Category Archives: holodomor

Russian Textbooks Attempt To Rewrite History [Article]

While last week we brought you National Holodomor Awareness week, disturbing news of history repeating comes out of Russia, courtesy the Times Online:

In Russian schools, something even more troubling appears to be happening. They call it “positive history” and the man behind it is Putin. In 2007, the former secret police chief told a conference of Russian educationists that the country needed a more patriotic history. Putin condemned teachers for having “porridge in their heads”, attacked some history textbook authors for taking foreign money — “naturally they are dancing the polka ordered by those who pay them” — and announced that new history textbooks were on their way. Within weeks, a new law was passed giving the state powers to approve and to disallow history textbooks for schools.

What does Igor Dolutsky, the author of a history textbook that has been dropped by the Kremlin, make of “positive history”? “It’s an appalling idea which hinders proper teaching in schools. School history should not create patriots, it should teach children to think. Putin’s task is to rule a state edging towards totalitarianism.”

Aleksandr Filippov is the Positive History Man. He has a long, mournful face and the air of a defrocked Orthodox priest. His voice is sorrowful but the message is upbeat: “It is wrong to write a textbook that will fill the children who learn from it with horror and disgust about their past and their people. A generally positive tone for the teaching of history will build optimism and self-assurance in the growing young generation and make them feel as if they are part of their country’s bright future. A history in which there is good and bad, things to be proud of and things that are regrettable. But the general tone for a school textbook should still be positive.”

It is when you analyse the Kremlinapproved “positive history” book in detail that the clock chimes 13. In March 1933 a fearless reporter and fluent Russian speaker, Gareth Jones, evaded the Moscow censors and went to the Soviet Ukraine and southern Russia, from where he reported that “millions are dying in the villages”. The “Great Famine” deaths were caused by Stalin’s forced collectivisation, grain seizures and mass deportations of peasant farmers. Malcolm Muggeridge declared it a man-made famine and Arthur Koestler wrote of seeing “horrible infants with enormous, wobbling heads, stick-like limbs, swollen, pointed bellies . . .”

Back in Moscow, the Great Famine was denied by Stalin’s stooge on The New York Times, Walter Duranty. Two years later, Jones was shot dead in China, some say by Stalin’s secret police, the NKVD.

One estimate is that four million died in Ukraine and southern Russia during the Great Famine, another puts the figure at ten million. No one counted. The unnecessary deaths of millions were airbrushed from history. So how does the 2009 “positive history” textbook cover this? It dedicates 83 pages to Stalin’s industrialisation — and one paragraph to the famine. The scales are loaded one way, to the benefit of Stalin’s reputation.

Read the rest of the article

It’s a very worth-reading article and goes on with other horrific examples – lies about the Soviets not starting World War 2 with the Nazis, minimalizing the Great Terror and more.

[The Times Online]

Black flags mark Ukrainian tragedy [Article]

From the Standard in St. Catherines, Ontario:

Saturday’s memorial at St. John the Theologian Ukrainian Catholic Church on Lakeshore Road included a candlelight prayer service and a program inside the church.

The 33 black flags placed on the lawn symbolize the year the famine was at its deadly height.

Local politicians, priests from other parishes and Ukrainian community members joined the St. Catharines gathering.

A handful of the about 30 Holodomor survivors living in the area were also present.

Services like it were held in Ukrainian communities in Canada and around the world.

All were scheduled to coincide with the official 4 p. m. memorial in Ukraine.

The Holodomor flag display continues outside the 91 Lakeshore Rd. church until Tuesday

Read the rest of the article

[The Standard]

Are You Listening New York Times? Gareth Jones & The Holodomor at the United Nations

Clipboard-1The great nephew of Gareth Jones, Nigel Linsan Colley recently discovered his great uncle’s diaries exposing the Holodomor touring Ukraine in the 30’s and delivered a speech to the United Nations in New York last week:

Last week, 180 newspapers across the world, from the Washington Post to the London Times reported the remarkable story of Gareth Jones and his graphic eyewitness accounts of his off-limits trek into Ukraine during the height of Moscow’s starvation of that country. Today, we call it the “Holodomor.” Gareth’s accounts are preserved in his journalist’s diaries which probably now represent the only surviving contemporary independent western verification of that genocide. These precious diaries are currently on display in the Wren Library at Cambridge University, where Gareth had been a student. They sit side by side with memorabilia of other illustrious alumni including Sir Isaac Newton’s personal annotated copy of ‘The Principia’, in which he proposed his fundamental mathematical Laws of Motion.

Thanks to the interest generated in 2003, much of the world has been made aware of the true circumstances of the Holodomor but it saddens me to report that although the world press ran the story last week, including a whole page in the London Times, conspicuous by its absence was the NYT.

All the NYT Pulitzer prize winners are being besmirched by the infamous acts of one rogue journalist. Isn’t it time Mr Sulzberger that as publisher of the NYT you should do the decent thing and return his Pulitzer? You owe it to your own paper’s reputation, and your readership, to live by your famous motto and publish ‘all the news that’s fit to print’.

