Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

The Forgotten Millions
The Atlantic Monthly ^ | December 2003 | Jonathan Rauch

Posted on 01/14/2004 9:17:54 AM PST by Publius

Communism is the deadliest fantasy in human history (but does anyone care?)

In January of this year the late Michael Kelly, who was a Washington Post columnist as well as the editor-at-large of this magazine, decried in the Post the fact that antiwar marches in Washington, DC, and San Francisco were sponsored by an organization, called International ANSWER, that is "a front group for the communist Workers World Party," which is, "literally, a Stalinist organization." As he was sometimes known to do, Kelly worked up a bit of dudgeon: "The left marches with those who would maintain in power the leading oppressors of humanity in the world."

Shortly afterward the columnist and essayist Katha Pollitt, writing in The Nation, advised him to calm down. "Kelly really should get out of the house more," she said. If he had attended the Washington march, as she did, he would have seen what a diverse and positive affair it was. She conceded that ANSWER was a "weird pseudo-Marxist sect," and she acknowledged its "off-key Stalinism and refusal to condemn Saddam Hussein," but she argued against taking any of that too seriously.

”It always seemed to me that ANSWER spoke only for itself, that not many people were listening, and that if war was an unpopular plan, the movement against it would grow way beyond the capacity of ANSWER to control it or lead it. In fact, ANSWER may have unintentionally spurred the rest of us to get busy and come up with alternatives like United for Peace and Justice or the Campaign for Peace and Democracy.”

Let me ask you, please, to go back and reread that paragraph, but this time make one change throughout: substitute the words "the American Nazi Party" for ANSWER. Or, if you prefer, substitute "the KKK." Notice how utterly out of place the author's insouciance suddenly seems. It is inconceivable that any self-respecting American intellectual would call a march sponsored by Nazis or Klansmen a worthy event. Yet when it comes to communists—well, what's the big deal?

Around the time of the Kelly-Pollitt exchange I attended a lecture in Washington that I can only describe as a consciousness-raising. It was given by Alan Charles Kors, a historian (of European intellectual history) at the University of Pennsylvania. For some years I've admired Kors' work opposing speech codes on university campuses, so I was drawn more by the speaker than by the subject—"Can there be an 'after socialism'?" I left feeling chastened.

Kors said this: "The West accepts an epochal, monstrous, unforgivable double standard. We rehearse the crimes of Nazism almost daily; we teach them to our children as ultimate historical and moral lessons; and we bear witness to every victim. We are, with so few exceptions, almost silent on the crimes of communism. So the bodies lie among us, unnoticed, everywhere." And so many bodies! Not six million but 60 million, or 100 million—in any case scores and scores of millions. Too many ever to number.

In her recent book, Gulag: A History, Anne Applebaum notes that Russia has no national museum or monument or place of mourning devoted to the crimes of communism. There have been "no public truth-telling sessions in Russia, no parliamentary hearings, no official investigations of any kind into the murders or the massacres or the camps of the USSR." In December of 2001, ten years after the Soviet Union dissolved, "thirteen of the fifteen former Soviet republics were run by former communists, as were many of the former satellite states."

Hoping to do better, in 1993 Congress and President Bill Clinton authorized the construction, on public land but with private funds, of a national memorial to honor the victims of communism. The act cited "the deaths of over 100,000,000 victims in an unprecedented imperial communist holocaust," and resolved that "the sacrifices of these victims should be permanently memorialized so that never again will nations and peoples allow so evil a tyranny to terrorize the world." The Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation then set out to raise $100 million, or a dollar per victim. The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum cost $168 million, so $100 million seemed reasonable.

Ten years later the project has scaled back its target to $450,000, which the foundation's president and CEO—a retired diplomat and consultant named Jay Katzen, himself working without pay—told me he expects to have raised by the end of this year. That will cover a memorial near (not on) the National Mall, in Washington, and an online museum. Original plans had called for a bricks-and-mortar museum and archive, but they will have to wait. "For a lot of people," Katzen said, "this does not have the immediacy, the sensitivity, that the Holocaust, for good reasons, has."

Well, the Holocaust museum was not dedicated until almost fifty years after the Holocaust. Perhaps these things take time. Perhaps communism is still too close to be seen in perspective. Perhaps this and perhaps that. The fact remains: communism, not Nazism or racism or whatever other ism you please, is the deadliest fantasy in human history, and even Americans, for all our struggles against it, have not yet looked it full in the face.

The Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation has a Web site, for those who are interested in learning or helping (www.victimsofcommunism.org). There are, I think, at least three reasons to hope that the project succeeds. A memorial in Washington would honor the dead. It would commemorate the longest and possibly the hardest geo-political struggle that the United States has ever undertaken. Not least, it might bring closer the time when activists will be ashamed to march under communist sponsorship, and when writers will be ashamed to make excuses for them.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; US: District of Columbia; US: Maryland; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: answer; china; communism; communistsubversion; culturewar; easternbloc; genocide; marxism; sovietunion; traitors; warcrimes
Amazing that this came from an Establishment Liberal venue. They're starting to get it -- about 60 years late. (Better late than never.)
1 posted on 01/14/2004 9:17:59 AM PST by Publius
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Publius
bump
2 posted on 01/14/2004 9:26:23 AM PST by RippleFire
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Publius
About-time-bump
3 posted on 01/14/2004 9:42:57 AM PST by VRW Conspirator (Ted Kennedy wants all of us bearing his guilt.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Publius
To admit the evil inherent in socialism is to admit complicity with evil, and to admit promoting and cooperating with evil. Those who remain socialists do so because they are incapable of admitting their guilt. Those whose conscience still exists can no longer be socialists when confronted with the facts. Millions have died for the lie, and the liars blindly continue.
4 posted on 01/14/2004 9:52:01 AM PST by RKV (He who has the guns makes the rules.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Publius
Great find.
5 posted on 01/14/2004 9:52:33 AM PST by BCrago66
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Comment #6 Removed by Moderator

To: Publius
read later
7 posted on 01/14/2004 10:09:21 AM PST by LiteKeeper
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Publius
Bump!
8 posted on 01/14/2004 10:49:00 AM PST by talleyman (It takes a village to raise an idiot. (Wimpy tag-line? Order Vi-tag-ra here!))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: seamole
Thanks for the ping.
9 posted on 01/14/2004 10:59:41 AM PST by hellinahandcart
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: hellinahandcart
bump for later read...!
10 posted on 01/14/2004 11:10:26 AM PST by 88keys (never vote for a person who can do nothing right...)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson