Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 23 – Mass graves
became a new and widespread reality in the first decades of Soviet power,
sometimes for ideological reasons -- the Soviet man shouldn’t think about life
after death -- and sometimes for economic ones – the number of deaths was
beyond the capacity of the regime to inter people individually, Svetlana Malysheva
says.
In a new study which she calls “The
Communization of Death,” the researcher at the Higher School of Economics says
that in the first years of Soviet power, the Bolsheviks viewed mass graves as a
positive educational experience for the citizenry because such places undermined
traditional religious ideas (iq.hse.ru/news/213310804.html).
In many places, she notes, people
were buried in mass graves even if there was every possibility for them to be
buried in individual ones. This was intended, Malysheva says, to deprive death
of its “sacred status” and to promote atheism.
And where mass graves were a problem because of space, the regime turned
to promoting cremation.
At the same time, she continues, “common
graves were first of all significantly cheaper and second they solved the
problem of lack of space in cemeteries.” But they had an unexpected and
unwanted consequence: by the end of the 1920s, Soviet citizens were showing their
indifference to the mass graves of Soviet heroes as well as to others.
That led the NKVD and health
commissariat in 1929 to ban mass graves. But that ban did not last because the
number of victims of the Stalinist system – purges, expulsions, deportations
and so on – and of World War II overwhelmed the regime’s capacity to bury
people individually or even to identify victims by name. In the case of “enemies,”
the authorities didn’t want to.
“Enemies of the people” who were
executed or died in the camps were typically buried in mass graves without any
identification at all. During the war, the Soviets buried both Soviet victims
and German ones in mass graves, although at least in principle they tried to
separate the two, identifying the former while often not putting up any markers
on the latter.
After 1945, residents of many
villages where there were mass graves put up memorial plinths with the names of
the dead, a means, Malysheva says, of overcoming the trauma of loss and the
impossibility of burying all the dead in individual graves at the time. Such plinths were typically paid for not by
the state but by public collections.
“In the 1950s and 1960s,” she
continues, “the cult of fallen heroes acquired state importance, and cenotaphs
were put up by administrations in the regions. On the sites of fraternal
graves, major memorials were erected.” The authorities were less interested in
having memorials go up over fraternal graves of victims of the war who weren’t
in uniform.
In the latter case, Malysheva says,
the authorities tried to play down or ignore how many such mass graves there
were not only to avoid any discussion of the role of the Soviet state in these
deaths both directly and indirectly but also to avoid spending money on such
projects when the regime was focusing on others.
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