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The Black Book of Red Blood-Detailing a century of Marxist carnage
Frontpagemagazine ^ | 10-8-03 | Jeremiah Reedy

Posted on 10/08/2003 7:26:21 AM PDT by SJackson

Since 9/11 attention has been rightly and understandably focused on terrorism and the Middle East. We must not, however, let this cause us to forget two other evils of the twentieth century: Nazism and Communism. It is the latter that I deal with here. A colleague recently observed that "many post-colonialist scholars...have been Marxists or strongly left, and therefore have been reluctant to make the Soviet Union a global villain on the scale of France or Britain." While no doubt true, this surprising statement brought to mind the heated debate that raged in France following the publication of Le Livre Noir du Communisme (in English The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression). The Black Book, a weighty tome of 858, pages was written by six leading French scholars, all of whom are former Communists or "close fellow-travellers." The controversy was triggered by the editor's introduction.

Critics were upset by four claims advanced there: 1) the number of victims; 2) the comparison of Communism and Nazism; 3) the assertion of complicity on the part of Western scholars; and 4) the explanation for the unusual silence that exists vis-a-vis the crimes of Communism.

In the first place they accused the editor of inflating the number of victims of Communism to reach 100,000,000. Relying where possible on recently opened archives, these statistics were given:

USSR: 20 million
China: 65 million
Vietnam: l million
North Korea: 2 million
Cambodia: 2 million
Eastern Europe: l million
Latin America: 150,000
Africa: l.5 million
Afghanistan: l.5 million
The international Communist movement and Communist parties not in power: 10,000.

On the other hand, Martin Malia, a well known American authority, in his review of the book confirms these numbers and calls the Communist record "the most colossal case of political carnage in history."

Secondly, there was the claim of striking similarities between Communism and Nazism, e.g. one party, a single ideology, total subservience of state to party, "a cult of a leader and mass terror." The methods used by the two totalitarian systems were also similar: deportations (in cattle cars), concentration camps (a Soviet invention borrowed by the Nazis), dehumanization and "animalization" of victims ("Kulaks are not human beings---they have no right to live." Enemies of the people must be crushed "like noxious insects," Lenin)

Because there were (and still are) Communists in the French government, the equation of Communism and Nazism provoked a furious debate in France; it was no doubt the most inflammatory aspect of his introduction. Of course, others had claimed this earlier, e.g. George Orwell and Hannah Arendt. One contributor to the Black Book wrote that Communism and Fascism were "identical in every significant way," and another called them "heterozygous twins." Tony Judt, writing in the N.Y. Times, asserted that they "are, and always were, morally indistinguishable." Anson Rabinbach summed it up thus: ". . . communist regimes were far more murderous than Nazism and should not be given second rank in the moral ledger of twentieth-century genocide." This is not to deny the obvious differences: the Nazis practiced racial genocide, the Communists "class genocide," the Nazis killed "the Other," the Communists killed their own; the Nazis had extermination camps, the preferred weapon of the Communists was famine (an easy thing to cause when there is central control of all resources).

Thirdly, the editor dared to raise the question of the complicity of those living outside the Communist countries. He accuses hundreds of thousands of "aiding and abetting" the crimes of Lenin and Stalin from the 1920s to the 1950s and of the "Great Helmsman" from the 1950s to the 1970s. "Much closer to our time," he writes, "there was widespread rejoicing [among leftist scholars] when Pol Pot came to power."

In the fourth place, how can we account for the strange silence vis-a-vis the crimes of Communism and the lack of knowledge on the part of the general public when it "metastasized" (the word used by Solzhenitsyn), affecting "one third of humanity on four continents during a period spanning eighty years" Several explanations have been advanced: the "tyrants" were good at concealing the facts, "the absolute denial of access to archives . . . , the total control of the print and other media as well as of border crossings, the propaganda trumpeting the regimes's 'successes,' and the entire apparatus for keeping information under lock and key were designed primarily to ensure that the awful truth would never see the light of day," They viciously attacked all who attempted to reveal the truth, they attempted to justify their crimes as a "necessary aspect of revolution," (You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs.), and they perverted the language. Other factors included naivete, self-deception, "cupidity, spinelessness, vanity, fascination with power, violence and revolutionary fervor. . ." Finally the fact that theSoviets participated in defeating the Nazis and the focus on the Holocaust as a unique atrocity have distracted the world from Communist atrocities.

