Ukrainian Holodomor
(Голодомор)
(Picture I took in Kyiv, Ukraine in November 2007 - It was part of an outdoor exhibition in Ukrainian and in English about the Holodomor Famine Genocide.)
(Picture I took in Kyiv, Ukraine in November 2007 - It was part of an outdoor exhibition in Ukrainian and in English about the Holodomor Famine Genocide.)
A Soviet-imposed famine that
killed between 7 and 10 million men, women and children from 1932 to 1933. The
following countries officially recognize the man-made famine as an act of
genocide: Australia, Canada, Colombia, Ecuador, Estonia, Georgia, Hungary,
Latvia, Lithuania, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Poland, Portugal, the Ukraine, the
United States (along with 18 of the 50 States) and the Vatican.
Holodomor Basic Facts
The term Holodomor (death by
hunger, in Ukrainian) refers to the starvation of millions of Ukrainians in
1932–33 as a result of Soviet policies. The Holodomor can be seen as the
culmination of an assault by the Communist Party and Soviet state on the
Ukrainian peasantry, who resisted Soviet policies. This assault occurred in the
context of a campaign of intimidation and arrests of Ukrainian intellectuals,
writers, artists, religious leaders, and political cadres, who were seen as a
threat to Soviet ideological and state-building aspirations. Between 1917 and
1921, Ukraine briefly became an independent country and fought to retain its
independence before succumbing to the Red Army and being incorporated into the
Soviet Union. In the 1920s, Soviet central authorities, seeking the support of
the populace, allowed for some cultural autonomy through the policy known as
“indigenization.” By the end of the 1920s, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin decided
to curtail Ukraine’s cultural autonomy, launching the intimidation, arrest,
imprisonment and execution of thousands of Ukrainian intellectuals, church
leaders, as well as Communist Party functionaries who had supported Ukraine’s
distinctiveness. At the same time, Stalin ordered the collectivization of
agriculture. The majority of Ukrainians, who were small-scale or subsistence
farmers, resisted. The state confiscated the property of the independent
farmers and forced them to work on government collective farms. The more
prosperous farmers (owning a few head of livestock, for example) and those who
resisted collectivization were branded kulaks (rich peasants) and declared
enemies of the state who deserved to be eliminated as a class. Thousands were
thrown out of their homes and deported.
In 1932, the Communist Party set
impossibly high quotas for the amount of grain Ukrainian villages were required
to contribute to the Soviet state. When the villages were not able to meet the
quotas, authorities intensified the requisition campaign, confiscating even the
seed set aside for planting and levying fines in meat and potatoes for failure
to fulfill the quotas. Special teams were sent to search homes and even seized
other foodstuffs. Starving farmers attempted to leave their villages in search
of food, but Soviet authorities issued a decree forbidding Ukraine’s peasants
from leaving the country. As a result, many thousands of farmers who had
managed to leave their villages were apprehended and sent back, virtually a
death sentence. A law was introduced that made the theft of even a few stalks
of grain an act of sabotage punishable by execution. In some cases, soldiers
were posted in watchtowers to prevent people from taking any of the harvest.
Although informed of the dire conditions in Ukraine, central authorities
ordered local officials to extract even more from the villages. Millions
starved as the USSR sold crops from Ukraine abroad. The USSR vigorously denied
that the Holodomor had occurred. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the
Communist Party, secret police, and government archives that have become
accessible to researchers support the conclusion that the famine was caused by
Soviet state policies and was indeed intentionally intensified by Soviet
authorities.
https://holodomor.ca/holodomor-basic-facts/
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