Paul Goble
Staunton, October 27 – Seventy-one
years ago this week, Stalin deported tens of thousands of Ukrainians to Siberia
and Kazakhstan, an action that is often ignored because of Khrushchev’s famous
remark that Stalin wanted to deport the Ukrainians but didn’t because there
were simply too many of them.
Despite the massive deaths from the Holodomor
and World War II, however, there may have been too many Ukrainians for Stalin
to have been able to deport all of them; but that didn’t stop the Soviet
dictator from deporting tens of thousands. And this Soviet crime too must never
be forgotten.
A year ago, on the 70th
anniversary of this action, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said that
Operation West, as the deportation was code named, led to the forcible
resettlement of “more than 76,000” people. He said that Stalin took this action
to “weaken the Ukrainian liberation movement” then fighting against the Soviets
(/maxim-nm.livejournal.com/451571.html).
On September 10, 1947, the USSR Council of
Ministers took the decision to deport Ukrainians from the western oblasts of
the Ukrainian SSR to Siberia and Kazakhstan. By this decision, “the Soviet
authorities planned to pull out of Ukraine all those who were defending a model
of a different non-Soviet Ukraine,” the Maxim-NM blog says.
In the weeks after that decision, Soviet
officials established roundup points in Lviv, Drobovych, Rovno, Koloma,, and Kovel
where Ukrainians suspected of fighting the Soviets and members of their families
were taken so that they could be sent as “special resettlers” to distant part
of the Soviet Union.
Initially, the Soviet Ministry of State Security
said it was deporting 75,000 people – that is the source of Poroshenko’s number
– but subsequently the MGB raised the number to 100,000 – and according to some
documents, the actual number reached 150,000 – or twice as many as Ukrainian
sources have been accustomed to citing.
Because those deported could take with
them only what they could carry, their remaining property was left behind; and
as a result of special Soviet orders, those who weren’t deported or who had
come into the region from elsewhere, often ethnic Russians, were allowed to
steal or occupy what they could.
The deportation operation began on October
21; and in the initial sweep, it involved 18,866 men, 35,152 women, and 22,174
children.
“In essence,” the blog continues, “the
deportation of Ukrainians by the Soviet authorities in no way was distinguished
from the deportation for forced labor organized by Nazi Germany in the same
places several years earlier.”
The total size of this horror is beyond
imagining. On January 1, 1953, the Soviet archives show, there were 175,063
people living in special settlements each of the Urals who had been deported
from the western oblasts of Ukraine between 1944 and 1952. Because of the
super-high mortality among those deported, that means the actual number of
expellees was much higher.
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