Seven million died in the 'forgotten' holocaust
By ERIC MARGOLIS -- Contributing Foreign Editor Toronto Sun
By ERIC MARGOLIS -- Contributing Foreign Editor Toronto Sun
Five
years ago, I wrote about the unknown Holocaust in Ukraine. I was
shocked to receive a flood of mail from young Americans and Canadians of
Ukrainian descent telling me that until they read my column, they knew
nothing of the 1932-33 genocide in which Josef Stalin's Soviet regime
murdered seven million Ukrainians and sent two million more to
concentration camps.
How,
I wondered, could such historical amnesia afflict so many? For Jews and
Armenians, the genocides their people suffered are vivid, living
memories that influence their daily lives. Yet today, on the 70th
anniversary of the destruction of a quarter of Ukraine's population,
this titanic crime has almost vanished into history's black hole.
So
has the extermination of the Don Cossacks by the communists in the
1920s, the Volga Germans in 1941 and mass executions and deportations to
concentration camps of Lithuanians, Latvians, Estonians and Poles. At
the end of World War II, Stalin's gulag held 5.5 million prisoners, 23%
of them Ukrainians and 6% Baltic peoples.
Almost
unknown is the genocide of two million of the USSR's Muslim peoples:
Chechens, Ingush, Crimean Tatars, Tajiks, Bashkirs and Kazaks. The
Chechen independence fighters who today are branded as "terrorists" by
the U.S. and Russia are the grandchildren of survivors of Soviet
concentration camps.
Add to this list of forgotten atrocities the murder in Eastern Europe from 1945-47 of at least two million ethnic Germans, mostly women and children, and the violent expulsion of 15 million more Germans, during which two million German girls and women were raped.
Among
these monstrous crimes, Ukraine stands out as the worst in terms of
numbers. Stalin declared war on his own people in 1932, sending
Commissars V. Molotov and Lazar Kaganovitch and NKVD secret police chief
Genrikh Yagoda to crush the resistance of Ukrainian farmers to forced
collectivization.
Ukraine was sealed off. All food supplies and
livestock were confiscated. NKVD death squads executed "anti-party
elements." Furious that insufficient Ukrainians were being shot,
Kaganovitch - virtually the Soviet Union's Adolf Eichmann - set a quota
of 10,000 executions a week. Eighty percent of Ukrainian intellectuals
were shot.
During
the bitter winter of 1932-33, 25,000 Ukrainians per day were being shot
or died of starvation and cold. Cannibalism became common. Ukraine,
writes historian Robert Conquest, looked like a giant version of the
future Bergen-Belsen death camp.
The mass murder of
seven million Ukrainians, three million of them children, and
deportation to the gulag of two million more (where most died) was
hidden by Soviet propaganda. Pro-communist westerners, like TheNew York Times'
Walter Duranty, British writers Sidney and Beatrice Webb and French
Prime Minister Edouard Herriot, toured Ukraine, denied reports of
genocide, and applauded what they called Soviet "agrarian reform." Those
who spoke out against the genocide were branded "fascist agents."
The U.S., British, and Canadian governments, however, were well aware of the genocide, but closed their eyes, even blocking aid groups from going to Ukraine.
The
only European leaders to raise a cry over Soviet industrialized murder
were, ironically and for their own cynical and self-serving reasons,
Hitler and Italian dictator Benito Mussolini.
Because
Kaganovitch, Yagoda and some other senior Communist party and NKVD
officials were Jewish, Hitler's absurd claim that communism was a Jewish
plot to destroy Christian civilization became widely believed across a
fearful Europe.
When
war came, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British PM Winston
Churchill allied themselves closely to Stalin, though they were well
aware his regime had murdered at least 30 million people long before
Hitler's extermination of Jews and gypsies began. Yet in the strange
moral calculus of mass murder, only Germans were guilty.
Though Stalin murdered three times more people than Hitler, to Roosevelt he remained "Uncle Joe."
The
British-U.S. alliance with Stalin made them his partners in crime.
Roosevelt and Churchill helped preserve history's most murderous regime,
to which they handed over half of Europe in 1945.
After the war, the left tried to cover up Soviet genocide. Jean-Paul Sartre denied the gulag even existed.
For
the western Allies, Nazism was the only evil; they could not admit
being allied to mass murderers. For the Soviets, promoting the Jewish
Holocaust perpetuated anti-fascism and masked their own crimes.
The
Jewish people, understandably, saw their Holocaust as a unique event.
It was Israel's raison d'etre. Raising other genocides at that time
would, they feared, diminish their own. This was only human nature.
While
today, academia, the media and Hollywood rightly keep attention focused
on the Jewish Holocaust, they mostly ignore Ukraine. We still hunt Nazi
killers, but not communist killers. There are few photos of the Ukraine
genocide or Stalin's gulag, and fewer living survivors. Dead men tell
no tales.
Russia never prosecuted any of its mass murderers, as Germany did.
We know all about the crimes of Nazis Adolf Eichmann and Heinrich Himmler; about Babi Yar and Auschwitz.
But
who remembers Soviet mass murderers Dzerzhinsky, Kaganovitch, Yagoda,
Yezhov and Beria? Were it not for writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn, we
might never know of Soviet death camps like Magadan, Kolyma and Vorkuta.
Movie after movie appears about Nazi evil, while the evil of the Soviet
era vanishes from view or dissolves into nostalgia.
The souls of Stalin's millions of victims still cry out for justice.

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