Resolution: Bundestag wants to recognize Holodomor in Ukraine as genocide - why this is more than just a gesture

In the evening, the Bundestag wants to recognize the so-called Holodomor in Ukraine as genocide.

Resolution: Bundestag wants to recognize Holodomor in Ukraine as genocide - why this is more than just a gesture

In the evening, the Bundestag wants to recognize the so-called Holodomor in Ukraine as genocide. The SPD, Greens, FDP and CDU/CSU have submitted a joint motion entitled "Holodomor in Ukraine: remembering - commemorating - admonishing". "The whole of Ukraine was affected by hunger and repression, not just its grain-producing regions," says the motion. "From today's perspective, a historical-political classification as genocide suggests itself. The German Bundestag shares such a classification."

Given Russia's current war of aggression in Ukraine, this is more than just a gesture, even if such a resolution has no immediate legal consequences. But by recognizing it as a genocide, the German parliament is confirming that there has been an independent Ukrainian people for a very long time, something that Russian President Vladimir Putin recently denied to the Ukrainians.

Holodomor can roughly be translated as "murder by starvation". The term is composed of the Ukrainian words holod (hunger) and moryty (to kill). And that pretty much describes what happened 90 years ago in the days of the former Soviet Union. At that time, several million people died in Ukraine within two years, the exact number is not certain. In the winter of 1932/33 alone there were three to three and a half million starvation deaths, the estimates for the total number of victims are four to eight million.

The special thing about the famine: It was man-made and the result of the collectivization of agriculture operated by the Soviet leadership under dictator Josef Stalin, which went hand in hand with ruthless provisions for food delivery and destroyed the traditional economic methods of rural areas.

In the winter of 1932, the Soviet leadership took additional draconian punitive measures in the Ukraine after the unrealistically high harvest quantities were not delivered. Despite the devastating supply situation, defaulting kolkhozes had to deliver additional quantities of food. The blockade was soon extended to all of Ukraine to stop people fleeing and searching for food in other regions.

In the judgment of many historians, such steps can be interpreted as targeted genocide intended to deliver the affected population to certain starvation. Accordingly, Stalin acted with the intention of breaking resistance he had assumed against forced collectivization in Ukraine and to destroy a national independence movement.

The term genocide is also commonly known as "genocide" and, according to Article 2 of UN Convention 260 from 1948, includes acts against members of a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, committed with the intention of destroying the group in whole or in part partially erased. Genocide was outlawed internationally with Convention 260.

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