BY
A recent KIIS
opinion survey regarding the perception of Joseph Stalin as a “great leader”
(or not) among the Ukrainian constituency has just
been released.
This opinion
poll presumably timed to coincide with the anniversary of Stalin’s death on 5th
March – notwithstanding being a subtle litmus test for the extent of seepage
into Ukraine from the persistent rehabilitation and legislated nostalgia to
which the unfortunate Russian public are currently being bombarded.
The results
are to be quite blunt, unsurprising, with the anticipated geographical,
demographic, income and educational expectations being realised.
For those that
do not want to click on the link and/or wade through the Cyrillic text, 23% of
the Ukrainian nation believe he was a “great leader” – that figure greatly
enhanced by the mostly eastern residing 50-somethings (and older)
under-educated section of the population.
For the
record, though not participating in the poll, the blog would stand robustly
with the 70% of the nation in stating that “Stalin – a cruel,
inhuman tyrant, guilty of the destruction of millions of innocent
people”, and would struggle to find much wisdom in his rule
either.
As for the
remainder of those polled who must somehow find him far less odious, perhaps
even rather cuddly, nice, and simply misunderstood (especially by westerners),
a reader cannot but ponder whether the worst kept of secret Soviet oratory,
Khrushchev’s “Secret
Speech“, is simply willful ignorance upon their part.
Although the
speech was not officially published in full until 1989 within the USSR, it was
hardly a secret. Western intelligence services and the Communist public
alike were all well aware of its contents very soon after it was delivered in
1956. How else could the “Khrushchev thaw” occur without its pre-framing
by way of the “Secret Speech”?
Indeed, the “Secret
Speech” saw it’s 60th anniversary on 22/23 February this year, and perhaps
considering the on-going rehabilitation and attempts at legislated nostalgia
relating to Stalin currently underway in Russia, maybe the 60th anniversary of
that speech should have received something of a revival – (perhaps “Lenin’s
Testament” too depending upon the level of credence one gives to the Lenin
Testament authenticity) – by those that would counter this Stalin rehab effort.
The “Secret
Speech”, after all, is hardly a glowing reference for Stalin’s accomplishments
– certainly from WWII onward. It is a political damnation of Stalin as it
was written to be (albeit there is little mention of his actions and atrocities
pre-1934, so perhaps Khrushchev agreed with Stalin’s pre-1934 policies and
atrocities?).
The speech
also recognises and warns (repeatedly) of the “cult of personality” – and that
obviously has some resonance within today’s Russia too.
Perhaps in
failing to “re-up” the “Secret Speech” on its 60th anniversary, it was an
opportunity missed to take a historical swipe at two Kremlin figures in one go?
Whatever the
case, the KIIS opinion survey has offered no surprises – other than the entire
world seems to have forgotten the 60th anniversary of the “Secret Speech”, a
speech that was actually a very important event at the time.
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