This brief summary obviously does not begin to do justice to the complexity and comprehensiveness of the account given in the book. Anyone who is interested is advised to read at least Martin Malia's foreword to the English version, "The Uses of Atrocity."

Two objections should be dealt with preemptively: First that Communism began as a benign movement of liberation that somehow got derailed. Malia believes that The Black Book lays this myth (that of "good Lenin, bad Stalin") to rest once and for all. Secondly, it has been argued that it is "illegitimate to speak of a single Communist movement from Phnom Penh to Paris." Malia thinks that The Black Book refutes this, a point on which there was unanimous agreement among the contributors. The ideology runs from Lenin, to Stalin, "to Mao, to Ho, to Kim Il Sung, to Pol Pot."

On pp. 9-10 of The Black Book one can find a breakdown of the ghastly statistics for the U.S.S.R., e.g. "The liquidation of almost 690,000 in the Great Purge of 1937-38," "The destruction of four million Ukrainians and two million others by means of an artificial and systematically perpetuated famine in 1932-33," etc., etc., etc. I shall say nothing about the millions who were enslaved or impoverished by the Soviet Union; nor shall I discuss the degradation of the environment that occurred in areas that came under its sway.

Still, perhaps the most devastating comment on Communism comes from Richard Pipes in his Communism, A History. Pipes writes that "the Khmer Rouge rule in Cambodia (1975-78) represents the purest embodiment of Communism: what it turns into when pushed to its logical conclusion. Its leaders would stop at nothing to attain their objective, which was to create the first truly egalitarian society in the world: to this end they were prepared to annihilate as many of their people as they deemed necessary. It was the most extreme manifestation of the hubris inherent in Communist ideology, the belief in the boundless power of an intellectual elite guided by the Marxist doctrine, with resort to unrestrained violence in order completely to reshape life. The result was devastation on an unimaginable scale." I leave it to readers to decide whether the Soviet Union should be considered "a global villain on the scale of France or Britain." One wonders where "post-colonialist scholars" have placed Nazi Germany in their villainy hierarchy.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Jeremiah Reedy is Professor of Classics at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: blackbook; communism

1 posted on 10/08/2003 7:26:22 AM PDT by SJackson
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To: SJackson
'The Black Book' Bump.
2 posted on 10/08/2003 7:30:42 AM PDT by DoctorMichael (Thats my story, and I'm sticking to it.)
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3 posted on 10/08/2003 7:31:35 AM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: DoctorMichael
Richard Pipes "Communism" is a very short and excellent primer on the subject. Dr. Pipes is a Harvard historian, but his tome is not at all sympathetic, proving perhaps that not all legitimate scholars have been cleansed from Cambridge yet.

One point he makes in the introduction is that it is not possible to discern a significant difference between "Socialism" and "Communism", they are one and the same.

This is an excellent book to give to liberal friends.

4 posted on 10/08/2003 7:38:00 AM PDT by Jack Black
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To: SJackson
"The destruction of four million Ukrainians and two million others by means of an artificial and systematically perpetuated famine in 1932-33," etc., etc., etc. I shall say nothing about the millions who were enslaved or impoverished by the Soviet Union; nor shall I discuss the degradation of the environment that occurred in areas that came under its sway.

More like around 12 million of Ukrainians died in artificial famine, while Durante got Pulitzer Prize for "reporting" how nice was the father Stalin.

The same puppeteers are now creeping into American system, clamping on freedoms, destroying the Constitution and brainwashing the "working people" with lies and propaganda, while dividing us into PC groups.

Viva Arnold! Viva Free Republic! Vote the ba$tards out!

Freep & Roll!

