Caravanserai
Human Rights

Central Asia looks on as Kremlin attempts to whitewash repression

Caravanserai and AFP

A woman October 30 fastens flowers to a tree with portraits of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin's purge victims at a memorial containing graves on the wooded outskirts of St. Petersburg. [Olga Maltseva/AFP]

A woman October 30 fastens flowers to a tree with portraits of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin's purge victims at a memorial containing graves on the wooded outskirts of St. Petersburg. [Olga Maltseva/AFP]

MOSCOW -- On Monday (October 29), hundreds of participants in the "Return of the Names" event, which has been running in Moscow for more than a decade, waited in line to read out the names of those killed, despite questions over whether city authorities would allow the annual ceremony to go ahead.

Others placed flowers and candles by a rock brought from the Solovki labour camp in the far north. The rock sits as a memorial outside the offices of the Federal Security Service (FSB) secret police, formerly the KGB.

"I come every year because I feel I have a duty to pay tribute to the victims," said 55-year-old Sergei Mitrokhin, a member of the liberal Yabloko political party.

"Today, Russia is trying to forget that period," he told AFP.

Russia's attempts to rewrite history

The Kremlin's continued attempts to whitewash the brutality of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin's reign of terror have not deterred citizens in Russian and Central Asia from paying tribute to the victims.

During the 1930s, Stalin sent millions of citizens to their deaths for opposing his policies or for a variety of imagined crimes, such as plotting his assassination or spying for several foreign countries simultaneously.

Russia in recent years has seen an official trend to present Stalin's rule in a positive light, while downplaying the repressions and forced collectivisation that killed millions.

Last December, for example, FSB Director Alexander Bortnikov said many of Stalin's victims deserved their punishments.

In an interview with the official Rossiyskaya Gazeta, he said many of the criminal cases were legitimate and "had an objective side to them", and suggested "links of coup plotters to foreign security agencies".

Such efforts to rewrite history have reawakened the grief of Central Asians whose families suffered at Stalin's hands.

Exact figures of the Stalin-inflicted death toll throughout the USSR are impossible to compile. Some estimates put the number of executions between 1921 (several years before Stalin seized all power) and 1953 (Stalin's death) at 5.5 million. Other estimates are even higher.

In Kazakhstan alone, estimates suggest nearly a third of all Kazakhs perished as a consequence of Stalin's policies.

Meanwhile, about 40,000 Kyrgyz are believed to have been executed during the Stalin years.

Every November 8, Kyrgyz gather at the the Ata-Beyit (Grave of Our Fathers) Memorial Complex to commemorate those who perished under the Soviet regime. The date formally became a day of remembrance in 2017, but it had been observed as such for years.

Since 1997, Kazakhstan has honoured its own victims of Stalinist terror every May 31.

"We need to keep the memory of those terrible times alive, since we keep falling into the same traps," Anuar Galiev, a historian at Al-Farabi Kazakh National University in Almaty, told Caravanserai earlier this year. "We need to create a system that cannot -- even in theory -- allow the same terrible events to repeat themselves."

'We have to remember'

Rights group Memorial, which organises the 12-hour annual event in Moscow, said this month authorities had rejected plans for the ceremony to take place at its usual location but a few days later said it could go ahead.

"We have to remember all of this," said Anastasia, a 26-year-old student who gave only her first name.

"We can't find anything out [about this period] in the official media," she said. "It all depends on the work of people like those in Memorial who organise this ceremony."

"What the state does to commemorate the victims is completely insufficient," said Maria Sakharova, 80, who was visibly moved after reading out the names of several victims.

Almost half of Russians aged 18-24 said they had never heard of Stalin-era repressions, according to a survey published by the VTsIOM state pollster this month.

Memorial, which also speaks out about current human rights violations in Russia, has come under increasing pressure in recent years.

In 2016, authorities labelled Memorial a "foreign agent" under a 2012 law that obliges groups deemed to have "political" activities and international funding to submit documents every three months outlining their finances.

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35 Comment(s)

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There's an ever growing number of the former Soviet republics condemning the repressions of Stalin the terrorist.

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Good. Russians will be singing a different song when they themselves encounter repressions.

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Well... 40,000 Kyrgyz faced repressions, 137 were executed, but our people in Kyrgyzstan deem the Bolshevik seizure of power in 1917 positive and see them above all as liberators from the colonial czarist oppression. And no one will ever change our mind, because the people's memories are alive. Thousands upon thousands ethnic Kyrgyz joined the Red Army. People followed the Bolsheviks doubtlessly and the most key thing was that about 20 years after the October Revolution communists had delivered on their promises and granted the small-numbered Kyrgyz people the status of a Soviet republic. Mikhail Frunze of Pishpek [the old name of Bishkek] played a significant role, indigenous people loved his father dearly. That's why it's doubtful you Americans will be able to play up this issue, it is stillborn right from the start. Of course, Dzhugashvili [Stalin's real surname] was a piece of work, but, alas, there will always be his fans. And it's not about the Kremlin propaganda, it's about the fact that he didn't care about wealth, he didn't steal millions and left no looted possessions like the rulers of today, including post-Soviet republics! Talking about our neighbours, you forgot to mention that half of the officials were locals in the 20s when republican authorities had been reshuffled in order to employ local native population! Trust me, our good old neighbours will go no further than a few random articles. Looking for the "FSB footprint" everywhere is ridiculous

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Stalin was very wealthy. It's s a myth he didn't steal anything.

