Ukrainian Famine

From Citizendium
Revision as of 20:05, 31 August 2007 by imported>Bohdan Leonid Shmorhay (→‎Reference: minor copyedit)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Famines due to crop failure, warfare, and drought have recurred throughout history in Ukraine, including one induced by severe drought and military requisitions in 1921-1922 that resulted in only one-third the normal harvest. The result in 1921-1922 was one million dead, from a combination of hunger and infectious disease.

But the Great Famine of 1932-1933 in Ukraine was caused exclusively by deliberate Soviet Stalinist policy rather than by climate, specifically in order to:

  • break peasant resistence to collectivization
  • destroy Ukrainian village culture
  • forcibly trade grain for machinery

Estimates of Ukrainian dead from the famine of 1932-1933 range from two million to six million, and this event constitutes a planned genocide comparable to the Armenian Genocide committed two decades earlier or to the Jewish Holocaust perpetrated by the Nazis a decade later.

References

"Harvest of Sorrow" by Robert Conquest 1986 Oxford University Press $20 ISBN 9780195051803

"Execution By Hunger" by Miron Dolot 1985 Norton and Company $16 ISBN 0393304167

"Encyclopedia of Ukraine" Volodymyr Kubijovyc, editor, University of Toronto Press 1984, Volume 1, pages 853-855, Famine article, ISBN 0802033628

"The Unknown Gulag" by Lynne Viola 2007 Oxford University Press $30 ISBN 9780195187694