Double genocide theory
The double genocide theory (Lithuanian: Dvigubo genocido požiūris, lit. 'Double genocide approach') says that two equally serious genocides happened in World War II. The first was the Holocaust committed by Nazi Germany against Jews.[1][2] The other was a genocide committed by the Soviet Union against Eastern Europeans (including the Poles, Ukrainians, and Baltic states' population), according to this theory.[3]
Overview
Historians think that the double genocide theory appeared in Lithuania after the Soviet Union ended in December 1991.[3] After this, formerly Soviet-occupied countries built monuments and museums to show the world the evidence of their suffering under Soviet totalitarianism.[3]
Supporters of the double genocide theory base their views on a series of events that happened in Soviet-occupied countries. The theory is controversial among scholars worldwide.[3] Some say that the double genocide theory is a form of historical revisionism.[3]
Soviet persecution of Poles
Josef Stalin's Soviet forces killed at least 150,000 Poles on Polish soil in wartime.[6] Soviet persecution of the Poles continued until the Soviet puppet government in Poland fell in 1989.[7]
The Great Terror
During the Great Terror (also called the Great Purge) between 1936-1938, Stalin's forces killed 111,091 Poles living in or near the Soviet Union.[8][9]
Soviet-occupied Poland
In 1939, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union invaded Poland and divided it in two.[10][11] The Soviet Union occupied eastern Poland. Stalin claimed he did this because pre-war Poland was a "crime against revolution [... with] counter-revolutionary activity".[12] Meanwhile, Nazi Germany occupied western Poland.
Soviet-occupied Poland included 52.1% of pre-war Poland (c. 200,000 km2) and over 13,700,000 citizens.[13] Among its citizens who were not Poles, 37% were Ukrainians, 14.5% Belarusians, 8.4% Jews, 0.9% Russians, and 0.6% Germans.[13]
In late June 1941, the Nazi-led Axis powers invaded the Soviet Union.[10][11] By that time, Soviet forces had already arrested 500,000 Poles in the Kresy macroregion.[6]
Katyn massacre
In a memo on March 5, 1940, Lavrentiy Beria asked Stalin to order the execution of 25,700 Polish "nationalists and counterrevolutionaries" in the Soviet-occupied zone.[14] Six members of the Soviet Politburo – Stalin, Vyacheslav Molotov, Lazar Kaganovich, Kliment Voroshilov, Anastas Mikoyan, and Mikhail Kalinin – signed an order authorizing this mass execution.[14]
Between April and May 1940, the Soviets executed around 22,000 Poles in the Katyn forest (now in Smolensk, Russia).[15][16] Most victims were captured Polish soldiers, Polish police, or members of the intelligentsia.[15][16]
Between February 10, 1940 and June 1941, as many as 1,200,000 Poles were deported to mainland Russia.[17] The deportation happened while Polish and Jewish property across the occupied zone were taken away by the Soviets.[18] Polish Jews made up 30% of the Poles deported to Siberia,[19][20] making them statistically the most targeted group among the deportees.[19][20]
The Katyn massacre was part of the Soviets' campaign to erase Poland's culture and identity.[15][16] The Soviets thought the Poles were "avowed enemies of Soviet authority", according to German-American historian Gerhard Weinberg.[21] Weinberg also wrote:[21]
Stalin could be certain that any revived Poland would be unfriendly [. ...] depriving it of a large proportion of its military and technical elite would make it weaker.
Destruction of Polish society
In both the Nazi- and Soviet-occupied zones, Poles were oppressed because of anti-Polish racism[11][22] (also called anti-Polonism[23] or Polonophobia[24]). This racism was not new; it existed even before the Soviet Union did.[22][25]
In their zone, the Soviets forced Russian culture onto the Poles. They made Polish universities focus on Russian studies, suppress Polish studies, and teach according to Soviet rules (called the Statute Books for Soviet Higher Schools).[13] They systematically erased traces of Polish history.[13] They dissolved all Polish political parties and organizations.[13] They also made the Polish currency invalid,[13] which caused the whole population to lose their life savings overnight.[26]
NKVD prisoner massacres
Before June 1941 (when Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union), the Soviets were holding hundreds of thousands of political prisoners in NKVD prisons across its occupied Eastern European territories.[27] Right after the invasion began, the NKVD was ordered to kill or evacuate 140,000 prisoners from Soviet-occupied eastern Poland.[27]
The NKVD hastily killed two-thirds of these prisoners.[27] Among the victims, at least 9,800 were reportedly executed in prisons and 1,443 executed during evacuation.[27] Geographically, 20,000–30,000 of them died in Soviet-occupied eastern Poland. Around 9,000 died in the Ukrainian SSR,[27] which had just gone through the Holodomor[28][29] and Great Purge-related massacres in the 1930s.[30][31] They were targeted for mass murder over their Polish or Ukrainian identity.[27][31]
Historian Yury Boshyk wrote:[30]
It was not only the numbers of the executed, but also the manner in which they died that shocked the populace. When the families of the arrested rushed to the prisons after the Soviet evacuation, they were aghast to find bodies so badly mutilated that many could not be identified. It was evident that many of the prisoners had also been tortured before death; others were killed en masse.
