From the MT:
"‘Historians couldn't believe such documents still
exist’ "
Russian man tracks down the secret police who executed his
great-grandfather 80 years ago. A 34-year-old Tomsk resident says he’s
tracked down the names of the men who helped kill his great-grandfather — a
peasant who was executed in 1938 on charges of spying for the Japanese.
According to a new report by Radio Liberty, Denis Karagodin managed to convince
initially reluctant security-services archivists to show him documents that
helped him reconstruct the chain of events that led to his relative’s execution
almost 80 years ago. Karagodin says he’s found the names of the people involved
at every stage of his great-grandfather’s death, from the NKVD leadership in
Moscow to the officers in Tomsk charged with enforcing the sentence, including
even locals drivers and typists, and the actual gunmen who carried out the
execution. The key document in the investigation was an execution order
by the Tomsk NKVD office against 36 different people, including Karagodin’s
great-grandfather. “The historians and specialists I was able to reach couldn’t
believe that I’d managed to get this document,” he told Radio Liberty. “Some
were simply in shock that such documents still exist and that you can actually
get them. It’s possible that I might be the first person in Russia’s history to
be given such documents.” Late on Nov. 20, Karagodin says he got a letter
from the granddaughter of one of the men who executed his great-grandfather,
asking forgiveness. She apparently learned about who her grandfather was,
thanks to Karagodin’s research, which he shares on his blog and on several
social-media accounts “I haven’t slept for several days,” the letter said.
“I’ve read over all the documents on your website. [...] I know I’m not to
blame for what happened, but the feelings I’m having are beyond words.
Karagodin says he wrote back to the woman, thanking her for her honesty, and
offering a “hand of reconciliation.” According to the website Karagodin’s
story has attracted significant attention on Facebook, where many Russians have
welcomed the theme of reconciliation between “victims” and “executioners,”
arguing that “repentance” is less practical, given the moral chaos that
prevailed in the Soviet Union in the 1930s and 40s. Karagodin’s
great-grandfather, Stepan, was arrested on Dec. 1, 1937, by members of the
Tomsk NKVD — the predecessor to the KGB. He was charged with conducting
espionage for the Empire of Japan, and sentenced to death by firing squad. The
verdict was carried out on Jan. 21, 1938, and Stepan Karagodin’s relatives were
told merely that he’d died while in police custody. According to Denis
Karagodin’s website, his family never believed the charges against Stepan,
and it spent decades trying to clear his name. Denis began his investigation in
2012, collecting information about NKVD employees at departmental and political
archives. He says he also got help from the relatives of other people executed
at the same time as his great-grandfather. In June this year, Karagodin said he
hopes to bring a criminal suit against the people responsible for his
relative’s death, posthumously charging the individuals whose names he’s
uncovered with conspiracy to commit murder.
^ This is what happens when you have a Communist
dictatorship for 74 years with millions upon millions of regular men, women and
children arrested, deported and/or murdered and you have done little to nothing
in the past 25 years (especially at the Federal level) to address those abuses
and crimes. Almost every single Russian and former Soviet family has a story of
a family member who was a victim of the Communists and by not addressing the
mistakes and crimes of the past you can't really move forward as a country
(Germany had the same issue and has only started really dealing with their Nazi
past in the past 2 decades while little to nothing is being done on the East
German crimes.) ^
https://themoscowtimes.com/articles/historians-couldnt-believe-it-56237
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