Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 26 – The evolution
in official Russian treatment of Stalin continues. He is no longer a tyrant nor
is he an effective manager who may have occasionally exceeded the bounds of the
acceptable. Now, the late Soviet dictator is being refashioned into a great leader
without modification who is unjustly attacked by the opponents of Russia.
An indication of this latest shift
came on Friday night during Roman Babayan’s talk show on Russian central
television which was broadcast under the title “1927: Remembering Everything” (youtube.com/watch?v=SfYUwaABXhU
and reviewed by Irina Pavlova at ivpavlova.blogspot.com/2017/03/1937.html#more).
As the US-based Russian historian
points out, the Moscow television program was timed to coincide with the 80th
anniversary of the February-March 1937 plenum of the Bolshevik Party’s Central
Committee, an event which “is typically considered as the beginning of the
Great Terror.”
Babayan’s show was “shocking,”
Pavlova continues, because it shows that despite all the available
documentation about what happened in the late 1930s, Russians “know practically
nothing about it” and are prepared to accept the line, offered by “liberal
historian” Yury Pivovarov that 1937 was simply “a quarrel among the ruling
group.”
Unfortunately, she continues, there
is nothing surprising in the fact that “these people even today do not
understand what took place, do not see in the arrests of governors, siloviki,
and entrepreneurs signs of the very same Great Terror which occurred in 1937
and do not include in this picture the arrests of ordinary Russian citizens and
dissidents.”
And when one individual in the audience,
Yan Rachinsky of Memorial, attempted to raise these issues, he was told by the
host to shut up because the human rights activist supposedly was only going to
present what foreign governments that have given his organization money want
him to say.
To provide a corrective to this
latest Moscow re-write of the history of the Soviet past, Pavlova offers a
summary of an article she published in Grani a decade ago about the Great
Terror, adding some comments about why this misunderstanding of Stalin’s actions
is particularly dangerous now (graniru.org/Politics/Russia/m.122961.html).
The February-March 1937 plenum “marked
the beginning of the visible part of the Great Terror,” that is, “the mass destruction
of the party-state bureaucracy.” But “this is only part of the truth” about
that event, and that “half truth” is leading some now to say that “’it would be
good to repeat’” what Stalin did against corrupt figures like Dmitry Medvedev.
In 1937, the historian points out, “the
people also supported the powers that be” at meetings organized by those powers.
But “there was also an invisible part of the Great Terror which began in August
1937, a far more massive effort directed at “cleansing” the country of “so-called
anti-Soviet elements, including simple people.”
“No one understood why this
happened,” Pavlova says. “Just like today, the powers were absolutely
untouchable. No one knew” what the secret police chiefs were saying behind
closed doors or what the regime was deciding at Politburo meetings. And they didn’t see it coming because it was
carried out “under the cover of the election campaign to the Soviet parliament.”
“The Russian powers that be and society
in essence have little changed from the times of 1937,” she argues, “even
though open borders and the Internet provide incomparably greater opportunities
to find out and understand one’s history.” For a brief time at the end of the 1980s,
that happened, but “it quickly dissipated to nothing.”
“No one took responsibility for the
crimes. No one undertook a real attempt to condemn the policy of state terror.
The historical lesson wasn’t drawn. And as under Stalin, society did not understand
the nature and consequences of terror,” just as society now, to judge from this
television program, does not understand these things either.
As a result, what has happened in
Russia is the restoration of “the exact same closed mechanism of power with the
secret adoption of decisions.” Legal methods of fighting corruption, imposing
control on officials and replacing them simply do not work in that kind of
system.
And this has an even more tragic
outcome, Pavlova concludes. “The
political technologists, publicists, and ‘opposition figures’ who serve the
powers that be are now testing the reaction of society to the recipes of 1937
for ‘cleansing’ the country.”
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