Saturday, November 24, 2012

Holodomor in Ukraine: Killing by hunger



Was history one of your least favorite subjects in school? Were you weary of endless dates, names and boring accounts from the remote past that seemed to have no connection to your present life? If so, welcome to the club of recovering history-haters! 

Nevertheless, would you be interested to learn about a shocking event that was never mentioned in your school history books? What if this event was unsurpassed, both in its scope and cruelty, even compared to Hitler’s Holocaust? Would you be interested to hear from a real person affected by this event? 

Created by the Soviet totalitarian regime, Holodomor of 1933 was one of the most brutal events in Ukrainian history, still debated by scholars and politicians today. The word itself means “Massive killing by forced hunger”. This tragic event directly affected my family. My grandfather had 12 siblings, and only he and his sister survived during 1933.

George Santayana said, “Those who don’t remember the past are condemned to repeat it”. I am speaking today in hope and prayer that atrocities like Holodomor are fully acknowledged, learned from and never repeated.I would like to present to your judgment today the causes, the cruelties and the controversy of Holodomor. 

For those of you who don't know, Ukraine is the second largest country in Europe, and its size can be compared to the territory of Texas with twice as much population (around 46 million). It is famous for incredibly rich soil good for farming and a variety of natural resources. It is also famous for its freedom-loving and talented people. 

What caused Holodomor? I would like to briefly summarize the series of events that led to it as presented in The Curriculum for Educators on Holodomor for Illinois schools, where the study of genocides is now mandated.

In 1917 the socialist revolution led by Vladimir Lenin sweeps over Russia. 

In 1922 Ukraine is included as one of the 15 Soviet republics. 

In 1924 Stalin replaces Lenin as the Soviet Union leader and turns out to be one of the worst dictators in history. 

In 1928 Stalin decides to take over private farming by turning private farms into collective farms (so-called collectivization). He wants to finance his industrialization ambitions by exporting humongous amounts of grain. Since people by nature don’t part very readily with what they consider their own, the collectivization is done by force, through regular troops and secret police. Ukraine, having an especially freedom-loving population, shows a strong resistance, and since agriculturally it was a very strategic place (called “the breadbasket” of Europe), Stalin resolves to break the resistance at any cost. 

And then the Holodomor began. 

What makes Holodomor stand out as one of the most brutal events in human history? Cruel policies, shocking death toll and lack of international support. 

In spite of bountiful crops, the government ordered full confiscation of agricultural products, followed by full confiscation of all food. Through constant searches, literally every grain of wheat and every crumb of food was taken out of houses before the eyes of starving families, including already cooked food on the stoves.
To top it all, military blockades were set up between the villages and the cities, to make sure people didn’t get any help and nobody escaped the famine zone. People were trapped. 

These policies resulted in the shocking number of deaths, especially among children. According to the report for the Congressional Commission on the Ukrainian Famine, submitted to Congress on April 22, 1988, death toll varies between 5.5 and 9 million.  In 1933 people in Ukrainian villages died at the rate of 25 000 per day or 1,000 per hour or 17 per minute. The population was reduced by 25% in one year. 

People were dying slow, torturous deaths in their homes. There were no dogs or cats in the neighborhoods, they were all eaten. People ate dead animals, grass, leaves, dirt. Parents did not let children out into the streets in fear that they would be caught and eaten by neighbors, until parents themselves started eating their own children.

People were too weak to dig graves and bury the dead. The dead were lying around and decomposing in the streets and in the houses. The Soviet officials hired those still alive and strong enough to collect dead bodies from homes in order to bury them all in big anonymous graves.The price for collecting one dead body was 200 grams of bread. In order to get bread the dead body collectors would take people who were still alive on their beds and put them into graves still alive. The reasoning was, “They will die anyway, and it will save us an extra trip to your home tomorrow”. 

The saddest cruelty of all was that the Soviet government skillfully and persistently lied through the media to the outside world about the state of affairs in Ukraine. In spite of these lies the U.S., as well as some European countries knew about the famine through its secret diplomatic channels and brave journalists.
Thus, a famous Welsh journalist, named Gareth Jones, as stated in official Gareth Jones archives, made two trips to Ukraine during the famine and wrote numerous articles about its atrocities in British and U.S. newspapers, as you can see on this slide.  
Yet the U.S. and other countries chose to take a passive position in this matter because of the lucrative economic treaties with the Soviet Union.

Today nobody denies the reality of Holodomor anymore. Yet there is a significant controversy around it among politicians and historians as to its causes and scope. The driving force of the controversy is what I would call a blinding political agenda. There are two camps that have been arguing about Holodomor.

The first group claims that Holodomor was an act of intentional genocide of Ukrainian people by the communist regime. Holodomor was officially pronounced as genocide by Ukrainian government in 2006. 8 other countries have acknowledged it as genocide, including the U.S. and Canada. 

The second group claims that it was a tragic, yet unintentional time of hunger due to bad crops or unwise economic decisions. It also reduces the number of victims to 1 or 2 million people. Guess what, the second group actually consists of people who are still in love with the communist ideology and who don’t want to face the role they or their country played in this event. Russian government is part of this group.

November 25 is an official National Day of Remembrance for the victims of Holodomor in Ukraine. There is hardly a family that has not lost someone that tragic year. In the evening people bring thousands of candles to a big square in downtown Kiev and light them in rows in front of St Michael's orthodox cathedral. They also light candles and put them in the windows of their homes. It is their way of saying, “We remember, we repent, we don’t want to ever repeat it again”. Let us remember, too.