Truth, an an informed public, are the linchpin of a free society

What does all this mean, today? Well, let me first take you back even further to the past. One hundred and seventy years ago, a Frenchman, Marquis de Custine published a book detailing his travels in Russia. Among the observations was this: “Russian despotism not only pays little respect to ideas and sentiments, it will also deny facts; it will struggle against evidence, and triumph in the struggle!”

Truth, and an informed public, are the linchpin of a free society. The campaign in Russia to resurrect Stalin, to whitewash his inhuman crimes, is well under way. There are disturbing signs that his rehabilitation will not only be poorly opposed but may even be facilitated by certain media around the world. Gareth Jones is a shining example of honest journalism, a benchmark to be aspired to by today’s media. It is thanks to efforts of many around us that the Holodomor is slowly, but surely, being accepted as the apogee of Stalin’s terror. I believe that Gareth was viciously murdered by the Soviet secret police. It was what the Frenchman Custine warned about, the Russian struggle against evidence. Just as decades later journalists and others who sought to uncover Moscow’s crimes before a trusting world, would also be murdered. No one is asking you to risk your lives. But do risk a little of your time and energy to uphold principle, honour and the truth. To make sure that despotism does not triumph.

Thank you very much.

[Gareth Jones Memorial]

Holodomor news round-up – Nov 29 2009

Not sure why they’re reporting the day after Holodomor Remembrance Day, but least it’s making some news rounds:

Ukraine leader calls ’30s famine Soviet genocide
Washington Times
Ukraine’s Soviet-era archives, opened to the public by Mr. Yushchenko, has allowed historians to take a fresh look at the Holodomor, or death by hunger. 

Ukraine’s parliament officially recognized the famine as genocide in 2006. Thirteen countries, including Canada, Poland and Australia, have followed suit. The United States had been reluctant to call the famine genocide — a view that offends many Russians.

Ukraine buries famine victims
Toronto Sun
Ukraine’s Holodomor, or death by starvation, was denied by the Soviet Union for decades. It is seen by many Ukrainians as a national tragedy. …

Ukrainian famine still brings tears
Edmonton Journal
The Holodomor was a Soviet-imposed famine that killed millions in Ukraine in 1932-33. After more than 70 years, the borders of Leonid Korownyk’s memory have …

“If we do not support the truth and stand up for history here in Alberta or around the world we risk a repeat and Russia will educate the world on their version of Holodomor.”

Ukraine commemorates “Holodomor” famine
euronews
The 1932-33 Holodomor – or death by starvation – is seen by many in the country as a national tragedy. Today allegations by Ukraine’s President Viktor …

Holodomor Remembrance Day: Last Saturday in November
Kyiv Post
People hold candles at the Holodomor Memorial in Kyiv on Nov 28. Ukraine commemorates the millions of people who died during the 1932-33 Holodomor, …

Ukraine reburies famine victims shot in Soviet era
Reuters India
Ukraine’s Holodomor, or death by starvation, was denied by the Soviet Union for decades. It is seen by many Ukrainians as a national tragedy. ...

Ukraine Commemorates 76th Holodomor Anniversary
Ukrainiana

Unlike elsewhere in the Soviet Union, the peasants in Ukraine and in the neighboring region of Kuban had nowhere run. By a directive of the Communist Party, barrier troops surrounded these areas, populated mainly by Ukrainians, and ensured that few would escape death…

A woman wipes her tears as she stands in front of coffins containing the bones of the famine victims during a reburial ceremony in Ukraine’s western town of Lviv, 500 km (312 miles) west of Kiev, November 28, 2009.During the third wave of the famine in 1946-47 in the USSR, historians believe up to a million died as Soviet authorities imposed heavy requisitioned grain and harvest quotas.About 600 famine victims were reburied in Lviv.Photo: GLEBE GARANICH (REUTERS)

Today is Ukrainian Famine and Genocide (Holodomor) Memorial Day

From the Winnipeg Press:

November is an important month for the Ukrainian community in Winnipeg and in other localities across Canada, launching the second National Holodomor Memorial Day on Nov. 28. The goal is to annually unite the Ukrainian community and all Canadians in remembering the victims and raising awareness of this tragedy.
Holodomor (man-made famine) is one of the most heinous crimes in the history of mankind. It was the result of a deliberate political strategy masterminded by Josef Stalin and his totalitarian Communist regime to eliminate millions of Ukrainians in the early 1930s by starving an area long known as Europe’s breadbasket. The losses during the Holodomor surpassed those of the Ukrainian nation during the Second World War.


Throughout the world and particularly in Canada, Ukrainians are continuing this awareness campaign by honouring the victims of the Holodomor by hosting a variety of events commemorating this tragic period.

Read more of the article

Here are the current list of laws honouring the Holodomor:

Similar legislation is already underway in Quebec and British Columbia. There are still lots of events planned for today.

Holodomor Survivors

I wasn’t able to show all 31 Holodomor survivor testimonies I uploaded from HolodomorSurvivors.ca earlier, so here’s all of them: