Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 17 – Court cases against Soviet citizens who collaborated with the
Nazis has long been a little studied “and in part taboo subject,” according to
Irina Makhalova, a historian at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics who is
leading a small team that has partially lifted the veil on this subject.
She describes
the work of her team to Russia’s IQ
website and in so doing both reports on what the team’s research has found and
on why their work has been severely restricted even now more than 70 years
after the events it describes. Most
important she both confirms and adds to the work Western historians have done
in this area (iq.hse.ru/news/227829586.html).
Because many sources remain classified,
Makhalova says, it remains “unknown” even now how many such collaborators were
caught and tried and also how many escaped trial and punishment. Most studies in the past were driven more by
ideology than facts and as a result, “there are many myths on this theme and a
deficit of objective materials.”
Except for two high-profile cases during
the war, she says, most of the trials were conducted in secret; and the Soviet
government released little or no information either about particular cases or
statistics about the shape of collaborationism among Soviet citizens during the
war.
That lack of information was then
distorted by a decision of the Russian authorities in the 1990s to provide the
Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C. with copies of some but far from all cases
against Nazi collaborationists from Ukraine, Crimea, Moldova and the three
Baltic republics. In the absence of better data, the Moscow historian says, her
group used this data set.
Many of these cases did not involve
the holocaust at all, Makhalova says; and the lack of data from other republics
had the effect, likely intended, of suggesting that collaborationists came
primarily from these non-Russian republics. In fact, Western scholars have
concluded that just over half of all collaborationists in the east were ethnic
Russians.
The Moscow historian says that most
experts in the West believe that between one million and 1.6 million Soviet
citizens collaborated in various ways with the German invaders. But only about 320,000 are known to have been
brought to justice, with a fifth sentenced to death and the others to long
prison terms.
The data do allow for the
possibility to overturning Soviet myths that the only people who collaborated
with the Germans were victims of Soviet policies, former kulaks, or members of the
upper classes from before 1917. In fact, those who did collaborate were mostly
peasants although abut a third were urban residents.
But perhaps Makhalkova’s most
important conclusion so far in this ongoing study is this: those who
collaborated did so not because of their ethnicity but rather because of the
specific circumstances in which they found themselves. People of different nationalities who found
themselves in one or another circumstance under the Nazis collaborated at
roughly the same rate.
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