
Reprinted from the Foundation for Economic Education
Power kills. Absolute power kills too many to count. Soviet dictatorย Joseph Stalinย spoke with personal authority on the subject when he famously said, โA single death is a tragedy; a million deaths is a statistic.โ
To write about any one or more massacres for which Stalin was responsible, one must first answer the question, โWhich ones?โ There are many. The slaughter of the kulaks during his collectivization campaigns of the 1930s. The Ukrainian Holodomor of 1932-33. The Great Purge of 1937. The killing of 22,000 Polish military officers and prisoners of war in the Katyn Forest in 1940. The mass deportations of various nationalities, accompanied by countless deaths, that he orchestrated throughout his 30 years in power. On and on. โUncle Joe,โ as Franklin Roosevelt called him, ranks as one of the top five mass murderers of the millennium.
One of Uncle Joeโs almost forgotten killing sprees took place on August 12, 1952 and is known in the history books as the Night of the Murdered Poets. On its 70th anniversary, let us remember both the victims and the larger lesson, namely, that concentrated and unrestrained power is ghastly, criminal business.
Hereโs the storyโฆ
‘Stalin’s Secret Program’
When Hitler invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, Stalin suddenly became an ally of Britain and the US in the fight against the Nazis. Everybody knows that much, but too many people forget that Stalin connived with Hitler to start World War II in the first place. He signed a secret agreement with Germany in August 1939 by which the two powers agreed to invade and divide Poland. Stalin used the opportunity to attack the Baltic states and Finland as well.
As Nazi forces rolled toward Moscow, Russian Jews knew their lives were on the line for more reasons than one. A fewโactor Solomon Mikhoels and poet Itzik Fefer being among the more prominent onesโformed the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee (JAC) to raise funds and international support for the Soviet war effort. After Hitlerโs defeat, the JAC turned its attention to rebuilding Jewish communities and culture inside the Soviet Union. To Stalin, such activity represented a challenge. Absolute power hates even a whiff of competition.
Beginning in 1948, JAC leaders and activists were targeted for arrest, and worse. Mikhoels was killed in a hit-and-run car โaccidentโ on Stalinโs orders, Soviet archives revealed years later. The others were subjected to torture and brutal interrogations and ultimately charged with โcounterrevolutionary crimes.โ This went on for years before 15 survivors were hauled into court in May and June 1952.
The so-called โtrialโ lasted six weeks. It was a farce from the start, its outcome pre-determined. Authors Rubenstein, Naumov and Wolfson in their book, Stalinโs Secret Pogrom, described it as โnothing less than terror masquerading as law.โ The Jewish defendantsโmost of whom were poets and literary figures for whom the JAC was a cause, not a full-time professionโwere denied defense attorneys. Even the presiding military judge, Alexander Cheptsov, complained about the dearth of evidence but he was overruled by the higher-ups in the Communist power structure. All were found guilty. The rule of law was trampled by the law of the ruler.
During the night of August 12-13, 1952, thirteen of the prisoners were executed in Moscowโs notorious Lubyanka Prison. Another escaped death only because he collapsed, fell into a coma, and died months later. The 15th, a noted biochemist named Lina Stern, was regarded as too vital โto the Stateโ so she got off with just 3-1/2 years in prison followed by five years in exile in Kazakhstan.
Meanwhile, Stalin busied himself preparing more fake accusations. In what became known later as the Doctorsโ Plot, he set up a number of Jewish doctors to face charges of conspiring against the State. The stage was set for another โPoetsโ-style trial. The lives of the doctors were saved when Stalin died and his ultimate successor, Nikita Khrushchev, announced that the whole thing was one big lie.
Khrushchev revealed that Stalinโthe very same man who once ordered Khrushchev to stoke antisemitism in Ukraine in these chilling terms: โThe good workers at the factory should be given clubs so they can beat the hell out of those Jewsโโhad given instructions to โbeat, beat and beat againโ until the doctors confessed.
If you are tempted to dismiss the Night of the Murdered Poets or the Doctorsโ Plot or any other massacre of historyโs innocents as interesting facts made largely irrelevant by the passage of time, please think again. Not by a long shot are they irrelevant.
Ghastly spasms of violence are tools of the trade for historyโs tyrannies. And tyrannies, of one variety or another, are what most human beings have lived under. Tyranny is the reason we who claim to be โfreeโ should cherish such principles as separation of powers; checks and balances; due process; habeas corpus; the rule of law; the right to vote; respect for individual rights; freedoms of speech, press, assembly, and religion; indeed, of a written Constitution itself.
Those time-honored notions for which so many brave souls sacrificed everything distinguish civilization from barbarity. From anyone who cares little about them, the rest of us should run for our very lives. We should demand an answer to this question from every elected official: What, if elected, will you do to stop and reverse the concentration of power?
As we note this awful moment in history, let us remember that such awful moments are too numerous to ever count, as are their victims. Let us reflect on the principles we know in our hearts are precious and indispensable in preventingย futureย awful moments.
Share This Article

Post on Facebook

Post on X

Print Article

Email Article




