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Bloodlands

Page 65

by Timothy Snyder

38 On Shcherbakov, see Brandenberger, National Bolshevism, 119 and passim; Kuromiya, “Jews,” 523, 525; and Zubok, Empire, 7.

  39 On the Victory Day parade, see Brandenberger, “Last Crime,” 193. On Etinger, see Brent, Plot, 11. See also Lustiger, Stalin, 213. Stalin’s concern with medical terrorism dated back to at least 1930; see Prystaiko, Sprava, 49.

  40 On Karpai, see Brent, Plot, 296.

  41 Lukes, “New Evidence,” 165.

  42 Ibid., 178-180; Lustiger, Stalin, 264.

  43 For the quotation and the proportion (eleven out of fourteen defendants of Jewish origin), see Proces z vedením, 44-47, at 47. On the denunciations, see Margolius Kovály, Cruel Star, 139.

  44 For Slánský’s confession, see Proces z vedením, 66, 70, 72. For the death penalty and the hangman, see Lukes, “New Evidence,” 160, 185. On Margolius, see Margolius Kovály, Cruel Star, 141.

  45 On Poland, see Paczkowski, Trzy twarze, 162.

  46 Quotation: Brent, Plot, 250.

  47 Kostyrchenko, Shadows, 264; Brent, Plot, 267. On the dance, see Service, Stalin, 580.

  48 On Mikhoels as Lear, see Veidlinger, Yiddish Theater.

  49 For “every Jew . . . ,” see Rubenstein, Pogrom, 62. For “their nation had been saved . . . ,” see Brown, Rise and Fall, 220.

  50 Quotations: Kostyrchenko, Shadows, 290. See also Lustiger, Stalin, 250.

  51 On Karpai, see Kostyrchenko, Gosudarstvennyi antisemitizm, 466; and Brent, Plot, 296.

  52 On the drafting and redrafting, see Kostyrchenko, Gosudarstvennyi antisemitizm , 470-478. On Grossman, see Brandenberger, “Last Crime,” 196. See also Luks, “Brüche,” 47, The Grossman quotation is from Life and Fate at 398.

  53 On Ehrenburg, see Brandenberger, “Last Crime,” 197.

  54 For the rumors, see Brandenberger, “Last Crime,” 202. For the number of doctors, see Luks, “Brüche,” 42.

  55 Khlevniuk, “Stalin as dictator,” 110, 118. On Stalin’s nonappearance at factories, farms, and government offices after the Second World War, see Service, Stalin, 539.

  56 On Stalin’s security chiefs, see Brent, Plot, 258.

  57 Stalin ordered beatings on 13 November; see Brent, Plot, 224. On the trial, see Lustiger, Stalin, 250.

  58 For details on the “anti-Zionist campaign” of 1968, see Stola, Kampania antysyjonistyczna ; and Paczkowski, Pół wieku.

  59 Rozenbaum, “March Events,” 68.

  60 On the earlier Soviet practice, see Szajnok, Polska a Izrael, 160.

  61 Stola, “Hate Campaign,” 19, 31. On the “fifth column, ” see Rozenbaum, “1968,” 70.

  62 Stola, “Hate Campaign,” 20.

  63 For the figure of 2,591 people arrested, see Stola, “Hate Campaign,” 17. For the Gdańsk railway station, see Eisler, “1968,” 60.

  64 See Judt, Postwar, 422-483; and Simons, Eastern Europe.

  65 Brown, Rise and Fall, 396.

  CONCLUSION: HUMANITY

  1 Compare Moyn, “In the Aftermath.” The interpretations here arise from arguments that are documented in the chapters; the annotation is therefore limited.

  2 Perhaps a million people died in the German camps (as opposed to the death facilities and shooting and starvation sites). See Orth, System.

  3 Compare Keegan, Face of Battle, 55; and Gerlach and Werth, “State Violence,” 133.

  4 Most of the remainder of those who starved were in Kazakhstan. I am counting the deaths in Ukraine as intended, and those in Kazakhstan as foreseeable. Future research might change the estimation of intentionality.

