Reaping
What They Once Sowed
By Lubomyr Luciuk
Those who survived
knew that the Great Famine of 1932-1933 in Soviet Ukraine was a deliberate,
politically engineered catastrophe whose victims numbered in the many millions.
Yet few dared even whisper about this devastation of their nation to others in
the generations that followed. It was not until the late 1980s, as the Soviet
empire stumbled into the dustbin of history and an independent, internationally
recognized Ukraine
re-emerged in Europe, that restored freedom
allowed for the truth to be set free. Until then, those who had endured the
horror now known as the Holodomor remained trapped in the very place where it
could not be spoken of.
Meanwhile,
those in the Ukrainian Diaspora who had grasped the terror-famine’s
mainsprings and weight found their admonitions largely ignored, completely
unaware that intelligence reports about conditions in the USSR, compiled
by several governments, often corroborated their understanding of the causes,
course, and consequences of this man-made famine. Yet knowing what they did,
those very same Western governments sent no relief and lodged no formal
protests with Moscow,
even as millions starved. A British Foreign Office mandarin confided why: “the truth of the matter is, of course, that
we have a certain amount of information about famine conditions…and that there
is no obligation on us not to make it public [but we] do not want to make it
public…because the Soviet government would resent it and our relations with them
would be prejudiced.”
Brave,
and few, were the survivors who, just after the Second World War, tried to
remind the West of this atrocity, expecting their witnessing to find fertile
soil during the Cold War. They were mistaken. Ukraine’s Great Famine genocide was
not accepted as a reality and remained mostly unknown as a subject of
historical inquiry until quite recently. Indeed, those attempting to till its
memory were subjected to a barrage of defamation, denounced as embittered migrs
- either Nazi collaborators or apologists for such miscreants. Echoes of those
prejudices persist. Where testimony could be given about the Famine it was
usually rejected or ridiculed.
A
noticeable resurrection in the debate over the causes and impact of the Famine
was precipitated in 1984 by the film Harvest of Despair, followed in
1986 by the release of Robert Conquest’s book, Harvest of Sorrow, by the
1988 Report to Congress of the US Commission on the Ukraine Famine and,
in 1990, by the Final Report of the International Commission of Inquiry
into the 1932-1933 Famine in Ukraine. Even so, for almost a decade after Ukraine’s
independence was secured in 1991, no more than token initiatives were made to
commemorate the Great Famine. Succeeding
Ukrainian governments, likewise, demonstrated no interest in bringing the
perpetrators and enablers of Communist war crimes and crimes against humanity
to justice, a negligence sometimes excused by reference to the post-genocide
nature of post-Soviet Ukrainian society.
Indifference
persisted until November 2004 when, as the world watched, democracy prevailed
during Ukraine’s Orange Revolution. But what also became
apparent is just how fragile the country’s sovereignty and territorial
integrity are. So, while Ukraine
played no official role in the 2003 campaign to have Walter Duranty’s Pulitzer
Prize revoked for his mendacious reporting - an effort that unexpectedly
harvested extensive and overwhelmingly positive international coverage - by
2006, the Verkhovna Rada had, at President Victor Yushchenko’s urging,
promulgated a law defining the Holodomor as genocide. Kyiv then undertook
diplomatic efforts to build international recognition for this position. One
modest success occurred earlier this year when Canada formally recognized the
Famine’s genocidal nature.
As
even more archival evidence about the Holodomor and its authors began emerging
from long-sealed repositories, voices of protest were heard from the Russian Federation
whose advocates don’t deny that a famine occurred but insist it had no
particular Ukrainian focus. Contemporary Ukrainian efforts aimed at enshrining
the Holodomor as a foundational experience in Ukrainian history while gleaning
international sympathy for Ukraine as a victim nation reflect Kyiv’s gradual
awakening to a critical geopolitical certainty: Ukraine may be in Europe but
its place there, perhaps even its right to exist, are far from secure.
Just
how many perished during the Great Famine may never be calculated precisely but
that millions were scythed down as Ukrainian resistance to Soviet rule was
consummated is no longer in doubt. Even if the victim total was ‘only’ 2.6
million, and it was likely higher, the intensity of mortality in Soviet Ukraine
over a duration of less than a year confers upon the Holodomor the unenviable
status of being a crime against humanity, arguably, without parallel in
European history. That is not well understood but someday it will be,
everywhere.
Lubomyr
Luciuk, Ph.D., is a professor of political geography at The Royal Military
College of Canada
and editor of the forthcoming book, Holodomor:
Reflections on the Great Famine of 1932-1933 in Soviet Ukraine (Kashtan
Press, 2008).