Ukraine’s Suffering still
overlooked by World
By Alexander J. Motyl
Kyiv Post
How can this blindness be explained?
Nazi Germany’s greatest war
crime is the Holocaust, of course, but the genocides against Ukrainians and
Belarusians constitute a close second. And yet, while the Holocaust is common
knowledge, few know much about the extermination of Ukrainians and Belarusians
— and Germans may know about this least of all. The tragedy of these peoples’
suffering in the war has been compounded by the world’s almost complete
ignorance and indifference.
That lamentable condition
may be about to change, if only among professional historians. In a
ground-breaking article that was published in the July 16 issue of The New
York Review of Books,
The devastation that
affected both countries is even greater when one considers their experiences in
the Stalinist 1930s and in World War I. Ukraine lost at least 3 million people
in the genocidal famine of 1933. Both countries also served as the main killing
fields of the Eastern Front during World War I (1914-18), the Civil War in
According to a recent study
of the Moscow-based Institute of Demography, Ukraine suffered close to 15
million “excess deaths” between 1914 and 1948: 1.3 million during World War I;
2.3 million during the Civil War, the Polish-Soviet War, and the famine of the
early 1920s; 4 million during the genocidal famine of 1933; 300,000 during the
Great Terror and the repressions in Western Ukraine; 6.5 million during World
War II; and 400,000 during the post-war famine and the destruction of the
Ukrainian nationalist movement.
And yet
How can this blindness be
explained?
Partly, it’s a function of
ignorance. The German media devote almost no coverage to
Nobel Prize winner Heinrich
Boll’s 1949 novel “The Train Was Punctual” provides a good example of this
cultural mindset. The novel describes a young German soldier’s return to the
front in southern
But why don’t Germans “see”
people who are so manifestly there? To some degree it’s because the “Untermenschen
have remained Untermenschen” — economically underdeveloped peoples with
silly cultural practices who either can’t get their political act together
(Ukraine) or are proud to be Europe’s only dictatorship (Belarus).
The more important
explanation is that German elites have traditionally viewed their neighbours to
its east through the prism of great-power politics.
But
Alexander J. Motyl is professor of political
science at Rutgers University-Newark in