Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 14 – Unlike in the
Russian Federation, no on in Kazakhstan is putting up statues to Stalin, Anuar
Galiyev says; but Astana isn’t doing enough to fight the recrudescence of support
for the Soviet dictator among people too young to have experienced the horrors
he inflicted on Kazakhs and other people.
It is far behind Kyrgyzstan and many
other former Soviet republics, the prominent Kazakh historian says; and one
step it should take immediately is the opening of a Museum on the Kazakh Famine,
which was artificially created by Stalin and killed millions of Kazakhs (camonitor.kz/31402-travma-pamyati-vozmozhna-li-v-kazahstane-reabilitaciya-stalinizma.html).
“In Kyrgyzstan,” Galiyev points out,
“there wasn’t such a massive famine as in Kazakhstan, there weren’t as many
GULAG camps – in our republic, their area exceeded the size of several European
states, and there weren’t as many repressed people.” But it has a memorial where many of Stalin’s
victims, including Chingiz Aitmatov’s father, are buried.
But Kazakhstan needs not only a
Museum of the Famine, the historian says; it needs a Museum of the History of
Deportations because so many peoples – the Koreans, the Germans, the Poles, the
Greeks, the Meskhetian Turks, the Chechens and the Ingush, among them – were dispatched
to Kazakhstan by Stalin and his system.
“It is necessary to return to people
their history even if it is tragic,” the historian says. As German researcher
Aleida Assman points out, “as long as a trauma is not overcome, it is not cured;
and the only means of overcoming it is to talk about it.”
Galiyev also addresses the problem of Russian-Kazakh relations
in Soviet times. “One should not consider Russia a metropolitan center in the
classical sense of this word because it was just as much a colony of the Center
in the form of the all-powerful communist party as were the other republics.”
“One
can, of course, speak about the fact that in the national borderlands, the
Center operated on the Slavic population, protecting it with the help of
vairoius preferences, but this is certainly the subject of another conversation.”
In the current context, one must stress that “the Slavic peoples suffered from
Stalinism no less than we did.”
Fortunately
in Kazakhstan, there is virtually no disagreement that Stalin was guilty of
enormous crimes, even if some people have a kind of misplaced nostalgia about his
times. But the real challenge now,
Galiyev says, is fighting against indifference to the past because indifference
can open the way to a new version of what must ever be allowed back.
But
there is yet another reason for combatting Stalinism by keeping the memory of
what it did to Kazakhstan, he argues. “Present-day Kazakh society has been
formed by the descendants of nomads and peoples deported into our land. Now,
the process of forming the Kazakhstan nation in a political sense is
continuing.”
And
that requires an honest assessment of the past, both its triumphs and its
tragedies. “In this nation are included not only Kazakhs and Russians who
remember about the hunger and repressions, not only the Uyghurs who have begun
now to speak openly about Atu, the mass destruction by the Bolsheviks of Uyghur
villages, but also Germans, Koreans, Vainakhs, and Greeks deported by Stalin to
Kazakhstan.”
“This
common wound and this common past unites us,” Galiyev says, “and therefore no
one must ever forget about Stalinism and its victims.”
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