Russia rewriting Josef Stalin's legacy Archives on dictator seized from
human-rights group Memorial

By Alex Rodriguez | Tribune correspondent

December 17, 2008

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — At first, the purpose behind the midday raid at a
human-rights group's office here was murky. Police, some clad in masks and
camouflage, cut the electricity to Memorial's offices and demanded to know
if any drugs or guns were kept on the premises.

Five hours later, after police had opened every computer and walked out with
11 hard drives, the reason for their visit became clear to Memorial Director
Irina Flige.

On the hard drives, a trove of scanned images and documents memorialized
Josef Stalin's murderous reign of terror. Diagrams scrawled out by survivors
detailed layouts of labor camps. There were photos of Russians executed by
Stalin's secret police, wrenching accounts of survival from gulag inmates
and maps showing the locations of mass graves.

"They knew what they were taking," Flige said. "Today, the state tries to
reconstruct history to make it appear like a long chain of victories. And
they want these victories to be seen as justifying Stalin's repressions."
Related links ·         The forgotten cities of eastern
Russia<http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-russias-forgotten-cities-feb26,0,3668092.story>

Stalin, the brutal Soviet dictator responsible for the deaths of millions of
his citizens, has been undergoing a makeover of sorts in recent years.
Russian authorities have reshaped the Georgia-born dictator's image into
that of a misunderstood, demonized leader who did what he had to do to mold
the Soviet Union into the superpower it became.

In Russian classrooms, history teachers are guided by a new,
government-approved textbook, Alexander Filippov's "Modern History of
Russia: 1945-2006," which hails Stalin as an efficient manager who had to
resort to extreme measures to modernize the lumbering Soviet agrarian
economy.

There were, writes Filippov, "rational reasons behind the use of violence in
order to ensure maximum efficiency."

A museum commemorating Stalin as a national hero opened in 2006 in the
southern city of Volgograd. The following year, a 40-episode television
drama broadcast on a state-controlled network whitewashed Stalin's crimes
and portrayed him as Russia's savior.

When he was president, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir
Putin<http://www.chicagotribune.com/topic/politics/government/heads-of-state/vladimir-putin-PEPLT007593.topic>sought
to shift the nation's focus away from Stalin's legacy of brutality.
Meeting with history teachers in 2007, Putin acknowledged that Russian
history "did contain some problematic pages. But so did other states'
histories.

"We have fewer of them than other countries, and they were less terrible
than in other nations," Putin continued. "We can't allow anyone to impose a
sense of guilt on us."

The battle over how Stalin should be remembered remains one of Russia's most
divisive topics of debate. For many Russians, Stalin's achievements far
outweigh his crimes. He is seen as the wartime leader who saved the
Motherland from Nazi Germany in World War
II<http://www.chicagotribune.com/topic/unrest-conflicts-war/wars-interventions/world-war-ii-EVHST00000110.topic>and
engineered the country's ascent as a global powerhouse.

For many others, that ascent was made using millions of Russians' lives as
grist. Historians estimate that Stalin's decrees led to the deaths of as
many as 20 million people, either from famine, execution, incarceration in
labor camps or during mass deportations.

After Stalin's death, Nikita Khrushchev's rise to power included a program
of de-Stalinization, which condemned Stalin's dictatorial rule and ended
forced labor.

In recent years, Russian authorities have made strides in rehabilitating
Stalin. In 2006, nearly half of Russians polled by the Levada Center, a
leading Moscow survey group, said they viewed Stalin positively, while just
29 percent perceived him negatively. When a Russian TV network conducted an
online survey this summer asking who was the greatest Russian ever, Stalin
was a leading contender.

Memorial's St. Petersburg branch has been researching and documenting
Stalin's crimes for 20 years, building one of the world's most complete
archives of one of the darkest chapters in Russia's history.

These archives are now in the hands of Russian police. St. Petersburg
prosecutors say they conducted the raid because they were trying to track
down an article in Novy Peterburg, a local newspaper under investigation on
charges of extremism. But Flige says Memorial has no connection at all with
the newspaper.

The archives include information and images that Flige says play an
invaluable role in preserving the historical record of the Stalin era,
including databases recording the names and biographical data of thousands
of Stalin's victims.

Flige says she does not know when she will get the archives back, or what
condition they will be in when they are returned. "They could damage them,
either deliberately or by accident," she said.

The raid occurred Dec. 4, a day before Flige was slated to join leading
historians and academics at a conference in Moscow about Stalin's place in
Russian history. "The way we see it, the raid was a kind of greeting card
from the authorities ahead of the conference," she said.

Flige says the raid reflects a government bent on remaking history so
Russians believe "all of the difficulties of the past were needed for the
glory of Russia."

That worries Elizaveta Delibash, a gulag survivor, who says too many
Russians have acquiesced to the government's version of history.

"There's a large part of society that simply doesn't know Russian history,"
says Delibash, 80. "So the work of Memorial is very important to let people
know what really happened. The problem is that the authorities fully
understand this."

[email protected]

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-russia-stalin_rodriguezdec17,0,2772612.story




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