Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 23 – Not all, but “the
overwhelming majority of Germans sincerely believed” what Hitler said, just as
not all but the overwhelming majority of Russians sincerely believe what
Vladimir Putin says, according to Semyon Gluzman. But when the Kremlin leader
falls, most Russians will say as the Germans did in 1945: “’We didn’t know;
they deceived us.’”
In an interview with Tatyana
Selezneva of Kyiv’s “Focus” journal, the psychiatrist who investigated the
political use of psychiatry against General Petro Grigorenko and who spent time
in the GULAG as a result, says that despite his fears about Russia, he remains
an optimist about the future of Ukraine as a European country (focus.ua/society/326571/).
Gluzman says that the foundation of
that optimism laid by his experience in the Soviet camps. “On the order of 40 percent of the dissidents
in them, young people who said that the king has no clothes were Ukrainians.
Philologists, historians, people with independent thought” like Svetlichny,
Dzyuba, and Stus, all from Eastern Ukraine.
“There weren’t any Belarusians or
Kygyz or Uzbeks,” he continues. And that speaks to the existence of “the ferment
of resistance” within Ukrainian society that meant that Yanukovich could not
become a dictator and that the Maidan was inevitable. That does not mean that there aren’t
problems, but there is hope.
Moreover, “in Ukraine,” Gluzman
says, “civil society is the basis of the state. Hundreds of thousands, even
millions of people, each in his or her own way, took part in the protests of
2013-2014 because it turned out that this people deserved another leadership,”
that they wanted to be “part of a normal European nation” and were ready to
sacrifice for that.
The clearest evidence of this, he
argues, is that “when [he or anyone else] criticizes the Ukrainian government,
[they] understand that this is not dangerous.” Unfortunately, it is still
dangerous to criticize one of the oligarchs, but that one can criticize the
government freely is real progress, especially in comparison with the Soviet
past and the Russian present.
Ukrainians do not display any signs of mass
psychosis, Gluzman says. “Concern and fear is growing, but this is a normal reaction
to an abnormal situation.” Many now are far too quick to suggest that someone
or other is mentally ill when in fact they are quite normal and are acting
either out of fear or from evil intentions.
“A significant part of the Russian
intelligentsia,” he suggests, knows the truth but is not speaking it out of
fear. They will thus be in a position to help Russia overcome the Putin period
after Putin is gone. And Putin is not mad as some suggest but rather a limited
man who “has not read or thought much” in the course of his life. He fully
understands the norms he is violating.
Despite their reputation, most
Soviet and Russian secret policemen are “indifferent bureaucrats who understand
everything very well indeed. There are very few sadistically inclined among
them.” Those around him will be the first to say they were deceived or acted
out of fear, but such claims must be rejected in their case just as they were
at Nuremberg.
Gluzman traces his current
understanding to his upbringing and his own work. His father was a member of the communist
party from 1924, “hated Soviet power but was deathly afraid of it.” He told his
son that before World War II, many Jews had been part of state security, and
that was the beginning of Gluzman’s own odyssey.
He decided he wanted to be a
psychiatrist and at the end of his training, he learned from the Voice of
America or Radio Liberty that the Soviet psychiatrist who used his field to
punish dissidents was Daniil Romanovich Lunts, a Jew like himself. And he concluded that “if Lunts is the chief
executioner, how can a Gluzman stay silent?”
When he began to collect information
about this horrific abuse, Gluzman says, he “became convinced that Lunts wasn’t
an ideologue or a judge.” He was simply someone who was following orders from
those above him. But that didn’t make the situation better; it only meant that
the problem was broader and more systemic.
Eventually he took up the case of
Petro Grigorenko, the Ukrainian general who took up the cause of the Crimean
Tatars and then was subjected to the punitive use of Soviet psychiatry as a
result. And that became the basis of his
resistance to the Soviets in the camps and his fight for a better society in
Ukraine.
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