Ukrainian Famine-Genocide Myth
- Dr. John Puntis -
Soviet poster circa 1930: "We will
keep out the kulaks."
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In 1922 the Soviet Union experienced severe famine conditions in
some areas following on from the wars of intervention when imperialist
powers had sought to crush the new Soviet state. Famine conditions
recurred again in 1933, particularly, but not exclusively, in the
Ukraine. There are two versions to this second famine that are
radically
different. An objective analysis indicates the famine to have resulted
from a combination of poor climatic conditions and sabotage on the part
of the rich peasants or kulaks in the face of the collectivization of
agriculture. Ukrainian nationalists however argue that the famine was
deliberately contrived by Stalin in order to break the spirit of the
Ukrainian people, and resulted in millions of needless deaths, in fact
death and destruction on such a scale that it dwarfs the Nazi holocaust.
Documentary evidence produced to support this claim is often
endorsed by academics such as Robert Conquest, or James Mace of Harvard
University. Such evidence is shaky in the extreme and often relies on
discredited accounts from the 1930's pro-fascist press in America, or
even Nazi documents. Despite this it continues to resurface, most
notably in the 1980s as part of an attempt by Ukrainian nationalists to
commemorate the 50th anniversary of the famine, and at the same time to
fuel the cold war rhetoric of the Reagan era.
The same old grainy photographic images appear time and time again,
purporting to show victims of the Ukraine famine, but these are almost
always undocumented, or if traced back actually come from famine relief
documents from the 1922 famine or even earlier. Cobbled together in the
film Harvest of Despair such pictures were shown on
UK television despite having been rejected by some public service
networks in the U.S. because of a blatant lack of objectivity.
Falsified photos to promote the Holodomor, from a
public exhibit in Sevastopol, Ukraine in March 2009, organized by the
Security Service of Ukraine. The photos were captioned to say
they were from the alleged famine in 1932-33 but the three on the left
were proven to be depression-era photos from the U.S. and the one at
the right from Russia in 1921. (www.nr2.ru)
Ukrainian nationalist organizations in Canada and elsewhere continue
to propagate the notion of deliberate famine genocide, while carefully
glossing over their own anti-Semitic, pro-Nazi and collaborationist
origins. A search on the web for "Ukrainian Famine Genocide" resulted
in 845 references to this "man made" famine, as usual graphically
illustrated with pictures for an earlier era. In this talk I will
explore some of the background to these various claims and counter
claims, with reference to the excellent book on the subject by Douglas
Tottle.[1]
Journalistic Fraud in the 1930sIn the autumn of 1934, an
American using the name of Thomas Walker entered the Soviet Union.
After less than a week in Moscow, the remainder of his 13-day stay was
spent in transit to the Manchurian border, at which point he left the
USSR never to return. Four months later a series of articles began in
the Hearst press in America, by Thomas Walker, "noted journalist,
traveller and student of Russian affairs who has spent several years
touring the Union of Soviet Russia." The articles described a famine in
the Ukraine that had claimed six million lives, and was illustrated
with photographs of corpses and starving children. Walker was said to
have
smuggled in a camera under "the most difficult and dangerous
circumstances."
Louis Fischer, an American writer living in Moscow at the time was
suspicious. Why had the Hearst press sat on these sensational stories
for ten months before publication? He established that Walker's short
visit to the Soviet Union could not possibly have allowed him to even
visit the areas he described and photographed. He also pointed out
that Walker's photographic evidence was distinctly odd: not only were
the pictures suggestive of an earlier decade (Fischer thought probably
of the 1921 Volga famine) but contained a mixture of scenes taken in
both summer and winter. Fischer also noted that the 1933 harvest in the
Ukraine had been good.
Some of the pictures were subsequently identified as showing scenes
from the Austro-Hungarian empire and World War 1, and it was known that
Hearst newspapers were digging up old pictures and retouching them for
use as propaganda. Pictures sometimes appeared labelled as having been
taken in Russia, and at other times the same picture
is relocated to the Ukraine for obviously political reasons. Not only
were the photographs a fraud, and the trip to the Ukraine a fraud, but
Thomas Walker himself was a fraud, turning out to be an escaped convict
by the name of Robert Green who had served time for forgery. At his
subsequent trial following recapture he admitted that his series of
pictures used in the Hearst newspaper articles were fakes and were not
taken in the Ukraine as stated. Despite these facts, the same photos
are still those used in commemoration posters, on web sites and in the
film Harvest of Despair.