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Good God, are we going downhill?.. What's the point of bringing this up... We live in the present and that's fine, we are friends!

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The NKVD had a big structure. Read about the Nevsky Pyatachok [the Neva Bridgehead east of Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg, Russia)]... The Brest Fortress where the whole NKVD regiment had perished (everyone from a private to the commander). The Border Service was also part of the NKVD. Once more: go about your business! Happy New Year and good luck to everyone.

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Why are you munching on something happened in the past? No one can know for sure. One should look at the present. Who would write articles about the past? They know nothing about that. [They] are simply filling an order. It's all about the money. And they are distracting from the present.

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Russia has turned towards Nazism and Fascism

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Nationalism is a bad thing. Unfortunately, it exists in Russia. [Nationalism is] always next to Nazism

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Comment removed for violating comments policy

I agree completely, I am not a patriot and support neither one of the current policy makers. But don't blame everything on Russia and the Kremlin as the successor of the USSR. Let's shift the blame on Georgia being the successor of the [American] Georgia and blame [everything] on the States since the ruler came from there

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The crimes of Stalinism and the Soviet Union cannot be covered up anymore, although Russia is trying hard. But [Russia] will have to pay for everything!

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I apologize for grammar mistakes. When you read comments on these cooked up articles and I can't call them otherwise. Go about your business, stop reading gutter press. Good luck, everyone

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If there were different policies at the time, the 90s would have come much earlier. Now liberals are popping up, yapping about repression under Stalin. Well, let them give you at least one name people would turn into a battle cry and attacked the enemy meeting their fate while repeating "For the Motherland! For Stalin!"

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If there were Nemtsov and the likes of him, but not Stalin at the time, do you think that you and the peoples of the fifteen republics would exist today? Yes, Stalin had probably gone too far in some respects, but are you sure he could have done it differently?

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Stalin was punished the way he deserved, dying soaked in his pee.

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You will also pee yourself dying, it's physiology!

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Same to you

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Who did that kind of a blotting paper statistic of the repressed [individuals] at the time? How are the victims of "political repressions of the totalitarian regime" counted? Are their names written along with those who died due to old age, sickness, accidents and others sentenced to death and executed? And how many of them were really "innocent?" Were the kulaks and priests innocent? They cut up Komsomol activists [young communists], teachers, doctors in two with hatchets. The "Forest Brothers", Basmachi and Banderites, Crimean Tatar and Balkar Hiwis [auxiliary forces recruited by Nazi Germany]... Would you consider them "innocent?" And now add up all those sleazeballs and you will have "millions" repressed [victims] new "nati-Anal historians" picked out of their noses, ears and butts!

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What millions? According to the archived data, less than one million people were sentenced during Stalin's rule.

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Impossible! It's probably one million from just one republic

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Lenin-Stalin-Hitler-Marx-Engels - they were all from the same nest.

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Only Yeltsyn paused terrorism against Asia and Russia, Putin is restoring all this along with genocide and murder plus plotting against Asia and Russians. Hitler and Stalin are schoolkids compared to him

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Putin = Stalin = Hitler

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May this shoemaker's son burn in hell

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Putin is simply trying to whitewash Stalin in order to kill all the opponents of his bloody thievish regime

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That's right. Morons like you should be annihilated.

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This yapping Yank site has made me laugh with its nonsense yet another time

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Are there any retards who believe these lies? Do the Yanks really think people in Central Asia are stupider than they are?

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[They are] keeping silence... There is nothing to say here. They know neither their own nor world history ))

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You bullshitting American rag, why do you post the photo of the dead prisoners at the "Klooga" concentration camp shot to death just before the Red army came [to liberate them]? The bodies were stacked onto a wooden pyre to be burned. Estonian General District, Third Reich, Reichskommissariat Ostland, 1944. And you call them "the victims of STALIN". PEOPLE, DON'T TRUST THIS STINKY SITE.

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The notion that half-educated Stalin was an effective manager is a lie. He was an ordinary serial killer.

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Then how would you explain that not only did food prices not go up, but, to the contrary, they went down on his watch?

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There was nothing getting cheaper because that was the time of hunger.

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How were you born if your ancestors died of starvation, I wonder? You were born and grew up fertilised with Yank dung.

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