Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 20 – Eugenics is
typically more associated with Nazi Germany than with the Soviet Union, but in
the 1920s and early 1930s, the USSR had one of the largest and most active eugenics
movements in the world. But then, as a result of its overreach, Stalin shut it
down, killing, imprisoning or exiling its leading activists.
Stalin probably would have moved
against eugenics in any case, but the trigger for his actions, which ultimately
led him to attack genetics as well, was a letter from a leading Soviet eugenicist
who wrote the Soviet dictator a most unwise letter given what was to happen (ttolk.ru/articles/kak_v_kontse_1930-h_v_sssr_razgromili_evgenikov).
Building on plans to create a
eugenics map of the population and a sperm bank to ensure that the next
generation would have the best possible features of the Soviet worker, the eugenics
specialist proposed to Stalin that Russian women should be artificially
inseminated with the sperm of Lenin and Darwin.
The result would truly be “new Soviet men,” the geneticist said.
Stalin’s reaction was sharp and
immediate. He ordered the closing down of all eugenics activities in the USSR,
the execution or jailing those actively promoting it, and the exiling of at
least one, the man who wrote the letter in the first place, an American
communist Herman Mueller who had been working in the Soviet Union since 1922.
Given Stalin’s reaction, Mueller
recognized that he had to get out of the USSR. He left within months and then
fought in Spain against Franco. Finally, he returned to the United States in
1940. In 1946, he won the Nobel Prize in medicine for his work on genetics,
much of which was conducted while he was promoting genetics in the Soviet
Union.
During the second half of 1936, the
Soviet press was filled with attacks on eugenics and eugenicists, declaring it “black
hundreds trash” and linking it to the Nazis.
Eugenics specialists were at a minimum expelled from the communist party
and loss their jobs. In many cases, their fate was much worse, as was that of the
institutes in which they worked: those were shut down.
One of the leading fighters against
eugenics at that time was Trofim Lysenko, the pseudo-scientist who later
conducted the same kind of campaign against genetics.
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