from Ukrainians. This is best done by first diluting the
issues with small steps – like water constantly dripping on a rock; it will
eventually wear a hole in the rock and allow us to crack it. It will be death to
the Holodomor by a thousand little cuts.
Holodomor Dilution is prerequisite to Holodomor Denial. It starts with
questioning the basic facts. When enough doubts are raised about the details, we
can put it all to rest.
1) Challenge the numbers. Let them count the sculls! It’s a fool’s
errand as the numbers can not be proven mathematically for any genocide. The
nature of the beast is such that it destroys its own evidence. We’ve had 75
years to “correct” the records. We can debate any number! Whatever the number,
we will water it down. The more times we water it down, the less credibility
they will have. For us, this is a perfect debate.
2) Challenge the victims. We must claim this was at a time of great
social upheaval. We were making history’s greatest omelet! Of course, we broke
eggs! And, we suffered as much as these Ukrainians did, maybe more! Talk about
Kuban – lots of victims there and it’s in Russia!! Who will know they were
almost all Ukrainians? And, if the Ukrainians say that, deny, deny, deny!
Insist this was Russia and they were Russians! Remember, after we killed
off the Ukrainians, we repopulated entire regions of Eastern and Central Ukraine
with our own loyal Russians. Point to the children of these Russian brothers
still living in Ukraine. Proclaim loudly "they are the real Ukrainians!"
Complain how they suffer to this day under Ukrainian rule!
3) Challenge the “genocide.” Demand they prove it technically beyond a
shadow of a doubt. Debate the details of that UN definition. The more we debate
the details, the more we can wrap them up in their own underwear! Keep talking
about collectivization. Keep talking about tragic errors by bureaucrats,
incompetent administrators, bad commissars – anything but the “G” word.
4) Always talk about the “Famine” – Even better, the “Great Famine.”
Keep talking about Russian and Soviet victims of a whole series of “famines.”
Talk about “famine” in Kazakhstan (who will care it was a year later and 5,000
miles away?)
Surround Holodomor with other “famines,” other “human tragedies.” When
people hear the word “famine,” they think of drought and locust, not genocide.
They think Ethiopia, not Auschwitz. For us, “artificial famine” and “famine
genocide” are wonderfully confusing terms. Leave it to the Ukrainians to give us
some of our best weapons against them!
5) Join in, cosponsor, co-opt resolutions at the United Nations and
other international bodies, civic organizations, etc., to remember the events in
Ukraine as a “tragedy,” always insisting on watering down with other
nationalities. Always make sure the “G” word is never used. We all know once a
mealy mouthed resolution is passed, it is virtually impossible to change it
later. No one likes to redo old business. Once it’s done, it’s done. The
Ukrainians will be so eager to get something, even anything, done they will go
along. Later, we will ram it down their throats.
6) We have considerable weight in international forums, even in the
U.S. Congress, especially with the lobbyists we’ve hired with our newly found
oil wealth. We must use this to make sure no one offends the Great Russian
People. Having suffered themselves in the Great War and the “Great Famine
Tragedy,” the Great Russian People are sympathetic to All its victims. Let’s get
that sympathy working for us.
7) Invite (or challenge) them to “scholarly” and “scientific”
conferences of “experts.” We still have lots of our old fellow travelers (or
their progeny) in influential places, especially in Western universities and
“think tanks” (see, I told you that would be a good investment!) They will keep
these Ukrainians debating how many devils can dance on the head of a pin until
doomsday! We don’t need to prove anything. As long as we keep them debating,
they have proven nothing!
8) These Ukrainians are such polite little lambs, like wide-eyed little
children, so eager to prove their case. Let’s just hope no one tells them some
things are simply not debatable. The Jewish community would never allow Alfred
R. Butz or exNazis to speak about the Holocaust! But Ukrainians will allow any
Communist or Ukrainian hating Holodomor denier a forum – Even Us!
9) Co-opt some of their “experts” and “scholars.” This is a lot easier
than most people think. Start now by building relationships, especially with
those in second tier universities out in the provinces. Tell them they are
underappreciated geniuses. Invite them to speak at conferences.
They all have unpublished manuscripts. Tell them you will get their books
published; you will get them tenure; even that coveted Chairman of the
Department position. You will get the world to finally appreciate their real
genius!
Then, here’s the pitch – “Gee, there’s just one problem. It’s this
Holodomor bit. You’re just too radical on it and people aren’t comfortable with
radical scholars. Yet, your work is such genius – maybe if you’d just tone down
that Holodomor stuff a little – maybe use a more ‘realistic’ number? And, at the
end of the day, are you that absolutely positive it was genocide? I mean, were
you there? It was so long ago, who can really prove it?”
