Publius Pundit
Articles Archive

« Previous · Home · Next »

Annals of Neo-Soviet "Education" -- Denying Holodomor

Filed under: Eastern Europe

5329-766166.jpg

It isn't only fanatical extremist rulers like Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran who deny the holocausts of World War II. G-8 member Russia is doing exactly the same thing.

A May 15th story in the Moscow Times about the repugnant parade of Soviet military hardware through Red Square a few days earlier stated:

After the parade, Medvedev hosted a champagne reception at the Kremlin for veterans. Medvedev has also sent out congratulatory telegrams to the leaders of other former Soviet republics. In his note to Ukrainian President Victor Yushchenko, Medvedev warned him against any attempt to justify the Nazi crimes and "question the liberating mission of the Soviet Army," the Kremlin said. Many in Ukraine sided with Nazi Germany during the war, and Ukrainian veterans who fought against the Soviets have been recognized and praised under Yushchenko. Putin, for his part, sent out congratulations to the prime ministers of the same countries, and in his telegram to Tbilisi he wished peace and well-being to the Georgian people. Relations with Georgia recently sank to a new low after Moscow increased the number of peacekeepers in Georgia's breakaway republic of Abkhazia, sparking fears of an armed conflict.
Andrei Richter, an Associate Professor at the School of Journalism of Moscow State University, responded in a letter to the editor as follows:
When I read this story, I was reminded of a recent trip to Kiev. While I was there, I picked up a copy of Kyiv This Month magazine only to be stunned by its column titled "History In Brief," which read: "1944 -- Soviet army occupies Ukraine again. In WWII, both German and Soviet armies were responsible for some 7 to 8 million deaths." When I wrote the editor of this magazine, I received a reply referring me to another web page from where this phrase was copied, almost word-for-word. To my surprise, the web page was taken from the official site of the CIA. I wonder what would happen if a Russian official web site wrote about, for example, French history something like this: "1944 -- U.S.-British army invaded Normandy. In WWII both German and Allied troops were responsible for some 600,000 French deaths." Wouldn't that cause uproar in the West? Why do our wartime allies believe they can twist history as they like?
Interestingly, Professor Richter had no interest in asking why Russians themselves believe they can twist their own history as they like. Last week, just for instance, La Russophobe published Paul Goble's report on yet more evidence of the Kremlin's efforts to whitewash Russia's litany of outrages and glorify the Soviet past. Just click here to see a whole lot more such evidence.

Equally interesting, Professor Richter likewise didn't seem to notice the irony embodied in calling himself a "professor of journalism" in a country that simply doesn't know the meaning of the word. He works for a university that is run by the Kremlin that destroyed Anna Politkovskaya and a whole host of other journalists and has seized control of every major publishing forum in the country. Neither Russian history books nor Russian newspapers or television give Russians the remotest clue about the actual facts of history, either their own or anybody else's, and yet so many Russians, like this poor sap, arrogantly imagine they have the right to sit in judgment based on the ridiculous falsehoods they've been fed since birth.

But back to the point: Which is what, exactly? As we understand it, Professor Richter (who obviously finds expressly himself clearly in writing quite challenging) is saying that he once read in a Ukrainian magazine that Russians killed 7-8 million Ukrainians during the World War II period, roughly as many as the Germans killed when they invaded, and claims this is false. Apparently, that's not what Russian history books say, and according to him there's no chance they could be wrong. Russians, in other words, know the history of Ukraine better than Ukrainians do. Moreover, he believes that this magazine is engaged in some sort of conspiracy with the CIA to foist false information about Russia onto Ukrainians -- apparently, he thinks this is the reason that many Ukrainians hate Russians and want independence from them, something that he apparently thinks is totally unjustified.

