Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 25 – Ukrainians have
struggled for decades to gain national understanding and international
recognition of the Holodomor, the terror famine Stalin inflicted upon them in
the early 1930s, Stanislav Kulchitsky says. Kazakhs can learn much from the
Ukrainian struggle as they seek to recover the truth about the same horrors the
Soviet system inflicted upon them.
The senior scholar at the Institute
for Ukraine of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences tells Central Asian Monitor’s
Kenzhe Tatilya that Ukraine has pursued its efforts to secure international
recognition of the Holodomor not to get compensation but to unite the Ukrainian
nation (camonitor.kz/33066-golodomor-i-asharshylyk-chem-ukrainskiy-opyt-pouchitelen-dlya-kazahskih-issledovateley.html).
“This too is important especially in
the context of the current Ukrainian-Russian hybrid war,” the Ukrainian scholar
says.
Kulichitsky notes that “Russia
considers itself to be the legal successor of the Soviet Union but isn’t
prepared to accept guilt for the crimes of Stalin’s times, even though the
Russian people too suffered as well.” But Ukraine and presumably Kazakhstan
have an interest in getting international recognition of the terror famine as a
genocide to undermine Russian propaganda.
For Ukrainians, this is especially
important because “the ruling circles of present-day Russia have revived the
pre-revolutionary policy which includes the non-recognition of the existence of
the Ukrainian nation” as separate and distinct.
But achieving international recognition won’t be easy or quick as there
is serious resistance internationally.
Kazakhstan made enormous strides in
the 1990s in the study of the Asharshylyk, as the analogue of the Ukrainian
Holodomor is called. But then “at the demand of Russia,” almost everything
stopped. In May 2013, for example, some
at an Astana conference tried to raise the issue but the leadership cut them
off.
Kazakh historians face other challenges
as well, Kulchitsky says. When the terror famine occurred there, Kazakhstan was
an autonomous republic within the RSFSR and so presumably many of the archives
that need to be explored are in Moscow and may be beyond the reach of Kazakh
researchers.
Ukrainian leaders have varied in their support
for research on this question, the historian says. Viktor Yushchenko was
committed to research on the Holodomor and even hoped to convince Israel to
recognize the Holodomor as a genocide, “but Israel values the uniqueness of the
Holocaust as a genocide and does not want to subject this term to any ‘inflation.’”
A commission of the US Congress,
headed by the James Mace, recognized the Holodomor as a genocide already in
1988, but the Congress as a whole did so only in 2018, 30 years later when
American relations with Russia had deteriorated. Much of what has been achieved in the US is
the work of the Ukrainian diaspora.
Ukrainians in the US succeeded in
getting historian Robert Conquest to do research on the question, attracting
new attention to the cause, although he could not read Ukrainian and so was
limited to materials supplied by others including Mace. A
second breakthrough, Kulchitsky says, was the 2017 appearance of Anne Applebaum’s
book on the Holodomor
“Kazakhstan has its own diaspora,”
the Ukrainian historian says, “which could support Kazakh scholars in conducting
research on the Asharshylyk, although not in Russia and China.” In doing so,
they need to keep in mind that there are many similarities but also important
differences in the two events.
That both acts were directed at the destruction
of a human group, the peasantry, is fairly easy to show. That it was an act of
genocide is more controversial. In the Ukrainian case, there is compelling
evidence for that conclusion; in the Kazakh case, far more research is needed, Kulchitsky
suggests.
“The main thing for Kazakh and Ukrainian
scholars is to create a real picture of what occurred. After that, others or
the scholars themselves can draw legal and political conclusions.” Those will
be controversial and acceptance of any one of them may take decades. “But they
are in the interests of our peoples who suffered so horribly in the hunger
years.”
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