Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 27 – Russian commentators
spend a great deal of time denouncing Ukrainians for remembering the Holodomor,
but they and the Russian people as a whole fail to remember the horrific terror
famine Stalin used as part of his war against the peasantry, a battle that cost
millions of lives.
In a commentary on the day that
Ukrainians and people of good will around the world remember the Holodomor in
Ukraine, Russian commentator Yevgeny Ikhlov asks “why don’t people in Russia
remember the millions of victims of Stalin’s war against the peasantry?” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=583A88CB71A3E).
“I understand why for Ukrainians
this day [of memory] is holy” because it is the same reason “why the Poles cannot
forget the Katyn massacres,” Ikhlov says.
But “I cannot understand by in
post-August [1991] Russia which frequently has declared the Orthodox Russian
(all three Slavic peoples[ peasantry the salt of the earth, people do not
recall at all the millions of victims of Stalin’s war with the peasantry.”
And Ikhlov continues, “I do not
understand why the large number of Cossack and militant Orthodox organizations
do not promote this as a public initiative.” Choosing
just the right day for a memorial may be difficult, but given that “millions
died,” one could select “any day at all.”
This difference between the
reactions of Ukrainians and those of Russians to the horrors of Stalin’s war
against the peasantry, an action that in fact became “a real terrorist ‘revolution
from above,’” reflect the fact that Ukrainians are a European nation while the
Russians remain idolators of state criminals like Stalin who are ready to be “building
material for the empire.”
One aspect of this Russian failure
to remember the victims in this case is the differences between the famines in
tsarist times and those organized by the Soviet state later, the Russian
commentator says. The first, which were not organized, hit the poorest elements
hardest and drove them out of the country.
The latter were directed “at the
most economically strong and psychologically independent social groups” of the population,
groups like the Cossacks, the Kazakhs and the Ukrainians, that Stalin had
particular reason to hate because of the threat they posed to his totalitarian
project.
The reason that Stalin’s famine
killed so many ethnic Ukrainians is because “from the time of the Civil War,
Stalin hated the independent Ukrainian peasants who were very skeptical about
the Reds,” an attitude he extended to the Cossacks in the North Caucasus and to
the nomads in Kazakhstan.
Thus is it important to remember,
Ikhlov continues, that “Bolshevik, Stalinist and Andropovite repressions
destroyed both the population of the glorious pre-Soviet culture and all the
vital elements in Russian civilization just as the socio-cultural groups most
valuable for the development of the country.”
At a “homological” level, the
commentator concludes, Putin’s repressions fit into the same pattern: they are
driving out the most energetic and independent people and thus leaving Russia
once again without those it needs to develop. Perhaps, he implies, that is why
few now want to talk about Stalin’s terror famine against Russian peasants.
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