The Hearst PressThe Hearst Press needless to say continued
with its famine genocide campaign despite the Walker fiasco. This is
not surprising when we consider that Hearst himself was known to
millions of Americans as "America's number one fascist." (One of
Mussolini's chief sources of personal income during the early 1930s was
from being a paid correspondent for the Hearst Press.)
In 1934 Hearst visited Nazi Germany and met Hitler. Following this
visit, the Hearst Press began to promote famine genocide articles on
the Ukraine. French Premier Edward Herriot, who had recently returned
from travelling in the Ukraine, publicized the fact that he had seen no
evidence of any famine. Following the Walker articles, Hearst
went on to try and convince Americans that the Soviet Union was a land
of utter starvation, genocide and cannibalism. At the time this was
often recognized as politically motivated sensationalism, but over the
passage of years these fabrications have become transformed into
"primary evidence."
By noting those features of the 1930s campaign and the selective
memories of those who helped the Hearst Press in propagating the
famine-genocide thesis, light can be cast on the character of today's
famine-genocide campaign.
Simultaneously with the launch of Hearst's 1935 outpourings, the
Nazi press in Germany and sympathetic papers elsewhere in Europe began
publishing similar stories. At this time a book by Dr Ewald Ammende was
published entitled Human Life in Russia. This has had a lasting
influence on those who propagate the famine-genocide myth,
and was republished in 1984. The book makes little pretence of
objectivity crediting Hearst correspondents, accounts from Nazi Germany
and Fascist Italy, and reproducing allegations by unnamed "travellers"
and "experts."
Most photographic evidence of the famine-genocide theorists can be
traced back either to Ammende's book or to Thomas Walker. The origins
of the photographs are not documented, although it should be noted that
Ammende was involved with famine relief work in 1921-2. The pictures
are said to have been taken in the streets and squares of
Kharkov in the summer of 1933, although only 10 of 26 appear to show
urban scenes. There are no signs or landmarks to help set them in
context. "Human Life in Russia" contains additional pictures that did
not appear in the German edition. These are claimed to have been taken
by Dr Ditloff, director of the German Government Agricultural
concession in the north Caucuses. One might wonder how a Nazi
functionary came to be wandering freely around the Ukraine taking
photographs, but in any case in later publications the same photographs
are either unattributed or attributed to a completely different source.
In fact, some pictures have been identified as coming from the 1922
famine, and some show winter scenes despite apparently having been
taken in summer. Other publications use the same pictures either with
no accreditation or accredited to Thomas Walker, despite the fact that
they were used to portray events in 1932/3 and Walker claimed to have
taken them in the spring of 1934.
It is clear that the photographic evidence is fraudulent, and was
used primarily as part of a campaign to undermine and discredit the
Soviet Union. Despite this, they continue to be used to this day.
Cold WarThe famine genocide campaign of the 1930s leaned
heavily on dubious right wing sources and was not accepted by
mainstream historians at the time, leading some Ukrainian nationalists
to speak of a pro-Soviet, left wing or even Jewish conspiracy to
suppress the truth. In the 1950s the Nationalists published books such
as The Black Deeds of
the Kremlin to propagate their interpretation of history. A section is
devoted to Nationalist allegations of Soviet mass executions during the
1930s in Vynnitsa. Unearthed during Nazi occupation in 1943, the graves
were examined by a Nazi commission and used in propaganda films.
Post-war testimony by German soldiers revealed however, that
this was a Nazi propaganda deception, the bodies being those of Jews
executed by the SS and Ukrainian militia.
The gruesome allegations of cannibalism in volume 2 of Black Deeds
has lead to it being referred to as the "Ukrainian Nationalist
cookbook"!
The Numbers Game
Nazis carry out mass killings in Vynnitsa,
Ukraine, 1942.
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The
famine genocide theorists are keen to establish that millions of people
died in the Ukraine. Their methodology, as usual, is highly suspect. A
"landmark study" by Dana Dalrymple published in Soviet Studies, 1964
comes up with a figure of 5.5 million based on averaging the guesses of
20 Western journalists.
One of them is our fictional friend Thomas Walker. Dalrymple states
that Walker made his survey by breaking away from a guided tour, and
had previously spent several years touring Russia. A similar figure by
the Archbishop of Canterbury is also quoted; this enthusiastic
supporter of Hitler had attempted to raise the famine issue in the
House of
Lords in 1934 when in fact the Foreign Office stated that there was no
evidence to support the allegations against the Soviet government.
Needless to say, the testimony of Sir John Maynard, a renowned famine
expert who visited the Ukraine in the summer of 1933 and rejected tales
of famine-genocide is dismissed by the Nationalists.
