The
1932-33 Holodomor was a consequence of the Bolsheviks’ efforts to completely
eradicate private property
Stephen Wheatcroft and Robert Davies wrote in the preface to the Russian
edition of their book about the famine Gody goloda: Selskoye khozyajstvo SSSR, 1931-1933 (Years of Famine:
Agriculture in the USSR in 1931-33) that they “failed to find
evidence that the Soviet authorities pursued a programme of genocide against
Ukraine”. Indeed, a programme of
this kind did not exist. Their book is filled with facts but ignores the most
important one — the party programme to which Bolshevik leaders looked for
guidance in creating an unprecedented socio-economic system. In the stormy
atmosphere of 1848, Marx and Engels summarized their views in the Manifesto of the Communist
Party: “The theory of the Communists may be summed up in the single
sentence: Abolition of private property”. The communist doctrine of the Russian
Bolsheviks was based precisely on the revolutionary Marxism of the mid-19th
century. When Lenin returned to Russia from his exile intent on transforming a
people’s revolution into a communist one, he outlined in his 1917 April Theses not
only a plan for the Bolsheviks to seize power but also a blueprint for further
action. This included changing the name of the party (from social democratic to
communist), adopting a communist party programme, creating a communal state and
founding Comintern, an international organization of communist parties.
Through propaganda and terror, the Bolsheviks ousted rival parties from
the Soviets and turned the latter into a clone of their own party and
government bodies. Thus emerged the Soviet authorities, a symbiosis of the
Bolshevik political dictatorship and the Soviet government. As a result of the
party’s foundation in “democratic centralism”, the Bolshevik leaders had
absolute power. The previous horizontally structured organizations upon which
civil society once rested were either destroyed or verticalized. The party and
governmental verticals of power were rooted in the masses through a series of
“transmission belts” — an extensive system that included the Soviets, the Komsomol,
trade unions and various non-governmental organizations. The Communist Party
also became a “transmission belt” when it produced an internal party of leaders
— the nomenklatura.
The vertical of government security came under direct control of the Secretary
General and, like the party and government verticals, was rooted in society
through hundreds of thousands (in Ukraine) and millions (across the USSR) of
“secret informers”. Unlike the traditional states—both democratic and
totalitarian—that were separated from society, the communist state permeated
society through all of its institutions. Such a state was necessary in order to
successfully implement elements of the communist utopia, namely dispossessing
society and complementing political autocracy with economic dictatorship.
The logic of communist transformations required the simultaneous
obliteration of private property among large and small property owners. It
proved fairly easy to remove the means of production from the bourgeoisie —
though it did prompt a civil war. In the countryside, communist transformations
involved setting up state farms in place of landowners’ estates and forming
communes by uniting peasants’ farms. Having factories, state farms and communes
at their disposal, the Bolshevik leaders were intent on doing away with the
market and replacing goods circulation with direct exchange. These were
precisely the changes set forth in the Russian Communist programme of March
1919.
However, peasants and soldiers mobilized from the countryside did not
want to even hear about state farms and communes and demanded that land be
divided fairly. The Council of People’s Commissars led by Lenin was forced to
back down and, rather than implement the exchange of goods between the
countryside and cities, search for other ways to provide food to workers in
nationalized industries. The government banned free trade and set up mandatory
procurement quotas for peasants. As a result, peasants began to limit the land
they cultivated, leaving just enough to serve only their personal needs as they
were unwilling to work for the state for free. Then, in December 1920, Lenin
introduced sowing quotas: state agencies were set up to inform peasant
households how much land each of them was supposed to cultivate and make sure
they worked diligently to produce a harvest, which was then taken away by the
state. However, Lenin quickly changed his mind and switched to the New Economic
Policy.
Collectivization
After five years of tense struggle, Stalin took over the party’s top leadership
and formulated two theses in the resolutions of the 15th party
congress in December 1927: agriculture needed to be collectivized, and the
country had to transition from goods circulation between the countryside and
cities to goods exchanges.
Nikolai Bukharin wrote in the Programme of the Communists (Bolsheviks)
back in 1918: “The task is not to have each individual peasant work his own
tiny plot of land, crawling on it like a dung beetle on its heap of dung.
Rather, the goal is to have as many poor peasants as possible engage in
communal work”. It seemed that after joining collective farms, peasants would
no longer be able to decide how much to sow, and the commune-state would be
able to distribute agricultural products outside of the market as demanded by
the guiding theory of the Russian communists. At the 16th congress of the
Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks) in June 1930, Stalin optimistically stated
that the grain problem was being successfully resolved thanks to the emerging
system of collective farms.