  5 This and the below quotation follow Robert Chandler’s 2010 translation of Everything Flows, unpublished as I write. See also Life and Fate at 29.

  6 A sustained discussion of the moral economy of land and murder is Kiernan, Blood and Soil.

  7 Mao’s China exceeded Hitler’s Germany in the famine of 1958-1960, which killed some thirty million people.

  8 For “belligerent complicity,” see Furet, Fascism and Communism, 2. Compare Edele, “States,” 348. Hitler quotation: Lück, “Partisanbekämpfung,” 228.

  9 Todorov, Mémoire du mal, 90.

  10 Milgram, “Behavior Study,” still repays reading.

  11 Kołakowski, Main Currents, 43.

  12 On international bystanding, see Power, Problem.

  13 Fest, Das Gesicht, 108, 162.

  14 As Harold James notes, theories of violent modernization actually fare badly in purely economic terms; see Europe Reborn, 26. Buber-Neumann quotation: Under Two Dictators, 35.

  15 The most significant German crime in Soviet Russia was the deliberate starvation of Leningrad, in which about a million people died. The Germans killed a relatively small number of Jews in Soviet Russia, perhaps sixty thousand. They also killed at least a million prisoners of war from Soviet Russia in the Dulags and the Stalags. These people are usually reckoned as military losses in Soviet and Russian estimates; since I am counting them as victims of a deliberate killing policy, I am increasing the estimate of 1.8 million in Filimoshin, “Ob itogakh,” 124. I believe that the Russian estimate for deaths at Leningrad is too low by about four hundred thousand people, so I add that as well. If Boris Sokolov is right, and Soviet military losses were far higher than the conventional estimates, then most of the people in the higher estimates were soldiers. If Ellman and Maksudov are right, and Soviet military losses were in fact lower, then most of these people were civilians: often civilians not under German occupation. See Sokolov, “How to Count,” 451-457; and Ellman, “Soviet Deaths,” 674-680.

  16 On the deaths of 516,841 Gulag inmates, see Zemskov, “Smertnost’,” 176. On the four million Soviet citizens in the Gulag (including the special settlements), see Khlevniuk, Gulag, 307.

  17 Brandon and Lower estimate 5.5-7 million total losses in Soviet Ukraine during the war; see “Introduction,” 11.

  18 For an introduction to the memory culture, see Goujon, “Memorial.”

  19 Here as elsewhere in the Conclusion, discussions of numbers are documented in the chapters.

  20 Janion, Do Europy. On Berman, see Gniazdowski, “‘Ustalić liczbę.”

  INDEX

  AB Aktion (Ausserordentliche Befriedungsaktion, Extraordinary Pacification Action)

  Abakumov, Viktor

  Adamczyk, Wiesław

  Aged. See Elderly

  Aginskaia, Perla

  Akhmatova, Anna

  Allilueva, Svetlana

  Angielczyk, Czesława

  Anielewicz, Mordechai

  Anschluss

  Anti-Comintern Pact (1936)

  Anti-Semitism

  Belarus and

  in Britain

  in Czechoslovakia

  Hitler, Adolf and

  National Socialism and

  in Poland

  Soviet Union and

  Stalin, Joseph and

  in United States

  Arajs, Viktor

  Archangelsk, Soviet Union

  Arendt, Hannah

  Armenians

  Aronson, Stanisław

  Aryanization

  Auschwitz

  Austria

  Babi Yar

  Babushkina, Evgenia

  Bach-Zelewski, Erich von dem

  Backe, Herbert

  Baltic States See also Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia

  Balts

  See also Estonians, Latvians, Lithuanians

  Balytskyi, Vsevolod

  BBC. See British Broadcasting Corporation

  Bełżec

  Bechtolsheim, Gustav von

  Belarus

  anti-Semitism in

  Final Solution and

  Final Solution in

  German-Soviet war (1941-1945) and

  Great Terror of 1937-1938 and

  Hitler, Adolf and

  Holocaust and

  Jews, murder of in

  Jews in

  Lenin, Vladimir and

  Minsk

  nationalism and

  partisan warfare in

 
; Polish Jews in

  Soviet prisoners of war and

  Stalin, Joseph and

  Belarusians

  murder of

  Belgium

  Belomor canal

  Belozovskaia, Iza

  Belsen

  Beneš, Edvard

  Bergen-Belsen concentration camp

  Berger, Oskar

  Bergman, Bluma

  Beria, Lavrenty

  Berman, Boris

  Berman, Jakub

  Bielski, Tuvia

  Bierut, Bolesław

  Birkenau

  See also Auschwitz

  Black Book of Soviet Jewry

  Blokhin, Vasily

  Blum, Léon

  Bolshevik Revolution (1917)

