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Holodomdor why ukraine doesn't like russia
1. Holodomor is a Ukrainian word that means “to starve to
death”, “to starve to death”. This word came to be used in the
context of Ukrainian history to define the events that led to
the death by starvation of millions of Ukrainians between
1931 and 1933. Roughly speaking, the holodomor, like the
Nazi holocaust against the Jews, consisted of a genocide
against the population of Ukraine undertaken by Soviet
communism, which was led by Stalin.
Ukraine was the USSR country that most showed
resistance to such measures. The Ukrainian cultural
autonomy and its strong national identity made it intolerable
to the desires of the Russian Soviets. The insurrection of the
Ukrainian peasants against the measures of forced
collectivization and compulsory requisition of grain forced
Stalin to impose measures even more drastic than those carried out
in other regions.
Stalin, then, began to trace an anti-Ukrainian campaign
with the objective of demonstrating how “harmful” was the posture of
that country in relation to communist aspirations. Initially, a systematic
humiliation of Ukrainian intellectuals began, who were subjected to
vexing judgments and various ridicule. There was also a debellation
of possible foci of anti-Soviet organization that could erupt in the long
term. After these measures Stalin proceeded to attack the peasantry
itself.
From 1929 onwards, a strong stipulation of cereal
production goals, destined for the Soviet central power, began to be
demanded of Ukrainian peasants. The rigidity was so great that these
peasants would only be able to meet the demand if they stopped
consuming their share of what was produced, that is, only if they
actually went hungry. Everything became government property. Many
people were arrested and sentenced to forced labor simply for eating
potatoes or harvesting corn on the cob for consumption.
Progressively, death was accentuated in Ukraine. Between 1931 and
1933, the death toll was so great that the corpses were scattered in
the streets and fields. The odor of rotting bodies permeated entire
regions. Historian Thomas Woods reiterates this fact:
2. In 1933, Stalin set a new target of production and collection,
which was to be carried out by a Ukraine that was now on the brink of
mass death from famine, which had begun in March of that year. I will
spare the reader the more graphic descriptions of what happened
from here. But corpses were everywhere, and the stench of death
hung heavily on the air. Cases of insanity, and even cannibalism, are
well documented.” (Woods, Thomas. The famine in Ukraine – one of
the biggest crimes of the state has been forgotten. Instituto Mises
Brasil.)
The death toll in those three years is estimated to have been five
million. But if you take into account the lingering effects of this
perverse economic policy and the Ukrainians who were put into
forced labor and died there, that number could be more than 14
million.
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