However, reality defied speculative doctrines. After meeting with
resistance once again, Stalin was forced to reorganize the collective farms as
semi-formal associations called artels, rather than communes. The difference
was that artel members
had the right to own private plots of land. When members of collective farms
saw that the state was taking away their products through grain procurement
campaigns, leaving nothing for the peasants themselves, they focused on their
private plots. Harvest losses in collective farms dropped below a critical
level. Receiving less and less from collective farms, the state was forced to
scale down its grain exports, which were supposed to provide the capital with
which industrial development would be financed. Cities also started
experiencing famines as the state reduced ration card norms and stripped
certain population groups of such cards altogether.
On 20 July 1930, Stalin wrote Kaganovich and Molotov from a resort
stressing the need to adopt a law which would: a) equate the property of
collective farms and cooperative societies with that of the state; b) punish
theft of property by at least 10 years in prison but usually entailing the
death penalty. To Stalin, without these measures, which he himself called
“draconian”, it was impossible to establish the collective system of farming.
In his July letters addressed to the Kremlin, Stalin demanded “finishing off
and burying … the individual’s hoarding reflexes, habits and traditions”. On 7
August 1932, the Central Executive Committee and the Council of People’s
Commissars adopted the resolution “On Protection of Property of State
Enterprises, Collective Farms and Cooperative Societies and Strengthening
Social (Socialist) Ownership” which repeated, verbatim, the penal measures
spelled out by the Secretary General. The regulation was commonly known among
peasants as “the law on five ears of grain”.
Grain procurement after the 1932 harvest proceeded with great
difficulty. In October, Stalin set up special grain procurement commissions
dispatching his top henchmen to different regions with extraordinary, even
dictatorial, powers: Vyacheslav Molotov to Ukraine, Lazar Kaganovich to the
North Caucasus Krai and Pavel Postyshev to the Lower Volga Krai. The Communist
Party and the Soviet government issued identically-titled resolutions “On
Measures to Boost Grain Procurement”. The text was written by Molotov, approved
by Stalin and signed by Stanislav Kosior and Vlas Chubar. It called for
“organizing the expropriation of grain which has been stolen during harvesting,
thrashing and transportation”. Collective farms and farmers that failed to meet
their foodstuff quotas had to pay fines in kind (with meat and potatoes). In
November 1932, Vsevolod Balytsky, deputy head of the Joint State Political
Directorate (OGPU) and its special authorized representative in the Ukrainian
SSR, issued order No. 1 in the Ukrainian State Political Directorate which
claimed that in Ukraine there was “organized sabotage of grain procurement and
of the autumn sowing campaign, organized mass theft in collective and state
farms, terror against the staunchest and most tested communists and activists,
dozens of Petliura’s emissaries and widely distributed leaflets”. Balytsky set
the following task: “Exposing and destroying the counterrevolutionary
insurgency and delivering a decisive blow against all counterrevolutionary kulak elements
and Peliura followers who are actively counteracting and derailing the key
efforts of the Soviet authorities and the party in the countryside.”
Peasants stripped by the state of their last remaining grain as well as
the urban populations that the state was unable to feed faced the possibility
of famine. Even population groups that the Cheka deemed “socially close” were
becoming a threat to Stalin’s team. Some second-line communist leaders began to
view Stalin’s version of the party line as a threat to the party and state.
However, Stalin did not abandon his course of action. He viewed the
natural unwillingness of the peasants to work without compensation as nothing
less than sabotage. Their desire to salvage part of the harvest they produced
(even in the case of individual farmers and their own fields) was interpreted
as theft. The intention of the local authorities and collective farm management
to keep some grain in order to prevent famine was deemed counterrevolutionary.
On 27 November 1932, Stalin called a joint meeting of the Politburo of the
Central Committee and the Presidium of the Central Control Commission to
denounce a number of leaders who were held personally accountable for the
failure of grain procurement. He claimed that “anti-Soviet elements had
penetrated collective and state farms in order to organize subversion and
sabotage”. “It would not be wise”, he emphasized, “if, considering that
collective farms are a socialist economic form, the Communists failed to
respond to the blow delivered by some of these collective farms and farmers
with a crushing blow of their own.”
“A crushing blow”
The essence of the Cheka operation (the crushing blow Stalin had in
mind) was to confiscate all available foodstuffs from the already starving
peasants. The operation could take the form of simultaneous household searches.
Stalin issued an order to this effect in his 1 January 1933 telegram to the
leaders of the Ukrainian SSR in Kharkiv. The first point demanded calling on,
through village councils, all collective and individual farmers to voluntarily
hand over “previously pilfered and concealed grain”. The second point of the
telegram was about those who ignored this demand: “Collective farms and farmers
and individual farmers who stubbornly continue concealing pilfered and
unaccounted-for grain will be subject to the severest punishment under the
resolution of the Central Executive Committee and the Council of People’s
Commissars of the USSR of 7 August 1932”. The resolution he referred to was the
infamous “law on five ears of grain”. Together, these two points forced the
local authorities to search every village household.
The fact that all food reserves were confiscated during the ensuing
searches supports the designation of the Holodomor as genocide. Yet those in
denial demand to be shown a document. Clearly, the government would have never
fixed such intentions on paper. However, eyewitnesses of the Holodomor — those
who spoke to the James Mace commission and to Ukrainian researchers — described
the actions and policies of the Soviet authorities in Ukraine. To date,
thousands of testimonies on the total confiscation of food among peasants have
been recorded and published. Harvard University is working to create an Atlas
of the Holodomor that will include a map showing the geographical distribution
of eyewitnesses who have confirmed total food confiscations in the Ukrainian
SSR and North Caucasus Krai.
When the state confiscates not only grain but any kind of foodstuffs,
its intentions should be qualified as murder — no other definition is possible.
In this case, we are dealing with premeditated and professionally organized
mass-murder whose victims were not only those viewed by the Kremlin as
saboteurs but also children and the elderly. Searches on Stalin’s orders and
the total confiscation of food were carried out by local activists and members
of poor peasants’ committees and supervised by Cheka officers.
Stalin’s “crushing blow” was a secret action, even though it covered a
huge territory. The lethal famine could only be mentioned in classified documents,
so-called “special folders”, for use by party and government bodies.
Functionaries at all levels avoided the word “famine” but were able, through
“special folders” with restricted access and circulation, to implement measures
that caused widespread famine.
In addition to hushing up the famine, the authorities also physically
blocked the population in repressed regions. On 22 January 1932, Stalin
personally (his autograph has survived) wrote a letter to the Central Committee
and the Council of People’s Commissars directing them to keep peasants in
Ukraine and the Kuban from moving to other regions en masse.
Therefore, we have a certain sequence of actions that turned the famine
into the Holodomor: 1) Stalin set up extraordinary grain procurement commissions
in three regions with high crop yields; 2) on Stalin’s initiative, legislation
imposing in-kind fines on peasants who refused to surrender “pilfered and
concealed grain” was introduced and enforced; 3) on Stalin’s orders,
comprehensive searches were carried out to find stashes of “pilfered and
concealed grain” which, in fact, did not exist; 4) all long-term storage
foodstuffs were confiscated during the searches; 5) regions that were
completely stripped of foodstuffs were physically blockaded; 6) a ban on using
the word “famine” in reference to the 1932-33 famine was introduced, which
remained in effect until December 1987. The consequence of this chain of
actions was the excessively high mortality rate of the population.
Stalin’s motives
After defeating the “right-wing deviation” Stalin took over party,
government and Cheka leadership, but that was where his power stopped. We
should not forget that Stalin as an icon, a leader beyond criticism, emerged
only after the Great Famine of 1932-33 and the Great Terror of 1937-38 and the
millions of deaths they caused. In 1932, control over the verticals of power
gave Stalin carte blanche to do anything he pleased with the commune state and
the society that was inextricably intertwined with it, but only as long as it
did not trigger a social upheaval. Meanwhile, the Cheka indicated that such an
upheaval was imminent. The collapse of grain procurement and the ensuing
1932-33 catastrophic famine could have cost Stalin the office of Secretary
General. Thus, through his 1 January 1933 telegram, he set in motion the Cheka
operation he had started preparing even before special grain procurement
commissions were set up.
Stalin was always wary of Ukraine. Canadian researcher Lynne Viola
published the statistics of peasant riots in 1930: 4,098 in the Ukrainian SSR,
1,373 in Central Chernozem Oblast, 1,061 in North Caucasus and 1,003 in the
Lower Volga region. If we look at this data together with the grain procurement
statistics, it becomes evident that the Kremlin was using grain procurement as
a way to punish rebellious Ukrainian peasants. As he wrote to Kaganovich on 11
August 1932, Stalin was convinced that there were “many conscious and unwitting
Petliura followers” even among the 500,000 members of the Communist Party of
Ukraine (Bolsheviks).
In 1933, the Great Famine removed the threat to the integrity of the
USSR that had emerged from Ukraine. Now, in 1991, the leading part in breaking
up the USSR was played by Yeltsin-led Russia rather than by Ukraine.
Today the 1932-33 Holodomor is the focus of attention for many
specialists. Sooner or later, under pressure of incontrovertible evidence the
world community will give its legal assessment of Stalin’s terror, which was,
in essence, genocide. When we insist that the victims of genocide were
Ukrainians as a national group and refer to the types of groups (racial,
ethnic, national and religious) outlined in the UN convention on genocide, we
meet with protests from Russian researchers. It was no accident that Stalin’s
diplomats prevailed in having social groups removed from the original text of
the convention. A time may come when this convention will be rewritten.
Meanwhile, we need to fully accept the conclusion Robert Conquest makes in his
famous book Harvest of Sorrow (1986):
“But whether these events are to be formally defined as genocide is scarcely
the point. It would hardly be denied that a crime has been committed against
the Ukrainian nation; and, whether in the execution cellars, the forced labour
camps, or the starving villages, crime after crime against the millions of
individuals forming that nation”.
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