The Cold War campaign resurfaced in the 1980s with considerable
publicity and scholarly backing from the Ukrainian Research Institute
of Harvard University, long a centre of anti-communist research. In
1983, the book The Ninth Circle, first published by Ukrainian
Nationalists in 1953 was republished, edited and introduced by
Harvard's
Dr James Mace. A critical review of this book described it as being "a
polemic, devoid of any documentation, and lacking in any scholarship."
The author, it was pointed out, fails to give any details about his
activity during the Nazi occupation of Ukraine, and makes not a single
derogatory comment about the Nazis. Once again the Thomas
Walker fakes are used as illustrations, despite the author claiming to
have been an eyewitness to the famine. The "academic" Mace writing of
Walker's material states, "American newspapermen like Thomas Walker
wrote plainspoken and graphic accounts of the Famine based on what they
had witnessed in the Ukraine in 1933." Note the
convenient backdating of Walker's trip to 1933 and not 1934.
Another contribution to the famine genocide literature is Walter
Dushnyk's 50 years ago: the Famine Holocaust in Ukraine. The foreword
to this book is by none other than Dalrymple. Dushnyk's roots can be
traced to Europe's pre-war fascist movement when he was active in the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists. Again a critical
reviewer comments that this book, "rather than being a scholarly
analysis, the material consists of a highly emotionally charged
vitriolic polemic. Indeed it has little to do with scholarship and
unquestionably is lacking in objectivity." Once again the same faked or
undocumented photographs are used as illustrations. Dushnyk calculates
the number
of famine deaths by projecting an anticipated population growth, based
on the 1926 census, onto the listed population census for the Ukraine
in 1939. The difference is 7.5 million and this therefore becomes the
number of famine victims. The nonsense of this methodology can be
demonstrated by transposing to Canada in the 1930s and showing
that 25 per cent of Saskatchewan's population disappeared during the
great depression. In fact, the population of the Ukraine increased in
real terms from 1926-1939 by almost 3.4 million. Whilst it is not
possible to give an accurate figure for the numbers of famine victims,
the claims of people like Dalrymple, Mace and Dushnyk have been shown
up as extreme exaggerations fabricated to strengthen their political
allegations of genocide.
Harvest of DeceptionThe famine-genocide campaign reached a
climax in 1986 with the publication of Robert Conquest's book Harvest
of Sorrow, and the film produced by the famine research committee of
the St Vladimir Institute, Harvest of Despair. The film is full of
the old undocumented pictures, and relies heavily on interviews
with former Nazis and Ukrainian collaborators, as well as defectors
from the Soviet Union; even [English journalist and satirist] Malcolm
Muggeridge pops up for a short appearance. The film's producers
apparently viewed more than a million feet of stock footage of film,
before selecting a mere 720 feet for use. Instead of any documented
evidence of the famine being presented, a montage of undocumented
stills are shown including the Walker/Ditlofff pictures, 1921/2 famine
pictures, and others from Nazi propaganda publications. With
breathtaking disregard for the truth, some scenes borrow from film of
the civil war, and Soviet films of the 1920s. In essence, it seems that
the
film makers scrounged through the archives looking for bits and pieces
of old "war-and-starvation" shots that were then spliced into the film
to great subliminal effect, bound together by a narrative and
interspersed with partisan interviews. So much has even been admitted
by some of those involved, yet the film has been widely shown and
praised,
including on British television. The makers even received grants and
logistical support from the National Film Board of Canada and another
publicly funded body, Multiculturalism Canada. Harvest of Despair was
clearly no objective documentary as is claimed, but rather a crude cold
war propaganda exercise.
Conquest's book Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivisation and the
Terror famine has emerged as the best attempt of the
famine-genocidists at legitimacy. Conquest's right wing affiliations
and his holocaust denials are now well known. At one time he was
employed by the British Secret Service's disinformation project, the
Information
Research Department, key targets being "the third world" and the "Russians." Conquest's earlier work The Great Terror had alleged that
only 5-6 million perished in the 1932/3 period and only half of them in
the Ukraine. By 1983 Conquest, however, had upped his estimates to 14
million and extended famine conditions to 1937! Such revisions
coincided handily with the 50th anniversary commemorations of the
famine.
Conquest presents the various nationalist cliques who held parts of
the Ukraine during the Russian civil war and foreign intervention as
bona fide governments. The mass slaughter of Ukrainian Jews carried out
under nationalist "independence" in 1918-19 is dismissed in 3 words.
