Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 26 – The millions of people the Stalin system killed did not disappear
into thin air: they were buried typically in mass graves that Russia today has
inherited but whose people and officials do not know what to do with them. As a
result, they remain a continuing wound on the body of the country, Anastasiya
Platonova of Takiye dela says.
The
Soviet system has left behind “cemeteries of the victims of political
repressions: mass burials of those shot as well as small cemeteries of the camps
and special settlements,” she continues. Some have been studied, but most have
not, despite the interests of relatives and society in dealing with this legacy
(takiedela.ru/2019/02/smert-rastyanutaya-na-desyatiletiya/).
Once people began
to learn the details of the deaths of their ancestors, their first question in
many cases she says was “where are they buried?” During the 1990s, some 120 mass graves were
identified, Irina Fliga of Memorial says; but taking the next step of
identifying individual victims was hampered by lack of records and the resistance
of the authorities and the church.
Moreover, many cases – and Platonova
documents some of these – officials had already constructed buildings or roads
over the sites, making it even more difficult to treat the victims of Stalin
with the respect that they deserve. And
things have only gotten worse in recent years with the FSB and the Russian Orthodox
Church throwing up roadblocks of various kinds.
Some other countries whose
populations were victimized by Stalin’s system have shown that it is possible to
address this problem more adequately, with Lithuania and Poland being two
prominent examples where governments have taken active roles in protecting the
graves and identifying as many of the bodies as possible, Platonova says.
Unfortunately, in Russia, one can
count on one’s hands the few cases of professional exhumation and personal identification. But what may be even worse, Flige adds, is
that “in Russia, there is still no public demand for the personal identification
of those who were shot.” There is no agreement among Russians even that every
victim should have the right to a grave.
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