November Memories
Ukraine, or at least the 30% of its citizens belonging to the hard Left, has celebrated yet another anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution, Lenin's coup d'etat of November 7, 1917. In order to understand the significance of what that event brought this country, I suggest we recall another less known but in its way no less important event of November 18, 1932.
Only in 1990 did it become known that on this date Stalin's Premier,
Vyacheslav Molotov, presided in the then republic capital of Kharkiv over
a meeting of the Politburo of the Communist Party (bolshevik) of Ukraine.
Under his tutelage it adopted a resolution, probably prepared earlier in
Moscow, to reinforce the "grain procurements campaign," otherwise known
as the food seizures soon to condemn millions of Ukrainian peasants to
death from starvation in what they call the holodomor, the Great
Manmade Famine of 1932-33. The decree introduced a system of "fines in
kind" for those failing to surrender the amount of grain the state demanded,
usually because they simply did not have it. The decree solved the problem
with Stalinist simplicity: if there's no bread, take the potatoes as a
fine, and impose a supplementary meat quota of 150% of the annual norm,
or, in to put it in simple words, slaughter the livestock. Farms and villages
could also be blacklisted: meaning, among other things, closing all stores
and removing all goods from them. All that was to be left was a seed reserve
for the next planting (the seed reserve would be ordered seized on December
24, this time on the orders of Lazar Kaganovich, and maybe that date also
deserves to be remembered). And within the next several months (it takes
a couple of months to starve to death, a singularly unpleasant way of passing
on) several million Ukrainians were dead, thanks to the solicitude of those
building the bright socialist future. Those so eager to return to that
future might perhaps do well to ponder these and other such anniversaries
when deciding just what it is they want to go back to.
Выпуск газеты №:
№40, (1998)Section
Day After Day