The Nazi occupation of the Ukraine is presented implicitly as a
breakdown between periods of Soviet "terror" and the liberation from
the Nazis as Soviet "reoccupation." There are many examples in the book
of Conquest's lack of scholarship. One example is him quoting from
accounts by a foreign correspondent who turns out to be none other than
Thomas Walker, the man who never was. In his reference note
for the quote he even moves the date of the Hearst article from 1935 to
February 1933. It is worth repeating the observations of American
historian J. Arch Getty on the quality of this kind of historical
research:
"Grand analytical generalizations have come from second hand bits of
overheard corridor gossip. Prison camp stories ("my friend met
Bukharin's wife in a camp and she said...") have become primary sources
on Soviet central political decision making .... the need to generalize
from isolated and unverified particulars has transformed rumours
into sources and has equated repetition of stories with confirmation."
Whereas serious historians do not accept hearsay and rumour as
historical fact, contrast this with Conquest's stated position that
"Truth can only percolate in the form of hearsay" and "on political
matters basically the best, though not infallible source is rumour."
The FamineComing now to the famine itself and its causes,
the factors of drought and sabotage during the process of collectivization are generally given little attention by right wing
historians. Interestingly, in A History of the Ukraine by Mikhail
Hrushevsky -- described by the Nationalists themselves as "Ukraine's
leading historian" --
we read that "Again a year of drought coincided with chaotic
agricultural conditions; and during the winter of 1932-3 a great
famine, like that of 1921-2 swept across Soviet Ukraine." Nowhere does
this history suggest that the famine was deliberate and aimed against
Ukrainians, and in fact more space is devoted to the famine of 1921-22.
There
are many references to drought conditions in the Ukraine in 1931 and
1932. Even Ewald Ammende in his Human Life in Russia refers to
climatic and natural causes of the famine.
While drought was a contributing factor, the main cause of the
famine was the struggle around collectivization of the countryside in
this period. In 1928 there were millions of small scale peasant farms,
three quarters of the land was sown by hand, one third of the crop
areas was harvested by sickle and scythe, 40 per cent of the crop was
threshed by flail. Over one quarter of peasant households possessed no
draught animals or farming implements, and 47 per cent had only
ploughs. The drive to collectivization was a key feature of the first
five year plan launched in 1929. The small minority of rich peasants,
the kulaks, opposed socialization of agriculture and fought against
collectivization with an organized campaign of large-scale destruction.
The struggle in some areas including the Ukraine approached civil war
scale. Visiting foreign observers at the time noted that kulak
opposition took the form of slaughtering their cattle and horses rather
than having them collectivized. From 1928-33 the number of horses in
the
Soviet Union fell from 30 to 15 million, cattle from 70 to 38 million,
sheep and goats from 147 to 50 million. Some kulaks burned down the
property of collectives and even burned their own crops and seed grain.
Many famine-genocide theorists discount kulak sabotage, but others
offer enthusiastic descriptions celebrating the opposition to Soviet
planning. In addition the famine was compounded by typhus epidemics
which undoubtedly claimed many lives. By 1933 there was a successful
harvest, enormous efforts were put into improving collective farms and
providing mechanized equipment.
Subsequent huge increases in agricultural and industrial output in
the Ukraine leading up to the Second World War give the lie to
allegations of 7 to 15 million starvation deaths only seven years
earlier. In addition, the record of Ukrainian resistance to the Nazis
and their Ukrainian nationalist auxiliaries was exemplary. In the
largest eastern
portion of the Ukraine loyalty was overwhelming and active. There were
over half a million organized Soviet guerrillas, and four and a half
million ethnic Ukrainians fought in the Soviet army. The Ukrainian
nationalist histories acknowledge this, and one can only wonder at the
ability of a nation to mobilize such numbers of military aged males in
the light of Nationalist claims about famine victims. The reality was
that for the bulk of the Ukrainian peasants, workers and the
professionals newly emerged from those classes, the Soviet system had
demonstrated overwhelming economic and cultural advantages.
The only place where the Nationalists found any kind of base during
the Nazi occupation was in what had been up to 1939 Polish Galicia;
this is where the Nazis did their bulk of recruiting for the fascist
police and SS units. An examination of what happened during the Nazi
occupation is revealing not only in terms of the popular support for
the Soviets demonstrated by the people of the Ukraine, but also for the
role played by the Ukrainian Nationalists.
Collaboration and Collusion
Founding of the SS Galicia Division
in the spring of 1943
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In June 1941 the Nazi army entered Lviv, capital of the Western
Ukraine. In its vanguard came the German-uniformed Nachtigall Battalion
of Ukrainian Nationalists. During the first three days of July the
Nachtigall Battalion slaughtered 7,000 Jews in the vicinity of Lviv.