5 posted on 10/08/2003 7:41:53 AM PDT by Leo Carpathian
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To: SJackson
how can we account for the strange silence vis-a-vis the crimes of Communism and the lack of knowledge on the part of the general public when it "metastasized" (the word used by Solzhenitsyn), affecting "one third of humanity on four continents during a period spanning eighty years" Several explanations have been advanced: the "tyrants" were good at concealing the facts, "the absolute denial of access to archives . . . , the total control of the print and other media as well as of border crossings, the propaganda trumpeting the regimes's 'successes,' and the entire apparatus for keeping information under lock and key were designed primarily to ensure that the awful truth would never see the light of day," They viciously attacked all who attempted to reveal the truth, they attempted to justify their crimes as a "necessary aspect of revolution," (You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs.), and they perverted the language.

But,but,but communism was defeated. How come all these tactics sound like modern Lib actions then? Perverted the language. Like the ACLU and AUFSCAS along with an activist Judiciary have been trying to do? Good read.

6 posted on 10/08/2003 7:44:09 AM PDT by Kudsman
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To: SJackson
First that Communism began as a benign movement of liberation that somehow got derailed. Malia believes that The Black Book lays this myth (that of "good Lenin, bad Stalin") to rest once and for all.

The killings were started under Lenin. When a man attempted to assassinate Lenin, that is when the KGB (not its name at the time) was born. Since there could be no crime in the "perfect" communist nation - dissenters were labeled enemies of the state and/or insane, given a “trial” and shot. You can talk about the bravery of the Soviet soldier in WWII all you want - but when the choice was being shot in the head by the Military section of the KGB or being shot in battle, the choice wasn't difficult (better to die fighting than labeled a coward). The informer network was started under Lenin too. Stalin (the man of Steal) just continued where Lenin left off - with his own paranoid twist.

The U.S.S.R. history makes me sick, as does the history of China. Thank you democrats for these atrocity filled countries and the blight on human history they have caused.

Since I seem to be in a talkative mood. What do you all think of the influence that the communist infiltration into the US in the 20’s & 30’s had on the labor movement? If I remember my history correctly – there was a radical communist running for president at the time in the guise of the labor (socialist) movement who caused rioting and received a significant % of the vote (I can’t remember his name, and I could be wrong). There was unrest among the lower classes in the US around this time due to the unfair / unsafe work environments of companies and compounding the issue - massive unemployment. I think it was ripe for USSR operative infiltration and exploitation. The great depression was a huge opportunity for the communist to exploit. I was talking about this with someone a while back, and I think that part of the reason for the “New Deal” was to appease this faction and to bring them back under control. The concessions that were made in the “New Deal,” were enough to appease the people who were only borderline communist and to part them from the hard-core communist who wanted to overthrow the government.

7 posted on 10/08/2003 7:49:54 AM PDT by NotQuiteCricket (http://www.strangesolutions.com)
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To: SJackson
Good article except for a glaring omission and that is almost every major genocide of this century was preceded by oppressive gov't. gun control/confiscation. Jews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership (www.jpfo.org) studided each of these holocausts and found this to be the case in every instance. Like the old saying goes......politicians prefer unarmed peasants.
8 posted on 10/08/2003 7:57:26 AM PDT by american spirit (ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION = NATIONAL SUICIDE)
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To: SJackson
Major The Black Book of Communism bump!

I read it when it first came out in English translation in 1999 and have been recommending it ever since.

The Black Book should be required reading for every undergraduate as a "general education" requirement. Every high school history teacher in America should be required to read the book to keep his or her job, and should be required to teach it.

9 posted on 10/08/2003 8:22:05 AM PDT by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo [Gallia][Germania][Arabia] Esse Delendam --- Select One or More as needed)
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To: SJackson
What would the "Forefathers" have done about the "Traitors" and "Infiltraitors".
History tells a story of "Men" willing to lay down their lives and the lives of their sons so that future generations would have freedom and liberty.
10 posted on 10/08/2003 8:26:44 AM PDT by liberty or death
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To: SJackson
bump
11 posted on 10/08/2003 8:27:03 AM PDT by VOA
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To: SJackson
Bump!
12 posted on 10/08/2003 8:43:25 AM PDT by LibertyAndJusticeForAll
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