Before you know it they’ll be meow-meowing any tune you suggest. And,
others will follow. And, here’s the best part – once they’re done, you’ll never
have to publish any of their crap anyway!
10) Waste their resources on little things while blocking serious
efforts. In Kyiv, there must be No Holodomor Memorial complex by 2008. Let them
talk about monuments, but remember to make sure nothing ever stands taller than
our Titanium Queen.
There must be no major Ukrainian movie on Holodomor. You never know, it
might just catch on. Look what Anne Frank did for the Holocaust! We can’t have
anything like that! There must be Nothing that can really catch the imagination
of the world.
We have enough agents of influence in Ukraine and in the Diaspora to
channel this. In Ukraine, make sure there’s no State funding and keep reminding
their Oligarchs that WE are their business partners. Keep them busy chasing
their own tails within their own little circles.
In the Diaspora, let them waste their time and money on chasing monuments
no one will see anyway. Let them sing in the showers! Never let them near a
stage. Make sure nothing happens that can impact on the real world.
11) Use our influence on media in Ukraine to block out news and
programs about the Holodomor. Counterprogram — put Holodomor stuff on little
watched channels, at odd times in the middle of the night, etc.
Start complaining this Holodomor stuff is getting wearisome, that it’s
anti-Russian propaganda by fascists, traitors, enemies, etc. “Enough already
with this Holodomor stuff – this is starting to sound like a broken record! It’s
all nonsense anyway!”
12) Use our influence on media in the West to block out news and
programs about the Holodomor. Counterprogram with stuff on other genocides. Call
for more programming on the Holocaust – a “real” genocide! Pressure the
television and news executives that this Holodomor stuff is not proven, that
it’s anti-Russian propaganda, hate mongering legends.
Promote stories of anti-Semitism in Ukraine instead. Most U.S television is
owned by corporations. Remind them of Russian wealth and influence, the
importance of the Russian market for their programs and movies. Do they really
want to insult all these innocent people, offend this huge emerging market?
13) Drag out those documents we forged in the 50s with the East Germans
about collaboration between Ukrainians and Germans during the war – the stories
we invented about how they turned our Jewish friends over to the Nazis. Keep
talking about Ukrainian Nazi collaborators, over and over. We’ve been telling
those lies for so long now that even I am starting to believe them!
No one will know the opposite is true, that the Ukrainians issued orders to
protect Jewish people from the Nazi! Even if the Ukrainians figure out our
documents are forged lies, by the time they get their act together to tell the
world about it, the debate will be over. What a brilliant idea that was! What a
great way to shift blame from the perpetrators to the victims!
14) Remember that kid’s finger your grandfather cut off and tossed into
the sausage machine? It became more ubiquitous than Kilroy! Remember the
photographs of “cannibals” they staged for the press? Always talk about
cannibalism. How can cannibals be “victims” of anything? Who would ever feel
sorry for a cannibal? The more we talk about cannibalism, the less sympathy they
get from all those dead babies. Always attack the victims, make them the guilty
ones!
15) Let’s find some naive Ukrainian pups (or some of our own) out there
to promote a “Truth and Reconciliation Commission” on Holodomor. This will
channel Ukrainian energies into a dead end. They will talk their hearts out into
a void no one will remember. We will control the “genocide” bit and focus on
little individual tragedies.
The world doesn’t really want to deal with genocide any more. After
Cambodia, Rwanda, Darfur, the sticker shock of genocide is gone. This will put
it all into an easy little box no one will have to look into anymore. For us, it
will be contained, harmless and over. The world will never miss it.
Look at South Africa – all “Truth and Reconciliation” did was white
wash the guilty in exchange for “confessions.” Can you imagine if Nuremburg had
been a “Truth and Reconciliation Commission”? Why, we’d be having drinks on the
terrace with old Adolf at his villa in Versailles! I can live with that!!
So, here we have it – It wasn’t that many; we all suffered; it wasn’t
genocide; no one is really sure what happened – they can’t even agree among
themselves! Waste their time and resources. Frustrate their best efforts.
They’re such bad people any way, maybe they even did it to themselves!
If need be, let’s embrace them to help them “find the truth.” We suffered
too! Let’s work together, let’s reconcile and all live together happily ever
after. Let’s put a positive future on all this. Enough of the negative
past!!
We have the best propaganda machine in the world. We sold “Communism”
to half the planet! Only that damned Coca-Cola has done better! Ukrainians
aren’t like Jews or Armenians. Those people will never forget and will never let
anyone else forget. In time, Ukrainians will get over it. They don’t really like
these unpleasant things anyway.
