Zero Point Ukraine. Olena Stiazhkina. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Olena Stiazhkina
Издательство: Автор
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Жанр произведения: Историческая литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9783838275505
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Using the term today, we mean a political nation, one which was still in the making at the beginning of the twentieth century. As George Liber rightly pointed out, “this history of the first half of the twentieth century recognizes that unspoken assumptions about national identity and political engagement in the past do not necessarily coincide with those of the present.”36 Thus, it would be fair to acknowledge that Ukrainians entered the World War II not as a political nation but as a group of various communities with very different levels of national consciousness and identity. Along with the Ukrainians who saw themselves as a community with a long-lasting historical tradition, there also were the “Soviet Ukrainians,” “malorosy” [Little Russians, a pejorative term], “Polish Ukrainians,” Rusyns, Hutsuls, Lemkos, etc. Still, this “self-identification” was not necessarily stable: some may have become self-aware as Ukrainians during the war while the others preferred to see themselves as part of the “great Russian people.” In addition, survivors and non-survivors of the war included other nations and communities: Poles, Jews, Germans, Belarusians, Moldovans, Greeks, Tatars, Armenians. Their strategies and tactics of survival when caught in the maelstrom of war, and afterwards, dealing with its unfinished tragedy, were at times based on the effort to preserve their identity and at other times on the forced or voluntary change of this identity as an alternative to death or repression. The concept of “enemy nations”37 (and practical punitive actions against them) was invented not only by the Nazis: Stalin’s totalitarian apparatus started demonstratively designating “enemy nations” and punishing them beginning in the 1930s. Timothy Snyder describes it as follows: “Stalin was a pioneer of national mass murder”;38 long before Hitler, Stalin’s “achievements” included “Polish,” “German,” “Romanian,” “Bulgarian,” “Greek” and other national purge “operations”39 that caused bloody tragedies for entire nations living alongside the Ukrainians. Hitler in turn also started his mass killings with the Poles. Christopher Browning writes: “If the Nazi regime had suddenly ceased to exist in the first half of 1941, its most notorious achievements in human destruction would have been the so-called euthanasia killing of seventy to eighty thousand German mentally ill and the systematic murder of the Polish intelligentsia. … The Jewish Holocaust ever since has overshadowed National Socialism’s other all-too-numerous atrocities.”40

      It is clear that situations of prolonged terror that caused “historical wounds” were brought about not only by the regimes in power but also by local communities, neighbors, local instigators of deportations and mass murders. Yet the “politics of recognition” as a conceptual approach enables seeing “historical wounds” of another kind: “wounds” made by the invisibility, devaluation or non-recognition of the sacrifice and heroism of some people who were omitted in the post-war heroic canon.

      The concept of “state” is equally problematic for analyzing what happened to people in the period. In the stories about the practices of terror, violent and disciplinarian actions, mobilization and organizational activities directed at society, the “state” often appears as a depersonalized (sacred or mechanistic) institution that acts rationally, solving its own pragmatic objectives.

      “Power,” as already mentioned, always had a name, body, biography, and history; therefore, individual relations and motives underlying the choices made by people during the long war had not only ideological but also individual intentions, including revenge or aid, betrayal or rescue, trust or contempt.