An
Enlightened Liberation Movement
By
Askold S. Lozynskyj
The recent Bandera/Shukhevych/OUN/UPA
debate has evoked a panoply of positions. Its gamut ranges from glorification
to opprobrium. Somewhere in between, there have been a number of academic and
non-academic papers stating that Bandera etc. were heroes, not Nazi
collaborators, potential but frustrated German allies with a non-democratic and
often fascist ideology.
On the subject of alliances,
OUN was never reticent about its loyalty. As early as June 4, 1935 OUN
leader Evhen Konovalets presented a memorandum to the British seeking support
for the Ukrainian cause: “We… are fighting for the total independence of
Ukraine… we are actively challenging all foreign occupiers of Ukrainian lands,
and although we consider Russia to be the main occupier, we shall… challenge
unilateral attempts of any foreign invader to solve the affairs of Eastern
Europe without the participation, or against the will, of the Ukrainian
people.” Similarly, on the eve of the Nazi invasion on
OUN and
UPA were not a form of government but a liberation political movement
and an army. The concept of such formations being entirely democratic is
ridiculous and certainly has no examples in history. Still, the leader of OUN
was elected through a representative democracy at a clandestine convention.
Once elected, he, like any commander in chief, was the ultimate authority.
Since the purpose of the movement and the army was to liberate occupied
OUN was
founded on its own set of “Ten Commandments” entitled the “Decalogue” adopted
at its first gathering in
The issue however remains
whether OUN was undemocratic and fascist as far as its ideology or view
of a world order and the Ukrainian state within that order.
While OUN was a
clandestine organization, its basic founding documents, resolutions and
manifestations are readily available for review to anyone interested in the
subject. In fact, one need not go into German, Soviet or any other archives.
Today, OUN documents are bound in books available for purchase by the
general public. Precisely for that reason, I am somewhat confused by the
“scholars” who, on one hand have defended OUN-UPA and their leaders,
yet, on the other, perpetuate the anti-democratic and fascist diatribe.
However, these scholars fail to produce evidence of such an ideology.
Fascism is defined as: “1.
The doctrines, methods, or movement of the Fascisti. 2. A system of government
characterized by rigid one-party dictatorship, forcible suppression of the
opposition (unions, other, especially leftist, parties, minority groups, etc.),
the retention of private ownership of the means of production under centralized
governmental control, belligerent nationalism and racism, glorification of
war.”
In December 1940, not long
before the German invasion into Soviet territory and when
The 1940 Manifesto outlined OUN’s
social program as being against: “the degradation of the individual at work and
at home,… deprivation of the individual’s happiness in life,… the general
impoverishment of the citizens,… the oppression of women…” OUN stated
that it was fighting for: “dignity and freedom of the individual, …the right to
freely express one’s beliefs,… freedom of religion,…freedom of conscience,… right
of workers to freely express their political beliefs in word and print,… the
right to free assembly,… the right to form political, social, and professional
organizations.”
These positions can in no
way be related to fascism. They are clearly democratic and enlightened for that
time. OUN’s ideology was at odds with much of that era’s totalitarian
The liberation struggle
waged by the Ukrainian people before, during and after World War II, under the
auspices of OUN-UPA led by Bandera and Shukhevych deserve genuine
attention and study. Ostensibly defending the struggle but mischaracterizing it
even in good faith is offensive and irresponsible.