They really will be happiest back in the Russian Empire. It’s always been
their place. They need to feel the master’s hand on their leash as it tightens
around their necks! And, if they’re obedient, we will reward them, just like in
the old days!
Trust me. We can do this.
Your faithful servant,
Herman V. Spinmeister et al
New York, Londongrad and St.
Leningrad
-----------------------------------------------
FOOTNOTE: Peter Borisow is president of the
Hollywood Trident Foundation and a member of the board of directors of the
Center for U.S. Ukrainian Relations. Borisow's business is film finance risk
management. He travels frequently to Ukraine to advise the film sector as well
as to support Ukrainian identify and independence. His interest in
Holodomor came from his parents, both of whom were Holodomor survivors. He
says his mantra is straightforward: "Holodomor - Genocide - 10 million killed."
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15. HOLODOMOR: REFLECTIONS ON THE GREAT FAMINE OF
1932-1933 IN SOVIET UKRAINE
New book edited by Lubomyr Luciuk: A
series of essays by leading scholars and
journalists on the causes and consequences of
the Great Famine of 1932-33 in Soviet Ukraine.
Morgan
Williams, Publisher and Editor, Action Ukraine Report (AUR)
Washington, D.C., Sunday, September 21, 2008
WASHINGTON, D.C.
- Lubomyr Luciuk, a leading scholar, researcher, analyst, and
author, who is professor of political geography at The Royal Military
College of Canada in Kingston, has edited a new book entitled "Holodomor:
Reflections on the Great Famine of 1932-1933 in Soviet Ukraine." The book is a
series of essays by leading scholars and journalists on the causes and
consequences of the Great Famine of 1932-33 in Soviet Ukraine.
The anticipated publication date is October 31, 2008. Information about
ordering the new book edited by Professor Luciuk:
Please send me ___
copy(ies) of "Holodomor: Reflections on the Great Famine of 1932-1933 in Soviet
Ukraine" (Kashtan Press, 2008) at $45 per copy, plus $10 Shipping and Handling.
The anticipated publication date is 31 October 2008. I enclose a cheque or money
order made payable to "The Kashtan Press" in the amount of
$_________.
Name (please print), Address, Street, City, State/Province,
Country, Postal Code/Zip Code; Telephone Number. Please mail this completed
form to: The Kashtan Press, 849 Wartman Avenue, Kingston, Ontario, Canada, K7M
2Y6. Thank you for your order.
AUR FOOTNOTE:
Lubomyr Luciuk is the editor of the book "Not Worthy, Walter Duranty's
Pulitzer Prize and The New York Times," published for the Ukrainian Canadian
Civil Liberties Association by The Kashtan Press in 2004.
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16
. HOLODOMOR: THE UKRAINIAN
GENOCIDE 1932-1933
New issue of the Canadian American Slavic
Studies Journal, Fall 2008
Morgan Williams, Publisher and Editor, Action Ukraine Report (AUR)
Washington, D.C., Sunday, September 21, 2008
WASHINGTON, D.C.-
Charles Schlacks, Jr., publisher, Canadian America Slavic Studies journal,
is preparing a special new issue of the journal, Vol. 42, No. 3, Fall 2008,
in honor of the 75th commemoration of the Ukrainian genocide of 1932-1933. The
new edition is entitled "Holodomor: The Ukrainian Genocide,
1932-1933."
The publication will contain articles and documents by scholars
in Ukraine, Poland, Australia, Canada and the USA. The guest editor is Roman
Serbyn, a leading and well known Canadian professor, scholar, researcher, author
(Universite du Quebec a Montreal). Publication date is scheduled for
mid-October, 2008.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: CANADIAN
AMERICAN SLAVIC STUDIES JOURNAL, FALL 2008
Yurij Shapoval. "Foreign Diplomats on the Famine in Ukraine";
Heorhii
Papakin. "'Blacklists' as a Tool of the Soviet Genocide in Ukraine";
Hennadii
Yefimenko. "The Soviet Nationalities Policy Change of 1933, or Why 'Ukrainian
Nationalism' Became the Main Threat to Stalin in Ukraine";
Mykola Riabchuk. A
review article about David Marples. Heroes and Villains: Creating National
History in Ukraine (2007);
Rafael Lemkin. "Soviet Genocide in Ukraine" (with
an introduction by Roman Serbyn);
Robert Kusnierz. "The Question of the Great
Famine in Ukraine of 1932-1933 in Polish Diplomatic and Intelligence
Reports";
Siriol Colley. "A Curtain of Silence: An Essay of
Comparison";
Lesa Morgan. An article about Western Australian studies of
memories of people in Ukraine in the 1930s;
Cheryl Madden. An article about
disease in Ukraine in the 1930s;
Peter Borisow. Interviews of Ukrainians who
lived in Ukraine in the 1930s, and stills from his documentary film about
Kravchenko.