Soviet puppet state in Poland
After Nazi Germany was defeated, the Soviet Union set up a puppet state in Poland.[32] Around 25,000 Polish Home Army soldiers[33] were deported to Gulags in mainland Russia.[33] Soviet soldiers also raped as many as 100,000 Polish women right after the war.[34]
The Soviet Union ruled Poland with communist totalitarianism until 1989,[35][36] and Soviet troops did not leave Poland until 1993.[37]
Polish resistance
Some anti-communist Poles fought against the Soviets.[38] However, the armed resistance failed because it had no support from foreign countries.[38] Tens of thousands of Polish resistance members were deported to mainland Russia.[38] The victims included around 6,000 Poles who had been jailed in Borowicze (now Borovichi, Russia) and another 6,300 in Stalinogorsk (now Novomoskovsk, Russia).[38]
Most were sent to Gulags in Workutstroj,[39] Pieczorłag, or Uchtiżemłag, located in the Komi Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic in northwestern Russia.[38] Historians cannot tell exactly how many died, because nobody has access to all of the Soviet documents.[38] Just a few survived, at most.[38]
The Poles resisted the Soviet puppet regime throughout the Cold War, often peacefully. The government often used violence, arrests, and police brutality to respond to protests, even peaceful ones.[40][41] However, strikes and protests by the Polish people contributed to the fall of the puppet regime in 1989.[7]
Polish resistance efforts included:
- Protests in June 1956 in Poznań (c. 100 killed and 600 wounded)[40]
- Protests in March 1968[36]
- Protests in December 1970 (44 killed, 1,000+ wounded and 3,000+ arrested)[41]
- Strike actions in 1971 and June 1976[42] in Łódź[43]
- Strikes in 1980 in Lublin[44]
- A warning strike[45] and hunger demonstrations[46] in 1981
- Demonstrations in 1982[47]
- Strikes in 1988[7]
Soviet persecution of Baltic states' population
The Baltic states also suffered under both the Nazis and the Soviets.[48] Under Nazi occupation, Estonia lost 25% of its pre-war Jewish population,[49] Latvia lost 75%,[50] and Lithuania lost over 95%.[51][52]
1940–41
The Soviets first occupied the Baltic states between June 1940 and June 1941.[53] During that time, they deported around 124,467 people to mainland Russia.[53] The deportees included modern Latvia's founder, Kārlis Ulmanis (1877 – 1942); he died of dysentery in a Gulag in Soviet Turkmenistan.[54] Baltic states' soldiers who refused to join the Red Army were shot.[55][56] More were arrested and deported by the NKVD.[55][56]
Historian Robert Conquest called these selective deportations a policy of "decapitation" by killing off Polish elites, "as was later evidently to be the motive for the Katyn massacre [in which about 22,000 Poles were killed]".[57] Meanwhile, Estonians and Latvians viewed this deadly year as the "year of horror".[55][56]
1941–44
Many Estonians, Latvians, and Lithuanians accepted the Nazi takeover.[55][56] By July 1944, the Nazis had forced 160,000 people in occupied Latvia to fight for Adolf Hitler by July 1944.[55][58] In Nazi-occupied Lithuania, they conscripted at least 20,000 people.[58][59]
Though the Nazis had forced these people to fight, they claimed the conscripts were volunteers.
1944–91
After World War II ended, the Soviets re-took control of the Baltic states. Between 1944 and 1956, many Baltic people resisted Soviet ethnic cleansing and totalitarianism.[60][61] In response, the Soviets deported at least 505,000 people from the Baltic states to Gulags in mainland Russia (including 124,000 Estonians, 136,000 Latvians, and 245,000 Lithuanians).[48] The Baltic states lost 20% of their total population as a result.[48] This included 250,000 who people who fled to Western countries to escape the Soviets.[48]
| Region of the Soviet Union |
Families | People | Average family size |
% of total deportees |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amur Oblast | 2,028 | 5,451 | 2.7 | 5.8 |
| Irkutsk Oblast | 8,475 | 25,834 | 3.0 | 27.3 |
| Krasnoyarsk Krai | 3,671 | 13,823 | 3.8 | 14.6 |
| Novosibirsk Oblast | 3,152 | 10,064 | 3.2 | 10.6 |
| Omsk Oblast | 7,944 | 22,542 | 2.8 | 23.8 |
| Tomsk Oblast | 5,360 | 16,065 | 3.0 | 16.9 |
| Total | 30,630 | 93,779 | 3.1 | 99.0 |
To scare the local people into obeying them, the Soviets would sometimes kill resistance members and dump their bodies in local villages.[63] On October 15, 1956, Adolfas Ramanauskas ("Vanagas"), chief commander of the Union of Lithuanian Freedom Fighters,[63] released a report describing the tortures some of them had suffered:[63][64]
The right eye is covered with haematoma [a bruise], on the eyelid there are six stab wounds made, judging by their diameter, by a thin wire or nail going deep into the eyeball. Multiple haematomas in the area of the stomach, a cut wound on a finger of the right hand. The genitalia reveal the following: a large tear wound on the right side of the scrotum and a wound on the left side, both testicles and spermatic ducts are missing.
Colonization during the Cold War
The Soviet regime imported millions of colonizers into the Baltic states from other parts of the Soviet Union.[65] This changed the Baltic states' ethnic composition forever:[65]
| Ethnic breakdown | 1939 | 1970 | 1989 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Estonians in Estonia | 88%[65] | 60%[65] | 61.5%[66] |
| Latvians in Latvia | 75%[65] | 57%[65] | 50.7%[65] |
| Lithuanians in Lithuania | 85%[67] | 84.6%[67] | 80.6%[67] |
The occupied Baltic states did not benefit from the decades-long Soviet colonization; they were exploited by it.[68] Declassified archives show that the Soviets took much more money from the occupied Baltic states than they ever invested back.[68] They used huge amounts of this money for military infrastructure to oppress the native population.[68] The myth of "generous Soviet aid in developing the Baltics" is propaganda invented to justify Soviet colonization, under which the Baltic states went through decades of oppressive rule.[68]
Deportations of Chechens and Ingush
After the Soviets retook the part of Chechnya previously occupied by Nazi Germans, they mass-deported Chechen and Ingush people from the Northern Caucasus. They falsely accused these people of collaborating with the Nazis.[69] The Soviets forced as many as 400,000 Chechens and 91,250 Ingush from the area within 8 days.[69]
Fearing that the area's mountainous terrain favors guerrilla war, the Soviets entrapped the Chechens and Ingush by inviting them to join the Red Army Day celebrations on February 23, 1944.[69] Once they showed up, they were arrested by soldiers armed with machine guns.[69] The Chechen and Ingush deportees were sent to camps across Central Asia and Siberia.[69] They were not allowed to return to Chechnya until 1957.[69]
The Chechens and Ingush lost as much as 33% of their total pre-war population under the Soviet invasion.[70] This is around the same percentage of population that Cambodia lost during the Cambodian genocide (1975‒79) under the pro-Soviet Khmer Rouge regime.[71]
Debates about the double genocide theory
Dovid Katz
American Yiddish scholar Dovid Katz wrote that the double genocide theory is a form of Holocaust revisionism. He thought the theory resulted from a "recent initiative that seeks to create a moral equivalence between Soviet atrocities committed against the Baltic region and the Holocaust in European history".[72]
Michael Shafir
Romanian-Israeli political scientist Michael Shafir shared Dovid Katz's views.[73] He said the double genocide theory was partly "competitive martyrdom".[73]
Timothy Snyder
American historian Timothy Snyder discussed the double genocide theory in his 2010 book Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin. Some left-wing scholars, including Dovid Katz and Efraim Zuroff,[74] have accused Snyder of "suggesting a moral equivalence between Soviet mass murders and the Nazi Holocaust". In response, Snyder said:[75]
I coincide with Zuroff and Katz on the centrality of the Holocaust, but we must not overlook how Stalin enabled Hitler's crimes.
