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Yuri Bogayevsky
Globe and Mail
13-Dec-1986
Kulaks murdered reform leaders
Letter to the Editor:
I regret that your paper thought it commendable and advisable to use almost two full pages on excerpts from Robert Conquest's book about the "imposed famine" of 1931-32 [sic] in the Ukraine (Nov. 29, Dec. 1).
To deal adequately with the historical and factual inaccuracies and crude political aspersions would require equal space. However, I would like to set the record straight on just a few points Mr. Conquest alludes to.
Times were difficult for the Soviet Union in the first decade following the 1917 Revolution, not least because of the hostility of the capitalist world, which sought initially to break and then totally isolate the new Soviet Government.
The years 1931 and 1932, to which Mr. Conquest basically refers, saw famine not only in the Ukraine but in many other countries around the world due to an inordinate period of global bad weather. In 1931, 27 million hectares of land (nearly 60 million acres) in the Ukraine were hit by a severe drought. In 1932, those same areas, plus productive wheat areas in in [sic] the Russian federation, were struck by an equally devastating drought. As a result, the grain production in the Ukraine in 1932 was 14.7 million metric tons — 3.9 million tons less than the year before.
Despite Mr. Conquest's speculations, major steps were taken to alleviate — not exacerbate — the situation. As a result, government grain-procurement quotas from the Ukraine were reduced to 6.6 million tons in July, 1932, from 7.7 million, and then when full realization of the problem set in, to 4.7 million tons. In fact, 10 million of the 14.7 million tons of grain harvested in the Ukraine stayed there, compared with 10.9 million tons in 1931 — a relatively small drop, and certainly commensurate with the decline throughout the country given the over-all drought.
The years of drought were also the years of collectivization. There was little experience of managing large farms, machinery was scarce, the use of horses and oxen was mistakenly neglected, and the cumulative misjudgment crippled the 1932 sowing and harvest seasons.
Those who opposed collectivization in the Ukraine — the Kulaks, who were dispossessed in the process — did not do so pacifically. In 1929 alone, Kulaks and their supporters in the Ukraine murdered about 10,000 Communist Party activists, farm leaders and reform sympathizers — the most able and skilful farmers.
Sabotage and the killing of cattle and draught animals were rife. Even some Western sources admit that in the Ukraine in 1931, 25 per cent of the collective farms were the target of arson, 10 per cent had what little machinery they had sabotaged and about an equal number had cattle poisoned, and attacks on collectivization sympathizers occurred on almost half the newly organized collective farms.
Despite initial misjudgment, disorder, violent opposition from the Kulaks and lack of experience, collectivization did succeed. Collectivization itself did not make the situation worse, nor did it cause starvation. In fact, it produced the opposite. In 1933, after the two years of dought [sic], the grain harvest in the Ukraine reached 22.3 million tons.
The population statistics cited by Mr. Conquest and other recent Western media stories, of anywhere between five million and 10 million people starving to death in the Ukraine in 1931-33, are as spurious as their claims that the famine was "imposed." The 1929 population of the Ukraine was 30.2 million. The population figure remained at about 32 million in both 1932 and 1933.
True, times were hard and many people did suffer, especially those families whose fathers, sons and brothers were murdered by the Kulaks. But not nearly to the extent portrayed in less than scholarly publications.
Yuri Bogayevsky
First Secretary
U.S.S.R. Embassy
Ottawa
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