  Bolshevism, Bolsheviks

  Borowski, Tadeusz

  Britain. See Great Britain

  British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)

  The Brothers Karamazov (Dostoevsky)

  Brzeziński, Mieczysław

  Buber-Neumann, Margarete

  Buchenwald concentration camp

  Bukharin, Nikolai

  Bulgaria

  Bulgarians

  First World War and

  Cannibalism

  Capitalism

  Caucasus

  Cedrowski, Izydor

  Central Powers

  Chamberlain, Neville

  Chełmno

  Cheka

  Children

  Final Solution and

  Great Terror of 1937 and 1938 and

  Poland, German invasion of and

  Soviet concentration camps and

  Soviet famines and

  China

  Churchill, Winston

  Circus (film)

  Cold War

  Collectivization

  failure of

  industrialization and

  legal basis for

  socialism and

  Soviet famines and

  Stalin, Joseph and

  Cominform (Communist Informational Bureau)

  Communism

  fascism and

  Hitler, Adolf and

  Holocaust and

  Home Army (Poland) and

  industrialization and

  Jews and

  National Socialism and

  Poland and

  Tito-Stalin split and

  Communist International

  Concentration Camp Warsaw

  Congress of Victors (1934)

  Cosmopolitanism

  Crabwalk (Grass)

  Cracow, Poland

  Crimea

  Croatia

  Cukierman, Icchak

  Czapski, Józef

  Czechoslovakia

  Czechs

  Czerniaków, Adam

  Dąbal, Tomasz

  Dachau concentration camp

  Daladier, Edouard

  Darkness at Noon (Koestler)

  Darwinism

  Death factories

  Auschwitz

  Bełżec

  Chełmno

  concentration camps vs.

  “euthanasia” program and

  liberation of

  Polish Jews and

  Polish Jews executed in

  Sobibór

  Soviet prisoners of war and

  Treblinka

  Defoe, Daniel

  Democracy

  Denmark

  Der Nister

  Dirlewanger, Oskar

  Dirlewanger Brigade

  Dmowski, Roman

  Dnipropretrovsk, Ukraine

  Donetsk, Ukraine. See Stalino, Ukraine

  Dorfmann, Ruth

  Dostoevsky, Fyodor

  Dowbor, Janina

  Dubček, Aleksandr

  Dulles, Allen

  Duranty, Walter

  Dzierżyński, Feliks

  East Germany (German Democratic Republic)

  Eberl, Irmfried

  Edelman, Marek

  Ehrenburg, Ilya

  Eichmann, Adolf

  Einsatzgruppen

  Jews and

  Political enemies and

  Einsatzkommandos

  Eizenshtayn, Sofia

  Elderly

  Engels, Friedrich

  Enlightenment

  Entente Powers

  Estonia

  ethnic cleansing of

  Final Solution in

  German-Soviet war (1941-1945) and

  Great Terror of 1937 and 1938 in

  Soviet occupation and annexation of

  Ethnic cleansing

  of Germans

  in Latvia

  in Lithuania

  in Poland

  in Soviet Union

  Stalin, Joseph and

  Etinger, Yakov

  European Union

  Everything Flows (Grossman)

  Evian Conference (1938)

  The Family Mashber (Der Nister)

  Fascism, fascists

  Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany)