While accusing Snyder of trivializing the Holocaust, Zuroff himself denied the Holodomor[76][28] and Bosnian genocide,[77] despite the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) having ruled that the Bosnian genocide was indeed a genocide.[78][79]
In addition, scholars who hold similar views to Zuroff often accuse the NATO of "inventing" the Bosnian genocide to justify the bombing and "destruction" of Yugoslavia,[78][79] or blame the Bosnian genocide victims for their own suffering.[78][79] The leading Bosnian genocide deniers include but not limited to Michael Parenti, Edward S. Herman, David Peterson, Jared Israel, Tariq Ali, Mick Hume and Diana Johnstone,[78][79] most of whom also reject the double genocide theory.[78][79]
James Kirchick
In a review of Snyder's book, American reporter James Kirchick said that Western intellectuals do not pay much attention to the Holodomor because of "the machinations of that [Soviet] regime in crafting the internationally agreed-upon legal definition of the term [genocide]".[80]
While the United Nations were drafting the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, the Soviets reportedly prevented "social" and "political" groups from being included in the list of possible genocide victims.[80] This kept the Soviets' crimes from being classified as genocide.[80] The victims belonged to several ethnic groups randomly labelled as "reactionary" or "counterrevolutionary", who were killed until Stalin chose to stop.[80]
Kirchick defended Snyder against accusations that he was "minimizing the Holocaust".[80] Snyder documented Nazi and Soviet atrocities equally, Kirchick said.[80] He also wrote that Stalin enabled Hitler's war in Europe by:[80]
- Making Soviet communism absolutist and totalitarian; this allowed Hitler to justify militarizing German society to confront the Soviet Union
- Telling the German communists to treat the Social Democratic Party as "social fascists"; this divided the left-wing Germans who could have prevented the Nazi takeover
- Signing the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact
- Invading Poland and occupying it until June 1941, when Hitler invaded the Soviet Union
Dovilė Budrytė
Dovilė Budrytė, a Lithuanian-American political scientist, wrote in 2016 that Ukrainians and Baltic people describe Soviet crimes with the word "genocide" as a form of "nation-building myths rooted in traumas".[81] She cited studies done by other scholars to support this theory.[82] She saw those views as "postcolonial trauma narratives".[81] She warned against any "unquestioning acceptance" of these ideas.[81]
In 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine. According to Budrytė, the Baltic states strongly support Ukraine because they have a shared history of suffering "genocides" under Soviet rule.[83]
She also wrote that people's lived experiences do not divide neatly between "Western" and "non-Western".[83] She highlighted the need to consider "power structures, broader political contexts and existing local and international norms" in order to judge how valid some of their claims are.[83]
Kristen Ghodsee
American ethnographer Kristen Ghodsee wrote about the double genocide theory in 2014. She argued that "economic and political elites" promoted the double genocide theory because they "fear[ed] a leftist resurgence in the face of [...] extreme social inequalities [... and] the excesses of neoliberal capitalism".[84] She accused these "elites" of "focusing almost exclusively on Joseph Stalin's crimes" when discussing communism, and "linking all leftist ideals to the excesses of Stalinism".[84]
Debates about the Katyn massacre
Historians have debated whether the Katyn massacre ‒ a major Soviet war crime[17] ‒ could be called a genocide under the double genocide theory. Many Polish scholars have described the massacre as a genocide, including historian Adam Basak,[17][85] jurist Cezary Mik,[17][86] Karolina Kosińska,[17][87] and prosecutor Małgorzata Kuźniar-Plota,[17][88] who investigated the massacre.[17][88]
[The Soviet Politburo's] intent was to destroy a part of the Polish national group [...] twenty-six thousand representatives of the intellectual elite, selected because of their social status and social function.
Mik called the massacre "genocidal murder of the Polish elite in Katyn and other places".[17][86]
If we talk about a specific plan to destroy a group, we can undoubtedly point to the USSR's policy [. ...] various genocidal acts against the Polish nation, acts the most spectacular of which was the Katyn Massacre.
More importantly, Kuźniar-Plota,[17][88] who investigated the massacre,[17][88] ruled that:[17][88]
[The Katyn massacre] had all the characteristics of the crime of genocide specified in Article 2 of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.[89]
Debates about the Holodomor
Some scholars who debate the double genocide theory discuss the Holodomor.[28][29] This was a man-made famine in Soviet Ukraine between 1932-1933.[28][29] As many as 7,000,000 people died of starvation under Stalin's policies.[28][29] As of 2025, over 30 countries recognize that the Holodomor was a genocide against the Ukrainian people:[90]
| Countries which officially recognize the Holodomor as genocide | ||
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
Many Western scholars who reject the double genocide theory have denied the Holodomor.[91][92] This denial comes from communist sympathies, which prevent them from recognizing the worth of Ukrainians as equal humans, according to other scholars.[91][92]
Holodomor denial is considered racist and dehumanizing.[91][92] Jurij Dobczansky, a senior Library of Congress cataloging specialist,[93] said:[94]
Holodomor denial [...] consists of especially vitriolic anti-Western and anti-Ukrainian tirades [...] accusations of foreign influence and Nazi sympathies, or ulterior motives.
Double Genocide Theory Media
A display on anti-Soviet partisans at the Lithuanian Museum of Occupations and Freedom Fights, formerly known as the Museum of Genocide Victims, that has been criticised for insufficient coverage of the Holocaust
An image displayed in the Historical Museum of Serbia, claiming to be “the example of living conditions of Goli otok prisoners.” This image is actually of survivors of the Nazi Buchenwald concentration camp, including Elie Wiesel.
Related pages
References
- ↑ * Shapiro, P.A.. Antisemitism, Christian Ambivalence, and the Holocaust (2007)Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253116741. OCLC 191071016. Retrieved November 4, 2024.
- Laqueur, Walter. The Changing Face of Antisemitism: From Ancient Times to the Present Day (July 30, 2009)Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 9780195341218. Retrieved November 3, 2024.
- Deportation of Hungarian Jews. Timeline of EventsUnited States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 6 October 2017.
- Brosnan, Matt. What Was The Holocaust? (12 June 2018)Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
- 36 Questions About the Holocaust. Museum of Tolerance, Los Angeles. Retrieved 2024-10-14.
- ↑ * Polonsky, Antony. Polish-Jewish relations and the Holocaust. Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry 4 (1989). p. 226–242. doi:10.3828/polin.1989.4.226. Retrieved October 16, 2024.
- Murder of the Jews of Poland. Yad Vashem. Retrieved October 16, 2024.
- POLISH VICTIMS. Holocaust Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 16, 2024.
- Waltman, Michael. The Communication of Hate (2010)Peter Lang. p. 52. ISBN 978-1433104473.