But note well, dear reader, that Professor Richter makes no specific mention of the source of his information that these murders did not occur, though he has no problem citing with specificity the sources that outrage him with their alleged CIA propaganda. Is he suggesting that Russians would never murder their allies? Is it just a myth too, then, that after liberating Poland Russia murdered thousands of Polish military officers, in cold blood, in the dark corners of the Katyn forest? Is it also a rude foreign plot that Russians murder Russians, that the dictator Josef Stalin slaughtered at least 20 million of them in his gulag archipelago? Is Alexander Solzhenitsyn's epic text by that name in reality just a work of fiction?

Apparently, Professor Richter believes that the Ukrainian holocaust called Holodomor (known as the "man-made famine") is also just a frivolous fairytale. Apparently, it makes no difference what the Ukrainians say about it, because they're just dupes of the CIA; nobody in Russia, of course, has been duped by the KGB, and certainly not Professor Richter Moreover, reports that Russian soldiers murdered thousands of political prisoners in their jail cells are similarly based on nothing but CIA lies, as are any claims about political purges of the Ukrainian government by Stalin, such as this one:

Ukraine was among the worst-hit areas. Unlike the purges of 1933, during which opponents of collectivization and Ukrainizers had been purged, in 1937 Stalin decided to liquidate the entire leadership of the Ukrainian Soviet government and the CPU. […] By June 1938 the top seventeen ministers of the Ukrainian Soviet government were arrested and executed. The prime minister, Liubchenko, committed suicide. Almost the entire Central Committee and Politburo of Ukraine perished. An estimated 37% of the Communist party members in Ukraine - about 170,000 people - were purged. In the words of Nikita Khrushchev, Moscow's new viceroy in Kiev, the Ukrainian party "had been purged spotless."
And reports of similar activity by Russian soldiers in other countries are just as bogus. If Canadian scholars make such allegations, they too are simply stooges of the CIA.

Professor Richter might like to actually go to Ukraine some day, and visit The Museum of the Soviet Occupation in Kiev. As an article in Izvestia pointed out, the net impact of the museum's exhibits is basically to show that Ukraine was better off under the horror of Nazi rule than under the domination of the Russians. The Russian reporter for Izvestia bristles when the Ukrainians dare to blame the atrocities on "Moscow" rather than "Communism" as if Russians were as much victims as Ukrainians -- but if that is so, where are Russia's memorials to the outrages committed by "Communism" in Ukraine? Look hard, you will find none. Apparently, it has never occurred to Professor Richter that Ukrainians might have exactly the same attitude of outrage towards Russia that he (and many other Russians) has towards the West because Russia treats Ukraine with just as rudely as he perceives Russia to be treated by the West.

For the record, though we may be hapless dupes of the CIA, we'd like to note our understanding, widely documented by Western scholarship, that there was active underground resistance to the Soviet occupation of Ukraine until the early 1950s when it was finally liquidated by the Stalin dictatorship. Things were so bad in Ukraine just before the Nazi's invaded, as we understand it, that many Ukrainians actually welcomed and assisted the Nazi invasion.

In conclusion, we can only say that that we believe Professor Richter's pathologically malignant and insane remarks are indicative of the neo-Soviet character of the Russian state today. The country is run by a KGB dictator and its leading institutions of higher education are dominated by apes like Richter. What can be expected from such a situation other that exactly the same kind of collapse that crippled the USSR?

Come to think of it, though, perhaps we went to far with that remark about apes. It's an unforgivable insult, and we feel we should apologize. To the apes.

Social Bookmarking:
Del.icio.us this del.icio.us | digg this digg | Add to Technorati technorati | StumbleUpon Toolbar stumble upon | Furl this furl | Reddit this reddit

Comments


victor says:

My father was born south of Kiev in 1922. My grandparents were Russian who moved to the Ukraine during the Revolution (Ukraine has always had a sizeable Russian community). Even though he was young, his memories of that horrible winter are very vivid. One thing that he is very sure of is that the famine did not discriminate on who was Ukrainian or Russian. Many Russians also starved to death during this period. The ones who did not suffer were members of the Communist Party (Ukrainian and Russian) .... in particular those who were loyal to Joseph Stalin.

