Alexander
Solzhenitsyn, who died this week aged 89, will rank with literary
immortals Tolstoy and Dostoevsky as a great chronicler of Russia’s
soul and its profound suffering.
Solzhenitsyn’s
epic works Ivan
Denisovich and The
Gulag Archipelago are literary monuments for all mankind.
After years as a political prisoner in the Soviet gulag, Solzhenitsyn
declared, "a writer’s goal is to fight the lie" –
meaning propaganda, historical distortion, and perversion of
facts.
Thanks
in good part to Solzhenitsyn and fellow dissident writers, the
world finally learned the Soviet Communists had murdered over
30 million people and imprisoned millions more.
At the
1945 Yalta Conference, Stalin boasted to Winston Churchill that
Commissar Lazar Kaganovitch, who had supervised the murder of
at least seven million Ukrainians and sent 2 million to concentration
camps, "is my Adolf Eichmann," referring to the Nazi
official responsible for killing millions of Jews.
In 1945,
the Soviet Union – the close wartime ally of Britain, Canada
and the United States – had 5.5 million prisoners in its prison
system, the gulag, of whom 25% died annually from cold, hunger,
exhaustion and disease.
Though
Stalin’s worst crimes were committed before World War II, the
full horror of his system of industrialized murder and slave
labor were barely known outside Russia until the 1980’s. To
this day, the world is constantly reminded of Germany’s crimes
during the National Socialist era. But Stalin’s victims, who
surpassed those of Hitler by a factor of three times, are almost
forgotten. Why?
History
is the propaganda of the victors. Few photographs of the gulag
have survived, evidence was destroyed, and witnesses have died.
Churchill and Roosevelt could not admit they were allied to
the greatest mass killer since Genghis Khan, and complicit in
his crimes. Or reveal that Communist agents of influence had
shaped White House policy. The feeble-minded Roosevelt even
hailed Stalin as "Uncle Joe."
The world’s
Communist and Socialist parties managed to suppress the full
scope of Stalin’s crimes even after Nikita Khrushchev denounced
him in 1956. Solzhenitsyn warned that socialism, and big sister
communism, inevitably led to totalitarian states.
Many Western
liberal intellectuals were infatuated with Stalin’s brute power
and didn’t want to know about their idol’s crimes. The French
leftist thinker Jean-Paul Sartre even refused to admit the gulag
existed.
Revealing
the truth about the Allies’ role in supporting Stalin and his
crimes would undermine the whole bogus mythology of World War
II that has become the state religion for the political right
in North America, Britain and Australia.
Those who
considered the Jewish Holocaust a unique historical crime were
not eager to bring attention to Stalin’s genocide lest it diminish
or dilute their own people’s suffering.
The
Soviet Union punished Solzhenitsyn by making him into a "non-person."
He was exiled to the United States, where he was at first hailed
as a hero. But the uncompromising Solzhenitsyn, ever the Old
Testament prophet, fulminated against the "soulless capitalism
system" and "mindless western consumerism."
Then he
published a book about a hitherto taboo subject, the prominent
role of Russian Jews in the Communist party and secret police.
The book provoked a storm of criticism in North America. Solzhenitsyn
was branded anti-Semitic and quickly became a non-person for
the second time.
Solzhenitsyn
returned to the new Russia after the fall of Communism and became
the leading exponent of the revived cult of reactionary 19th-century
pan-Slav nationalism. He championed Russia’s Orthodox Church
as guardian of the nation’s soul, proclaimed Russia’s manifest
destiny, and advocated a form of modern czarism that looks remarkably
like today’s Kremlin run by Vladimir Putin and Dimitri Medvedev.
Being a
prophet in the wilderness is a hard, thankless profession. But
Solzhenitsyn’s dauntless courage and tenacity shone the light
into some of the darkest cellars of Russia’s tortured history.
He influenced a generation of writers, including this humble
one, whose goal, like his, has always been to "fight the
lie."