- Unter der NS-Herrschaft ermordete Juden nach Land. / Jews by country murdered under Nazi rule.. Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung / Federal Agency for Civic Education (Germany) (April 29, 2018).
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 * Moses, Anthony Dirk. The Canadian Museum for Human Rights: The 'Uniqueness of the Holocaust' and the Question of Genocide. Journal of Genocide Research 14 (2) (May 2012). p. 215–238. doi:10.1080/14623528.2012.677762.
- Brook, Daniel (2015-07-26). "Double Genocide" (in en-US). Slate.
- Budrytė, Dovilė. Crisis and Change in Post-Cold War Global Politics: Ukraine in a Comparative Perspective (2018)Springer International Publishing. p. 155–177. ISBN 978-3-319-78589-9. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-78589-9_7.
- ↑ Vidar. No more time (by TUSE in Gdansk, Poland). Street Art Utopia (10 March 2022).
- ↑ Museum of the Occupation of Latvia. Latvijas Okupācijas muzejs. Retrieved March 18, 2025.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 *DAVID ENGEL, FACING A HOLOCAUST: THE POLISH GOVERNMENT-IN-EXILE AND THE JEWS, 1943–1945, at 71 (1993) (“The German broadcast [announcing the discovery of the Katyn graves] charged that these officers had been shot by the Soviets in March 1940 . . . .”).
- "In the 1939-1941 period alone, Soviet-inflicted suffering on all citizens in Poland exceeded that of Nazi-inflicted suffering on all citizens. (...) The Soviet-imposed myth about "Communist heroes of resistance" enabled them for decades to avoid the painful questions faced long ago by other Western countries." Johanna Granville, H-Net Review of Jan T. Gross. Revolution from Abroad.
- Tomasz Szarota & Wojciech Materski (2009), Polska 1939–1945. Straty osobowe i ofiary represji pod dwiema okupacjami, Warsaw: Institute of National Remembrance, ISBN 978-83-7629-067-6 (Excerpt reproduced in digital form).
- Sterio, Milena. Katyn Forest Massacre: Of Genocide, State Lies, and Secrecy. Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law 44 (3) (2012). Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 *Turning the tables? by Andy Zebrowski “The second massive wave of strikes this year has shaken the Polish regime to such an extent that it doesn't know which way to turn”
- ↑ McLoughlin, Barry, and McDermott, Kevin (eds). Stalin's Terror: High Politics and Mass Repression in the Soviet Union. Palgrave Macmillan, December 2002. ISBN 1-4039-0119-8, p. 164
- ↑ Goldman, Wendy Z.. Inventing the enemy: denunciation and terror in Stalin's Russia (2011). New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-19196-8.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Telegrams sent by Friedrich Werner von der Schulenburg, German ambassador to the Soviet Union, from Moscow to the German Foreign Office: No. 317 Archived 2009-11-07 at the Wayback Machine of 10 September 1939, No. 371 Archived 2007-04-30 at the Wayback Machine of 16 September 1939, No. 372 Archived 2007-04-30 at the Wayback Machine of 17 September 1939. The Avalon Project, Yale Law School. Retrieved 14 November 2006.
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 1939 wrzesień 17, Moskwa Nota rządu sowieckiego nie przyjęta przez ambasadora Wacława Grzybowskiego Archived 2017-11-11 at the Wayback Machine (Note of the Soviet government to the Polish government on 17 September 1939, refused by Polish ambassador Wacław Grzybowski). Retrieved 15 November 2006.
- ↑ Władysław Anders. Bez ostatniego rozdziału (in pl) (1995). Lublin: Test. p. 540. ISBN 83-7038-168-5.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 13.4 13.5 Trela-Mazur, Elżbieta. Sovietization of educational system in the eastern part of Lesser Poland under the Soviet occupation, 1939-1941 (1998). Kielce: Wyższa Szkoła Pedagogiczna im. Jana Kochanowskiego. p. 43, 294. ISBN 83-7133-100-2.. Also in: Trela-Mazur 1997, Wrocławskie Studia Wschodnie, Wrocław.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Brown, Archie. The Rise and Fall of Communism (2009)HarperCollins. p. 140. ISBN 978-0061138799. Retrieved 7 May 2011.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 15.2 Sanford, George. Katyn and the Soviet Massacre of 1940 (2005)Routledge. p. 20–24. ISBN 0415338735.
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2
- The Katyń Massacres of 1940. SciencePo (July 23, 2011). Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- "Documents: US, UK hushed up Soviet massacre of 22,000 Poles in WWII". NBC News. September 11, 2012. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/documents-us-uk-hushed-soviet-massacre-22-000-poles-wwii-flna991980. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- Brzozowska-Pasieka, Monika. The Secret Soviet Genocide of WWII. Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- "Putin blames Poland for WWII and says Soviet occupation "saved lives"". Notes from Poland. December 23, 2019. https://notesfrompoland.com/2019/12/23/putin-blames-poland-for-ww2-and-says-soviet-occupation-saved-lives. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- War crimes are a common thing for the Kremlin. We recall the mass murders and genocide during World War II, for which Russia (so far) has not been punished — a story in archival photos. Бабель (April 25, 2022). Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- Cuesta, Javier G. (April 28, 2023). "Russia rewrites the history of 22,000 Poles murdered by Soviet forces during World War II". EL PAÍS English. https://english.elpais.com/international/2023-04-28/russia-rewrites-the-history-of-22000-poles-murdered-by-soviet-forces-during-world-war-ii.html. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- ↑ 17.00 17.01 17.02 17.03 17.04 17.05 17.06 17.07 17.08 17.09 17.10 17.11 17.12
- The first deportation of Poles to Russia. European Network Remembrance and Solidarity (ENRS). Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- Rummel, R.J.. Statistics Of Poland's Democide: Addenda. University of Hawaii System. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- Karski, Karol. The Crime of Genocide Committed against the Poles by the USSR before and during World War II: An International Legal Study. Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law 45 (3) (2012). Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- Ludwika, Zofia. A Polish Woman's Daily Struggle to Survive: Her Diary of Deportation, Forced Labor, and Death in Kazakhstan: April 13, 1940-May 26, 1941. Rice University. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- ↑ (in Polish) Represje 1939-41 Aresztowani na Kresach Wschodnich Archived 2006-10-21 at the Wayback Machine (Repressions 1939–41. Arrested on the Eastern Borderlands.) Ośrodek Karta. Retrieved 15 November 2006.