As to the question on why there are no memorials for all the Russians who also starved during this famine .... this is a problem that I have also noticed in Russia itself. There are very few if any memorials to the tens of millions of Russians who died at the hands of the Communist Party. Every Russian knows what the Communists did in the 20th century.... but to address this past and the suffering that it produced in a public forum will .... in my opinion ..... unfortunately take a very long time.


elmer says:

I have a friend, a Ukrainian friend, born and raised in Ukraine, who managed to survive the Holodomor. By hook and by crook, his father managed to save an entire small village. Today, that village no longer exists - it is long gone.

Millions of Ukrainians were not lucky enough to survive the Holodomor.

During WWII, this same friend was captured and taken into forced labor by the Nazis. He was forced to work in Germany, where the conditions were brutal. He managed to survive.

A few years ago, I helped him with some paperwork involved in getting a small amount of reparations from Germany for his forced labor.

Germany today is a thriving, democratic country, which has come to terms with its past.

Not so Russia.

During WWII, in Ukraine, there were many Ukrainians who were caught between a rock and a hard place, between Scylla and Charybdis.

They were caught between the rooskie sovoks, and the Nazis. All they wanted was a free, sovereign and independent Ukraine.

They did not want the fascist soviets in Ukraine, nor did they want the Nazis. I had uncles who fought for Ukraine in the Ukrainian army - they were not fighting for the Nazis, and they certainly weren't fighting for the russian soviet fascists - they were fighting for Ukraine.

And, today, finally, Ukraine is a free, sovereign, independent and democratic country.

Russian government has always been brutal to people. Why Russians tolerate is a mystery to me. During WWII, Stalin, under his "no step backward" policy, posted snipers behind his own troops - just in case sovok troops tried to turn around.

So soviet troops had to face not only the Nazis, but also their own snipers.

This is documented in books such as "The Whisperers," by Orlando Figes, and in other documents.

One can only hope that Russians finally come to terms with their brutal history.


blackminorca says:

Russians were not targeted by the Kremlin as can be seen in this map. The death zone ends at the Russian border.

http://www.faminegenocide.com/resources/famine_map.html

Also, Stalin executed the Ukrainian Communist leaders and replaced them with Russians - something that Moscow had been doing for some time in its quest for ethnic cleansing.

This is the principal reason that Russian speakers exist in Ukraine.


Oleksander says:

Only 3 million people died.

Ukraine wasn't entirely ethnic ukrainians at the time, russians died to.

You go to kiev recently? Posters up call russians moscals, an ethnic slur.

This is just lies and hate mongering! It is sad day when tragedy like this is corrupted for political gain.


Russian Bear says:

blackminorca says:

The death zone ends at the Russian border.


Lies!

First, it has not been proven the map is correct.

Second, could you really read the map accurate?

Look, at thye map:

The Proscurov (Chmelnytski) region which is the West Ukraine with no Russian population at all, survived the Famine better than many Russian populated areas.
Chernihiv, Vinytsa, regions are populated by pure Ukrainians and they had mortality rate of 1-14.9%, same like Central Russia, Belorussia and even lesser than the Russian populated Volga region, Stavropol and Rostov(15-19%).
Lugansk, Kharkiv, Nikolayev, Kherson -all these regions had a significant number of Russian population and they were hit hard too.
The Crimea was a part of Russia, not of the Ukraine at that time(even now Russians consist 60% of the Crimea population), but was hit by the famine as hard, as the Kiev region.

So, to say that Hlodomor was an act of ethnic genocide is a groundless lie. It was a famine, cased by the policy of collectivization and it hit many other regions regardless of the ethnicity of the population


Post a comment


(will not be published)



Remember Me?

(you may use HTML tags for style)




TrackBack

TrackBack URL: http://publiuspundit.com/mt/contages.cgi/801