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  • The Great Famine victims remembered

    Kingston Whig-Standard (Ontario)
    December 5, 2009 Saturday
    Final Edition

    The Great Famine victims remembered

    by LUBOMYR LUCIUK


    Only seven people came to bury him. He rests beneath a simple stone in
    New York's Mount Hebron cemetery, the sole clue to his historical
    importance an inscription incised below his name -- "Father Of The
    Genocide Convention."

    As a graduate student I was obliged to read his book, Axis Rule in
    Occupied Europe: Laws of Occupation, Analysis of Government, Proposals
    for Redress, frankly more door-stopper than page-turner. Nowadays,
    with advocates for "humanitarian intervention" shilling the notion of
    a "duty to intervene" whenever and wherever necessary to "stop
    genocide," Dr. Raphael Lemkin's name and words are better known. After
    all he fathered the term "genocide" by combining the root words --
    geno (Greek for family or race) and -- cidium (Latin for killing) then
    doggedly lobbied the UN's member states until they adopted a
    Convention on Genocide, 9 December 1948, his crowning achievement.

    Because of the horrors committed by Nazi Germany in the Second World
    War what is often forgotten, however, is that Lemkin's thinking about
    an international law to punish perpetrators of what he originally
    labeled the "Crime of Barbarity" came not in response to the Holocaust
    but rather following the 1915 massacres of Armenians, Greeks and
    Assyrians within the Ottoman Turkish empire.

    Likewise overlooked were Lemkin's views on Communist crimes against
    humanity. In a 1953 lecture in New York City, for example, he
    described the "destruction of the Ukrainian nation" as the "classic
    example of Soviet genocide," adding insight-fully: "the Ukrainian is
    not and never has been a Russian. His culture, his temperament, his
    language, his religion, are all different... to eliminate (Ukrainian)
    nationalism...the Ukrainian peasantry was sacrificed...a famine was
    necessary for the Soviet and so they got one to order... if the Soviet
    program succeeds completely, if the intelligentsia, the priest, and
    the peasant can be eliminated [then] Ukraine will be as dead as if
    every Ukrainian were killed, for it will have lost that part of it
    which has kept and developed its culture, its beliefs, its common
    ideas, which have guided it and given it a soul, which, in short, made
    it a nation...This is not simply a case of mass murder. It is a case
    of genocide, of the destruction, not of individuals only, but of a
    culture and a nation."

    Yet Ukraine's declaration that the Great Famine of 1932-1933 (known as
    the Holodomor) was genocide has secured very little official
    recognition from other states, Canada one of those few. Most have
    succumbed to an ongoing Holodomor-denial campaign orchestrated by the
    Russian Federation's barkers who insist famine occurred throughout the
    U. S. S. R. in the 1930s, did not target Ukrainians and so can't be
    called genocide. They ignore key evidence -- the fact that all
    foodstuffs were confiscated from Soviet Ukraine even as its borders
    were blockaded, preventing relief supplies from getting in, or anyone
    from getting out. And how the Kremlin's men denied the existence of
    catastrophic famine conditions as Ukrainian grain was exported to the
    West. Millions could have been saved but were instead allowed to
    starve. Most victims were Ukrainians who perished on Ukrainian lands.
    There's no denying that.

    A thirst for Siberian oil and gas explains why Germany, France and
    Italy have become Moscow's handmaidens, refusing to acknowledge the
    Holodomor and blocking Ukraine's membership in the European Union,
    kowtowing to Russia's geopolitical claim of having some "right" to
    interfere in the affairs of countries in its so-called "near abroad."
    More puzzling was a pronouncement this year by Pinhas Avivi, deputy
    director-general of the Israeli Foreign Ministry: "We regard the
    Holodomor as a tragedy but in no case do we call it genocide...the
    Holocaust is the only genocide to us." Yet if only the Shoah is
    genocide what happened to the Armenians, or to the Rwandans, not to
    mention to those many millions of Ukrainians?

    Last Saturday, Nov. 28, was the date on which the Holodomor's victims
    were hallowed. Thousands of postcards bearing Lemkin's image and
    citing his words have been mailed to ambassadors worldwide with
    governments from Belgium to Botswana, from Brazil to Bhutan, being
    asked to acknowledge what was arguably the greatest crime against
    humanity to befoul 20th century European history. There is no doubt
    that Lemkin knew the famine in Soviet Ukraine was genocidal. If the
    world chooses to ignore what he said than what this good man fathered
    -- the word "genocide" -- will loose all meaning, forevermore.

    Professor Lubomyr Luciuk teaches political geography at the Royal
    Military College of Canada and edited Holodomor: Reflections on the
    Great Famine of 1932-1933 in Soviet Ukraine (Kashtan Press, 2008).
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