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 Grabowski, Jan. Wikipedia's Intentional Distortion of the History of the Holocaust. The Journal of Holocaust Research 37 (2) (February 9, 2023). p. 133–190. doi:10.1080/25785648.2023.2168939. Retrieved January 20, 2025.
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 Jan Tomasz Gross, Revolution from Abroad (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003), pp. 196–98.
- ↑ 21.0 21.1 Weinberg, Gerhard. A World at Arms (2005)Cambridge University Press. p. 107. ISBN 978-0521618267.
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 Demography and National Security (2001)Berghahn Books. p. 308–315. ISBN 1-57181-339-X.
- ↑ Thaddeus C. Radzilowski, Anti-Polonism Archived 15 June 2016 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Ilya Prizel. National Identity and Foreign Policy: Nationalism and Leadership in Poland, Russia and Ukraine (13 August 1998)Cambridge University Press. p. 171. ISBN 978-0-521-57697-0.
- ↑ Myroslav Shkandrij, Russia and Ukraine: literature and the discourse of empire from Napoleonic to postcolonial times, McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2001, 354 pages. ISBN 0-7735-2234-4 Page 69.
- ↑ Karolina Lanckorońska. Wspomnienia wojenne; 22 IX 1939 - 5 IV 1945 (in pl) (2001). Kraków: ZNAK. p. 364. ISBN 83-240-0077-1.
- ↑ 27.0 27.1 27.2 27.3 27.4 27.5
- Popiński, Krzysztof. Drogi śmierci. Ewakuacja więzień sowieckich z Kresów Wschodnich II Rzeczypospolitej w czerwcu i lipcu 1941 (in pl) (1995). Warszawa: Wydawnictwo "Karta". ISBN 83-900676-9-2.
- Zbrodnicza ewakuacja więzień i aresztów NKWD na Kresach Wschodnich II Rzeczypospolitej w czerwcu – lipcu 1941 roku. Materiały z sesji naukowej w 55. rocznicę ewakuacji więźniów NKWD w głąb ZSRR, Łódź 10 czerwca 1996 r. (in pl) (1997). Warszawa: Główna Komisja Badania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu – Instytut Pamięci Narodowej. ISBN 83-903356-6-2.
- Musiał, Bogdan. Rozstrzelać elementy kontrrewolucyjne. Brutalizacja wojny niemiecko-sowieckiej latem 1941 roku (in pl) (2001). Warszawa: Stowarzyszenie Kulturalne Fronda. ISBN 83-88747-40-1.
- Berkhoff, Karel Cornelis. Harvest of Despair (2004)Harvard University Press. p. 14. ISBN 0674020782. Retrieved 2013-12-30.
- Robert Gellately. Lenin, Stalin, and Hitler: The Age of Social Catastrophe. Knopf, 2007 ISBN 1-4000-4005-1
- ↑ 28.0 28.1 28.2 28.3 28.4
- Worldwide Recognition of the Holodomor as Genocide. Holodomor Museum (November 24, 2007). Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- Boriak. Hennadii 30 (2008)Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute. p. 199–215. Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- Bezo, Brent. Living in "survival mode:" Intergenerational transmission of trauma from the Holodomor genocide of 1932–1933 in Ukraine. Social Science & Medicine 134 (April 15, 2015). p. 87–94. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.04.009. Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- Andriewsky, Olga. Towards a decentred history: The study of the Holodomor and Ukrainian historiography. East/West: Journal of Ukrainian Studies 2 (1) (2015). p. 17. doi:10.21226/T2301N. Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- Mills, Claire. Ukrainian Holodomor and the war in Ukraine. House of Commons Library (March 3, 2023). Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- Holodomor | Holocaust and Genocide Studies | College of Liberal Arts. University of Minnesota Twin Cities. Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- ↑ 29.0 29.1 29.2 29.3
- Applebaum, Anne. Holodomor | Facts, Definition, & Death Toll. Britannica (September 16, 2024). Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- Holodomor (Ukrainian Genocide). The Genocide Education Project. Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- Common Lies about the Holodomor. Ukraïner (November 1, 2020). Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- Why Did So Many Ukrainians Die in the Soviet Great Famine?. Kellogg Insight (October 1, 2022). Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- "Ukraine: This 96-year-old survived Soviet Holodomor famine". DW News. November 24, 2023. https://www.dw.com/en/ukraine-this-96-year-old-survived-soviet-holodomor-famine/a-67548306. Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- ↑ 30.0 30.1 Richard Rhodes. Masters of Death: The SS-Einsatzgruppen and the Invention of the Holocaust (2002). New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-375-40900-9. Rather than releasing their prisoners as they hurriedly retreated during the first week of the war, the Soviet secret police killed most of them. In the first week of the invasion, the NKVD prisoner executions totaled some 10,000 in western Ukraine and more than 9,000 in Vinnytsia, eastward toward Kyiv. Comparable numbers of prisoners were executed in eastern Poland, Byelorussia, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia. The Soviet areas had already sustained hundreds of thousands of executions during the 1937–1938 Great Purge.
- ↑ 31.0 31.1 Valery Vasiliev, Yuriy Shapoval, "Stages of «Great Terror»: The Vinnytsia Tragedy", Zerkalo Nedeli, No. 31 (406), August 17–23, 2002, (in Russian Archived 2007-11-28 at the Wayback Machine, in Ukrainian Archived 2009-05-18 at the Wayback Machine)
- ↑ The Great Globe Itself: A Preface to World Affairs By William Bullitt, Francis P. Sempa
- ↑ 33.0 33.1 Paczkowski, Andrzej. Black Book of Communism. Crimes, Terror, Repression. (1999). London: Harvard University Press. p. 372‒375. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- ↑ Joanna Ostrowska, Marcin Zaremba, "Kobieca gehenna" (The women's ordeal) Archived 2019-03-23 at the Wayback Machine, Polityka - No 10 (2695), 2009-03-07; pp. 64-66. (in Polish)
Dr. Marcin Zaremba Archived 2011-10-07 at the Wayback Machine of Polish Academy of Sciences, the co-author of the article cited above – is a historian from Warsaw University Department of History Institute of 20th Century History (cited 196 times in Google scholar). Zaremba published a number of scholarly monographs, among them: Komunizm, legitymizacja, nacjonalizm (426 pages),[1] Marzec 1968 (274 pages), Dzień po dniu w raportach SB (274 pages), Immobilienwirtschaft (German, 359 pages), see inauthor:"Marcin Zaremba" in Google Books.