Non-Jewish writers, intellectuals and professionals known to be hostile
to Nazism were also killed. In the first eight months of Nazi
occupation 15 per cent of Galician Jews -- 100,000 people -- were
slaughtered by the joint actions of the Germans and Ukrainian
nationalists. Many thousands of Nationalists who fled to Germany and
elsewhere in the wake of the retreating Nazi armies had to cover up
their personal and
collective guilt in the holocaust and betrayal of their country.
Anti-Semitic and fascist themes run deep through the history of the
Ukrainian nationalist movement. Leaders of the Ukrainian Nationalists
were on the payroll of the Nazi party before Hitler invaded the Soviet
Union. Ukrainian Nationalist battalions were trained in Germany before
the
war and some were used in the invasion of Poland. The Nachtigall and
Roland Ukrainian volunteer detachments fought with the German army and
in late 1941 were reorganized into a Police Battalion and employed in
Byelorussia. Despite this being well known, the famine genociders
portray the nationalists as having fought against both Hitler and
Stalin and somehow on a par with the French resistance. Similarly
distorted is the role of the 14th Waffen SS Galizien Division (also
known as the Halychyna Division). Formed in 1943 its main function was
brutal anti-partisan work. Even after German withdrawal from the
Ukraine, nationalists stayed behind and continued to harass Soviet
supply
lines. Nationalist troops served Hitler in Ukraine, Poland,
Byelorussia, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Yugoslavia. Ukrainian
collaborators assisted in the murder of hundreds of thousands in death
camps like Treblinka, Sobibor, Yanowska and Trawniki. Such were the
"anti-Nazi" credentials of those who nationalists today would present
as "national
liberation fighters," "heroes of the Ukrainian people" and "patriots
who struggled for a free Ukraine."
After the WarAfter the allied victory over Nazi Germany
many collaborators sought to escape justice and retribution, looking
for new lives in North America and elsewhere. Western intelligence
agencies helped sanitize Nazi collaborators for emigration to new
homelands in return for a new collaboration against Russia. The
International
Refugee Organization as well as the U.S. Displaced Persons Commission
initially regarded the Ukrainian Nazis as ineligible for visas. This
did not stop American intelligence agencies from presenting the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists as having been engaged in
anti-Nazi combat. This was a complete fabrication, but persuaded the
immigration authorities to change their stance. Laundered East European
collaborators were put to work at Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty, the
Voice of America and schools training U.S. intelligence officers in
East European languages. Some were trained for sabotage operations
within the Soviet Union and others employed as living witnesses
of "communist terror" in the psychological conditioning of the American
people for war against the USSR. The Ukrainian "famine-genocide" was
but one of many themes. Ultimately it became more important to the
immigration authorities in the U.S. and Canada whether one might be
considered a communist rather than to have been a Nazi
collaborator.
Conclusion
Over 65 years ago the fakery and political motivation of the
pro-fascist publisher William Hearst were exposed by the American
journalist Louis Fischer. In examining the record of those propagating
the famine genocide campaign today, one is drawn to Fischer's
conclusion:
"The attempt is too transparent, and the hands are too unclean to succeed."
Dr. John Puntis is a physician at Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Department of Childrenīs Gastroenterology.
Note
1. Fraud, famine and fascism. The Ukrainian genocide myth from Hitler to Harvard. Progress Books, Toronto, 1987. ISBN 0-919396-51-8.
See Also Articles by Prof. Mark Tauger
Prof. Mark Tauger
is one of the world's leading scholars on the development of
agriculture in the Soviet Union during its early years. He is an
associate professor of history at West Virginia University. He is the
author of the 2010 book Agriculture in World History. His
writings on
Soviet agriculture -- articles, book chapters, and reviews -- are
listed on his website at West Virginia University. Three of these are
provided below:
"Stalin,
Soviet Agriculture and Collectivization," Chapter Six in Food and
Conflict in Europe in the Age of the Two World Wars, edited by
Frank Trentmann and Flemming Just, Palgrave Macmillan, 2006
"Natural
Disaster and Human Actions in the Soviet Famine of 1931-33," (2001, 65
pages), Carl Beck Papers No. 1506, Center for Russian and East
European Studies (University of Pittsburgh). This is the only study
documenting the underlying environmental causes of the famine of those
years.
"The
1932 Harvest and the Famine of 1933," Slavic Review 1991.
This article was published in
Volume 50 Number 9 - November 24, 2020
Volume [volume] Number [issue] - [date]
Article Link:
Ukrainian Famine-Genocide Myth - Dr. John Puntis
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca
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