  Fefer, Itzik

  Field, Noel and Hermann

  Final Solution

  in Belarus

  children and

  death factories and

  deportation and

  enslavement and

  in Estonia

  “euthanasia” program and

  final version of

  German-Soviet war (1941-1945) and

  Hitler, Adolf and

  in Hungary

  Hunger Plan and

  Jews, elimination of and

  Large Action (1942) and

  in Latvia

  Lublin plan of

  Madagascar plan of

  Nazi justification for

  partisan warfare and

  Poland and

  reformulating

  in Romania

  Soviet plan of

  Stalin, Joseph and

  in Ukraine

  Wehrmacht and

  women and

  Finland

  First World War

  Fischer, Ludwig

  Fiterson, Sima

  Five-Year Plan

  Flak, Jadwiga

  Flak, Marian

  Flossenberg concentration camp

  For a Just Cause (Grossman)

  Four-Year Plan Authority

  France

  Czechoslovakia, annexation of and

  First World War and

  German invasion of

  Jewish deportation from

  Poland, German invasion of and

  Second World War and

  Versailles Treaty (1919) and

  Franco, Francisco

  Frank, Hans

  Franz, Kurt

  Free Masons

  French Revolution

  Frenkel, Paweł

  Furet, François

  Gandhi, Mohandas

  Garden of Eden

  Gassing

  Gauleiters

  Gęborski, Czesław

  Geibel, Paul

  Geller, Eliezer

  General Commissariat White Ruthenia

  See also Belarus

  General Government

  Generalplan Ost

  Gerassimova, Rosa

  German Democratic Republic (East Germany)

  German Empire

  defeat of

  German Jews

  deportation

  Holocaust and

  murder of

  German Order Police

  Germans

  deportation of

  ethnic cleansing of

  First World War and

  Soviet famines and

  superiority of

  German-Soviet war (1941-1945)

  Belarus and

  Civilians and

  Final Solution and

  Generalplan Ost and

  Hitler, Adolf and

  Hunger Plan and

  Japan and

  Jewish resistance and

  Leningrad, seige of and

  “lightning victory” in

/>   Moscow, Soviet Union and

  National Socialism and

  Operation Bagration and

  partisan warfare and

  Polish resistance and

  Red Army and

  Soviet power and

  Soviet prisoners of war and

  Stalin, Joseph and

  Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and

  Wehrmacht and

  Germany

  Anschluss and

  Austria, annexation of by

  British problem and

  concentration camps in

  Czechoslovakia, annexation of by

  economy of

  First World War and

  gas chambers in

  Great Terror of 1937 and 1938 and

  Japanese alliance with

  Jews, murder of in

  killing fields in

  Poland, invasion of by

  Poland, occupation of by

  Rapallo, Treaty of and

  socialism in

  Soviet alliance with

  Soviet occupation of

  Soviet Union, encirclement of and

  Soviet war (1941-1945) with

  starvation campaign of 1941 and

  starvation zones in

  Treaty on Borders and Friendship (1939) and

  Gestapo

  Ghettos

  Łódź, Poland

  death factories and

  Lublin, Poland

  Minsk, Belarus

  Polish Jews in

  Riga, Latvia

  Slutsk, Belarus

  Warsaw, Poland

  Glińska, Irena, Janina and Serafina

  Globocnik, Odilo

  Goebbels, Joseph

  Goglidze, S. A.

  Gold, Artur

  Goloshchekin, Filip

  Gomułka, Władysław

  Gorbachev, Mikhail

  Gorbman, Ekaterina

  Göring, Hermann

  Gottberg, Curt von

  Gottwald, Klement

  Graniewicz, Bazylii

  Graniewicz, Kolya

  Grass, Günter

  Great Britain

  anti-Semitism in

  concentration camps, liberation of by

  Czechoslovakia, annexation of and

  First World War and

  Jews and

  Poland, German invasion of and

  Poland and

  Second World War and

  socialism in

  Great Depression

  Great Terror of 1937-1938

  in Belarus

  Belarus and

  casualties of

  children and

  class operations of

  end of

  family, destruction of and

  Germany and

  Gulag and

  Hitler, Adolf and

  Japan and

  Jews and

  kulak operation of

  Latvian operation of

  Leningrad and

  national operations of

  NKVD (Soviet secret police) and

  NKVD and

 

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