Joanna Ostrowska Archived 2016-03-14 at the Wayback Machine of Warsaw, Poland, is a lecturer at Departments of Gender Studies at two universities: the Jagiellonian University of Kraków, the University of Warsaw as well as, at the Polish Academy of Sciences. She is the author of scholarly works on the subject of mass rape and forced prostitution in Poland in the Second World War (i.e. "Prostytucja jako praca przymusowa w czasie II Wojny Światowej. Próba odtabuizowania zjawiska," "Wielkie przemilczanie. Prostytucja w obozach koncentracyjnych," etc.), a recipient of Socrates-Erasmus research grant from Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin, and a historian associated with Krytyka Polityczna. - ↑ Fall of Communism in Eastern Europe, 1989. Office of the Historian (US Government). Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- ↑ 36.0 36.1 *Lappin, Shalom (2006), ‘How Class Disappeared from Western Politics’, Dissent, Vol. 51, No. 1, pp. 73-78.
- Nirenberg, David. Anti-Judaism: The Western Tradition (2013). Retrieved February 9, 2025.
- Tabarovsky, Izabella. Demonization Blueprints: Soviet Conspiracist Antizionism in Contemporary Left-Wing Discourse. Journal of Contemporary Antisemitism (JCA) 5 (2022)Academic Studies Press. p. 1–20. doi:10.26613/jca/5.1.97. Retrieved February 9, 2025.
- Troy, Gil (February 1, 2024). "How Palestine Hijacked the U.S. Civil Rights Movement". Tablet magazine. https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/how-palestine-hijacked-us-civil-rights-movement. Retrieved February 9, 2025.
- Kirsch, Adam (2024), On Settler Colonialism: Ideology, Violence, and Justice, W.W. Norton and Company, New York and London.
- Lappin, Shalom. The Nazification of the Postmodernist Left. Fathom Journal (2025). Retrieved February 9, 2025.
- ↑ *Murphy, Dean E. (September 19, 1993). "Last Russian Troops Depart From Poland : Military: The Red Army arrived to battle Nazis 54 years ago. Its successors' exit leaves the nation free of foreign interveners for the first time since then.". Los Angeles Times. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1993-09-19-mn-36939-story.html. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- Kornat, Marek. Why did Russian troops leave Poland as late as in 1993, not in 1989?. Wszystko co najważniejsze (September 16, 2023). Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- Sieradzka, Monika (September 17, 2018). "The day Soviet troops left Poland". DW News. https://www.dw.com/en/charting-russias-role-in-polands-path-to-nato/a-45530894. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- ↑ 38.0 38.1 38.2 38.3 38.4 38.5 38.6 The establishment of communist regimes in Eastern Europe, 1944-1949 By Norman Naimark
- ↑ Poles and Polish citizens in the Gulag. Gulag Online. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- ↑ 40.0 40.1 (in Polish) "Z perspektywy historyka i w świetle dokumentów…" – interview with dr Łukasz Jastrząb
- ↑ 41.0 41.1 Piotr Brzeziński z IPN: "Czarny czwartek" mógł być prowokacją wymierzoną w Gomułkę (in pl). dzieje.pl. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
- ↑ The origins of democratization in Poland By Michael H. Bernhard, page 45
- ↑ Jarska, Natalia. Bunt miasta kobiet (in pl). Tygodnik Powszechny (12 April 2011). Retrieved 8 February 2025.
- ↑ Warsaw Voice, Solidarity 1980-81
- ↑ *The biggest strike in history of Poland, J. Polonus Archived 2008-05-01 at the Wayback Machine
- Bydgoszcz March. Retrieved 2009-01-02.
- Kalendarium 1980–1981, Jaroslaw Szarek Archived 2011-07-18 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ *"Anger Over Food Spreads in Poland". By James M. Markham, The New York Times
- The Polish Revolution By Timothy Garton Ash, p. 191
- Jerzy Kropiwnicki, the president of Łódź. Retrieved 2009-01-02.
- ↑ *(in Polish) Encyclopedia of Solidarity – Lubin Crime. Article written by Lukasz Kaminski, historian of Wroclaw University. Encyklopedia-solidarnosci.pl. Retrieved on August 31, 2011.
- Rzeczpospolita daily, KAZIMIERZ GROBLEWSKI "Winni sa niewinni" Archived May 3, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. Rzeczpospolita.pl (December 13, 2001). Retrieved on August 31, 2011.
- Poland under Martial Law, by Roman Stefanowski, Blinken Open Society Archives
- August 1982 demonstration, Portal of the Polish Press Agency. 11listopada1918.pl. Retrieved on August 31, 2011.
- ↑ 48.0 48.1 48.2 48.3
- The Baltic States. Years of dependence 1940-1990 (Romuald J. Misiunas, Rein Taagepera, University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1993)
- Soviet repression and deportations in the Baltic states. Gulag Online. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- Narratives of Exile and Identity: Soviet Deportation Memoirs from the Baltic States (V. Davoliute, T. Balkelis, Central European Press, 2018)
- A Soviet Story: Mass Deportation, Isolation, Return (Alain Blum, Emilia Koustova in Narratives of Exile and Identity, Central European University Press, 2018)
- Soviet Mass Deportation from Latvia, briefing papers of museum of the Occupation of Latvia (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Latvia)
- The History of the Occupation of Latvia[dead link] (Museum of the Occupation of Latvia)
- ↑ The Holocaust in Estonia – Klooga Concentration Camp and Holocaust Memorial (September 5, 2019).
- ↑ The Names of Shoah Victims from Latvia. Yad Vashem.
- ↑ Porat, Dina. The Final Solution: Origins and Implementation (2002)Routledge. p. 161–162. ISBN 978-0-415-15232-7.
- ↑ Reich, Aaron. On This Day: Nazis liquidate Vilnius Ghetto, slaughter Lithuanian Jews (in en-US). The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com (23 September 2021). Retrieved 2023-08-19.
- ↑ 53.0 53.1
- Dunsdorfs, Edgars. The Baltic Dilemma. Speller & Sons, New York. 1975
- The Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivization and the Terror-Famine (1986)
- Stephane Courtois; Werth, Nicolas; Panne, Jean-Louis; Paczkowski, Andrzej; Bartosek, Karel; Margolin, Jean-Louis & Kramer, Mark (1999). The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-07608-7.
- Küng, Andres. Communism and Crimes against Humanity in the Baltic States. 1999 Communism and Crimes against Humanity in the Baltic states. Retrieved 2018-05-07.
- Buttar, Prit. Between Giants (May 21, 2013)Bloomsbury USA. ISBN 978-1-78096-163-7.
- ↑ Kārlis Ulmanis. Britannica (August 31, 2024). Retrieved October 27, 2024.