Morgan Williams. Holodomor: Through The Eyes Of Ukrainian
Artists;
Some documents with translations of leaders' letters and orders of
1932-1933 (Stalin, Kaganovich, Molotov).
Some of articles were translated by
Marta Olynyk in Montreal.
The Guest Editor is Roman Serbyn, Universite du
Quebec a Montreal.
TO ORDER THE NEW EDITION OF THE JOURNAL:
Copies of this special "Holodomor" edition of the Canadian American
Slavic Studies Journal (Fall, 2008) are available for purchase by the
general public.
Please send in your order as soon as possible as the number ordered in
advance will determine the number to be published.
The price is $20.00 each plus $10 shipping and handling (U.S.
dollars). Appropriate additional shipping costs should be added for
multiple orders. Orders by post should be sent to Charles Schlacks, P.O.
Box 1256, Idyllwild, CA 92549-1256, USA. Orders can be sent by e-mail.
They should be sent to Charles Schlacks at
Schlacks.Slavic@Greencafe.com. Journal
will be available in mid-October, 2008. If you have any questions
please contact Charles Schlacks.
AUR FOOTNOTE: The
Fall 2003 edition of the Canadian American Slavic Studies, published by Charles
Schlacks, was also a special edition entitled, "Holodmor, The Ukrainian Genocide
1932-1933.
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17
. UKRAINE: NEW BOOK BY THE
LATE NOTED HISTORIAN JAMES MACE
Collection of scholarly and journalistic
works entitled "Your Dead Choose Me"
By Olha Risheltylova, The Day Weekly Digest, Kyiv, Ukraine,
Tue, Sep 16, 2008
LVIV - At the ceremony to launch the book James
Mace: "Your Dead Chose Me," held during the 15th Lviv Forum of Publishers, the
American scholar’s widow, Natalia Dziubenko-Mace, said her husband was eager to
publish this book in Ukraine.
“Unfortunately, I am the one who is launching it, and he is gone. But I
think this is James’s second arrival in Ukraine – through these books, his work,
his colleagues, through the fact that he has finally reached your hearts and
minds.”
The Lviv launch is the first in a series taking place in many cities of
Ukraine, timed to coincide with the 75th anniversary of the 1932-1933 Holodomor.
The Day has already reported that the 670-page book is the first collection
of scholarly and journalistic works about the Holodomor and lingering
sociopolitical issues by James Mace, the renowned US academic and researcher of
the Ukrainian Holodomor. According to Mace’s widow, however, this is not a
complete collection of the author’s immense legacy.
The Day is planning to have the book translated into several languages,
and government agencies and NGOs in every region of Ukraine have already
placed orders for it.
During the launch it was correctly noted that publications about the
Holodomor are no longer a novelty. The situation was different in the 1990s,
when few people wanted to know about the Great Famine. In his articles for The
Day, Mace was the first to blaze a trail with his research on this tragic page
in Ukraine’s history.
Mace was well known in Lviv, the city where his widow was born and
which the couple frequently visited. Many of Mace’s colleagues from this western
Ukrainian city attended the launch.
Among them was Oleh Romanchuk, the writer and editor of the journal
Universum, the well-known Lviv entrepreneur Oleksandr Dziubenko, the writers
Yaroslav Pavliuk, Yurii Hurhula, and Vitalii Protsyk, who is researching the
period of Soviet repressions.
Stanislav KULCHYTSKY, historian and author
of the book:
“As an historian, James approached
research problems from a historical viewpoint. This was interesting and
convincing. This book now contains his total legacy. The publication was funded
by The Day, which sells these books but, more often than not, gives them away to
interested organizations. I hope this book comes out in English.
“In his report on the Holodomor to the US Congress, Mace said, ‘The use
of food as a political weapon by despotic regimes is not a thing of the past.’
When he was trying to persuade the world to recognize the Holodomor, he meant
that this was a lesson for Ukraine. This lesson is also useful for Russia,
Venezuela, and other countries.
Unfortunately, the 4th session of the UN General Assembly postponed the
question of the Ukrainian Holodomor for one year. And although there will be no
round date to time this question to, we will do our utmost to tell the world
about what happened in Ukraine in the winter of 1932-1933. We will be able to do
so thanks to this collection of political articles that James Mace contributed
to The Day.”
Petro KRALIUK, professor and pro-rector,
National University of Ostroh Academy:
“We have a lot of
phony Heroes of Ukraine now, while the man who is truly a hero of Ukrai