Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 30 – One of the most
widespread beliefs among analysts and ordinary people is that when the archives
of the Soviet Union are opened, they will provide a true picture of what took
place. But that hope is misplaced, Yury Mukhin says. These archives are full of
almost as many falsifications as the open sources people have relied on in the
past.
That should come as no surprise:
Soviet officials were incapable of the kind of double bookkeeping such a view
assumes. They could not engage in lies in public and then only report honestly
in materials that have ended up in the archives. Instead, the lies in one inevitably spilled
over into lies in the other.
Such a reality, of course, does not
mean that the archives are not an important addition to the understanding of the
past. Were they not, the powers that be would not be fighting so hard to limit
access to them. But it does mean that they have to be approached with the same
caution that most people approach the open Soviet media.
Unfortunately, that doesn’t always
happen, and many assume that if something is in the archives, it is necessarily
true. In a commentary for FORUM-MSK, the
Moscow commentator says that those who believe everything from the Soviet
archives need to be reminded of that danger on a regular basis (forum-msk.org/material/news/15738490.html).
“From time to time,” he says, “sensational
revelations appear with the declaration that ‘the archives have been
declassified!’ And everyone believes these ‘unclassified’ documents without any
qualification.” But anyone who is interested in the history of the Soviet past
needs to proceed with caution when such “revelations” occur.
“The archives of Russia are crowded
with falsifications,” Mukhin argues. “And anyone who is really interested in
the history of our Motherland will encounter these falsifications on a constant
basis.” No one document or even group of
documents should be accepted just because “they’re from the archives.”
In support of that contention, he
cites a 2009 study which demonstrated just how many falsified documents could
be found in a single archive (ymuhin.ru/node/1963/v-opolonke-rosarhiva-vsplyl-pakt-molotov-ribbentrop)
and provides an analysis of his own of documents from the archives that were
included in a 1999 book on Lavrenty Beria.
Those documents may actually have
been in the archives, Mukhin continues; but other sources, both archival and
not, show that they are not true. Preferencing archival documents in such cases
is a dangerous and self-deceiving act, although he suggests that those who use
the archives may be as interested in falsification as those who put things in
them in the first case.
A case in point, albeit one that Mukhin
doesn’t mention, concerns lists of those who cooperated with the Soviet
security services. Not surprisingly, these lists contain many mistakes,
exaggerations by NKVD officers in many cases designed to make them look good or
to justify more money for their activities.
Unfortunately, in many places that
were once part of the Soviet empire, such problems are often ignored; and
peoples’ lives are ruined as a result.
No comments:
Post a Comment