- ↑ 55.0 55.1 55.2 55.3 55.4 Motyka G., Wnuk R., Stryjek T., Baran A., 2012. Wojna po wojnie. Antysowieckie podziemie w Europie Środkowo-Wschodniej w latach 1944-1953. Scholar, Gdańsk-Warsaw.
- ↑ 56.0 56.1 56.2 56.3 Piotrowski, Sławomir. Security policy of the Baltic states and its determining factors. Security & Defence Quarterly 22 (5) (2018). p. 46‒70. doi:10.5604/01.3001.0012.7586. Retrieved March 19, 2025.
- ↑ The Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivization and the Terror-Famine (1986)
- ↑ 58.0 58.1 Palmer A., 2008. Północne sąsiedztwo. Historia krajów i narodów Morza Bałtyckiego. Książka i Wiedza, Warsaw.
- ↑ Kasekamp A., 2013. Historia państw bałtyckich. PISM, Warsaw.
- ↑ "The Brothers of the Wood. Bandits, Says Russia; Politicians, Says Prisoner's Counsel.". The Sun (New York, New York): 9. 25 June 1908. https://www.loc.gov/resource/sn83030272/1908-06-25/ed-1/?sp=9&q=BROTHERS+WOOD&r=0.092,0.775,0.356,0.175,0. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ↑ "Jan Pouren Case". The Independent (New York) 65 (3120): 673. 17 September 1908. https://books.google.com/books?id=w0UkA-5r5T4C&dq=%22forest+friars%22&pg=PA673.
- ↑ Strods, Heinrihs. The File on Operation 'Priboi': A Re-Assessment of the Mass Deportations of 1949. Journal of Baltic Studies 33 (1) (2002). p. 1–36. doi:10.1080/01629770100000191. Erratum. Journal of Baltic Studies 33 (2) (2002). p. 241. doi:10.1080/01629770200000071.
- ↑ 63.0 63.1 63.2 *Dundovich, E., Gori, F. and Guercett, E. Reflections on the gulag. With a documentary appendix on the Italian victims of repression in the USSR, Feltrinelli Editore IT, 2003. ISBN 88-07-99058-X
- Lučinskas, Gintaras. 12 16. Lietuvos Laisvės Armija – partizaninio karo pradininkė Dzūkijoje (in LT). Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- Istorinė Lietuvos laisvės armijos reikšmė pasipriešinime okupantams (in LT). www.xxiamzius.lt. Retrieved September 29, 2019.
- ↑ Kuodytė, Dalia and Tracevskis, Rokas. The Unknown War: Armed Anti-Soviet Resistance in Lithuania in 1944–1953, 2004. ISBN 9986-757-59-2
- ↑ 65.0 65.1 65.2 65.3 65.4 65.5 65.6 Hiden, Johan. The Baltic Nations and Europe (1994). Harlow, England: Longman. ISBN 058225650X.
- ↑ "Last USSR census 30 years ago counted largest-ever number of residents". Eesti Rahvusringhääling (EER). January 28, 2019. https://news.err.ee/904647/last-ussr-census-30-years-ago-counted-largest-ever-number-of-residents. Retrieved March 18, 2025.
- ↑ 67.0 67.1 67.2 Statistical yearbooks of Lithuania (in lt). Statistikos Departamentas. Retrieved March 18, 2025.
- ↑ 68.0 68.1 68.2 68.3
- Damage Caused by the Soviet Union in the Baltic States (2011).
- Krūmiņš, Gatis. The Investments of the USSR Occupying Power in the Baltic Economies – Myths and Reality. Vidzemes Augstskola.
- Gatis Krūmiņš: Debunking Myths of Soviet Investment in the Baltics (in en-US). Deep Baltic (2017-06-20). Retrieved 2025-01-10.
- ↑ 69.0 69.1 69.2 69.3 69.4 69.5
- Vatchagaev, Mairbek. Remembering the 1944 Deportation: Chechnya's Holocaust. North Caucasus Weekly 8 (8) (1970). Retrieved March 19, 2025.
- Brauer, Birgit. Chechens and the survival of their cultural identity in exile. Journal of Genocide Research 4 (3) (2002). p. 387–400. doi:10.1080/14623520220151970. Retrieved December 21, 2024.
- Aurélie, Campana. The Massive Deportation of the Chechen People. Science Po (November 5, 2007). Retrieved March 19, 2025.
- ↑ Dunlop, John B.. Russia Confronts Chechnya: Roots of a Separatist Conflict (1998). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-63619-3.
- ↑
- Hinton, Alexander Laban. Why Did You Kill?: The Cambodian Genocide and the Dark Side of Face and Honor (1998)Cambrdige University Press. Retrieved December 10, 2024.
- Hannum, Hurst. Cambodia (2001)Routledge. ISBN 9781315192918. doi:10.4324/9781315192918-7. Retrieved December 10, 2024.
- Kiernan, Ben. Centuries of Genocide (2012)Routledge. ISBN 9780203867815. doi:10.4324/9780203867815-10. Retrieved December 10, 2024.
- Tyner, James A.. Phnom Penh during the Cambodian Genocide: A Case of Selective Urbicide. Sage Journals 46 (8) (January 1, 2014). p. 1873–1891. doi:10.1068/a130278p. Retrieved December 10, 2024.
- Tyner, James A.. Dead labor, landscapes, and mass graves: Administrative violence during the Cambodian genocide. Geoforum 52 (January 18, 2014). Ohio, USA. p. 70–77. doi:10.1016/j.geoforum.2013.12.011. Retrieved December 10, 2024.
- ↑ Liedy, Amy Shannon. Holocaust Revisionism, Ultranationalism, and the Nazi/Soviet 'Double Genocide' Debate in Eastern Europe (7 March 2011)Wilson Center. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
- ↑ 73.0 73.1 Shafir, Michael. Ideology, Memory and Religion in Post-Communist East Central Europe: A Comparative Study Focused on Post-Holocaust. Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 15 (44) (Summer 2016). p. 52–110.
- ↑ Beckerman, Gal (March 13, 2011). Exploring the 'Bloodlands'. http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2011/03/13/exploring_the_bloodlands/?page=full. Retrieved 28 January 2022.
- ↑ Snyder, Timothy (October 5, 2010). "The fatal fact of the Nazi-Soviet pact". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2010/oct/05/holocaust-secondworldwar. Retrieved 28 January 2022.
- ↑ Zuroff: Israel should not recognize Holodomor as genocide (in en). The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com (2019-01-22). Retrieved 2024-05-11.
- ↑ Solomon, Esther. "Jews Can't Let the Genocide Deniers Win". Haaretz. https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2021-12-12/ty-article-opinion/jews-cant-let-the-genocide-deniers-win/0000017f-f819-d318-afff-fb7b61220000.
- ↑ 78.0 78.1 78.2 78.3 78.4
- Jason Schulman. The Nato-Serbia War and the Left. Science & Society 67 (2) (2003). p. 223–225. doi:10.1521/siso.67.2.218.21187b. Retrieved 25 December 2020.
- Marko Attila Hoare. Nothing Is Left (in en) (December 2003)Bosnia Institut UK. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
- Marko Attila Hoare. The 'Anti-War' Link. www.helsinki.org.rs (23 July 2005)Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia. Retrieved 25 December 2020.
- George Monbiot. Naming the Genocide Deniers (in en). monbiot.com (13 June 2011). Retrieved 25 December 2020.
- Oz Katerji. The West's leftist 'intellectuals' who traffic in genocide denial, from Srebrenica to Syria | Opinion (in en). Haaretz.com (24 November 2017). Retrieved 26 December 2020.
- ↑ 79.0 79.1 79.2 79.3 79.4
- Ratko Mladic, Srebrenica and lessons for the left. Workers’ Liberty (June 1, 2011). Retrieved December 11, 2024.
- Bloodworth, James (May 18, 2012). "It's Time the Left Apologised for Its Denial of the Srebrenica Massacre". Huffington Post (HuffPost). https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/james-bloodworth/sections-of-the-left-shou_b_1520929.html. Retrieved December 11, 2024.
- Werleman, CJ (March 29, 2021). "Why Does the Anti-Imperial Left So Often End Up Denying Genocide?". Byline Times. https://bylinetimes.com/2021/03/29/why-does-the-anti-imperial-left-so-often-end-up-denying-genocide. Retrieved December 11, 2024.
- Ayoub, Elia J. (May 25, 2022). "On Ukraine-Syria solidarity and the 'anti-imperialism of idiots'". Shado Magazine. https://shado-mag.com/opinion/on-ukraine-syria-solidarity-and-the-anti-imperialism-of-idiots. Retrieved December 11, 2024.
- Mulaj, Jeta. Kosova: A Note from the Wreckage of Anti-Imperialism. Continental Thought and Theory (2023)University of Canterbury. doi:10.26021/14429. Retrieved December 11, 2024.
- ↑ 80.0 80.1 80.2 80.3 80.4 80.5 80.6 The Butchery of Hitler and Stalin. Hoover Institution (June 1, 2011). Retrieved March 20, 2025.
- ↑ 81.0 81.1 81.2 Budryte, Dovile. Decolonization of Trauma and Memory Politics: Insights from Eastern Europe. Humanities 5 (1) (January 18, 2016). Georgia, United States. p. 7. doi:10.3390/h5010007.
- ↑ * Johan Dietsch. Making Sense of Suffering: Holocaust and Holodomor in Ukrainian Culture. Lund: Lund University Press, 2006.
- Georgii Kas’ianov. “The Holodomor and the Building of a Nation.” Russian Social Science Review 52 (2011): 71–93.
- Rebekah Moore. “‘A Crime against Humanity Arguably Without Parallel in European History’: Genocide and the ‘Politics’ of Victimhood in Western Narratives of the Ukrainian Holodomor.” Australian Journal of Politics and History 58 (2012): 367–79.
- ↑ 83.0 83.1 83.2 Budrytė, Dovilė. A decolonising moment of sorts': The Baltic States' vicarious identification with Ukraine and related domestic and foreign policy developments. Central European Journal of International and Security Studies 17 (4) (2023). Prague, Czech Republic. p. 82‒105. doi:10.51870/YPIJ8030. Retrieved March 20, 2025.
- ↑ 84.0 84.1 Ghodsee, Kristen. A Tale of 'Two Totalitarianisms': The Crisis of Capitalism and the Historical Memory of Communism. History of the Present 4 (2) (Fall 2014). p. 115–142. doi:10.5406/historypresent.4.2.0115.
- ↑ 85.0 85.1 See Adam Basak, Katyń: Problem odpowiedziałności karnej sprawców w świetle Norymbergi, in 21 Studia na Faszyzmem i Zbrodniami Hitlerowskimi 325, 325–60 (Karol Jonca ed., 1998).
- ↑ 86.0 86.1 See Cezary Mik, Lech Aleksander Kaczyński (18.6.1949-10.4.2010), 1/2 Kwartalnik Prawa Publicznego 5, 10 (2010) (describing the life as well as public and academic work of the late Lech Kaczyński, President of Poland, who, while heading a Polish delegation for the celebrations of the seventieth anniversary of the Katyn Massacre, died along with the ninety-five people accompanying him on April 10, 2010 in a plane crash in Smolensk).
- ↑ 87.0 87.1 Karolina Kosińska, Zbrodnia ludobójstwa w prawie międzynarodowym 34 (2009).
- ↑ 88.0 88.1 88.2 88.3 88.4 See Małgorzata Kuźniar-Plota, Kwalifikacja prawna Zbrodni Katyńskiej—Wybrane zagadnienia, in Zbrodnia Katyńska: W kRęgu Prawdy i Kłamstwa 46 (Sławomir Kalbarczyk ed., 2010).
- ↑ Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. Welcome to the United Nations. Retrieved March 12, 2025.
- ↑ Global Holodomor Recognition - HREC. Holodomor Research and Education Consortium (HREC). Retrieved March 18, 2025.
- ↑ 91.0 91.1 91.2
- Call to Action: Holodomor Denial by University of Alberta Lecturer. Ukrainian Canadian Congress (November 27, 2019). Retrieved October 25, 2024.
- "Jason Kenney denounces 'useful idiots' amid uproar over university lecturer's Holodomor denial". National Post. November 29, 2019. https://nationalpost.com/news/jason-kenney-denounces-useful-idiots-amid-uproar-over-university-lecturers-holodomor-denial. Retrieved October 30, 2024. "Holodomor refers to the famine in Ukraine that killed millions of people in 1932–33, a genocide recognized by the Canadian Parliament and provinces".
- "Calls for U of A lecturer to be fired for denying Holodomor". CBC News. November 29, 2019. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/u-of-a-edmonton-macdonald-holdomor-1.5377661. Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- Labine, Jeff. 'We were just hurt': Ukrainian students call for UofA to fire lecturer who denied Holodomor. Edmonton Journal (December 2, 2019). Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- ↑ 92.0 92.1 92.2
- "I guess denying the Holodomor is okay with some Canadian academics". Hill Times. January 20, 2020. https://www.hilltimes.com/story/2020/01/20/i-guess-denying-holodomor-is-okay-with-some-canadian-academics/266610. Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- Western Influence in the Cover-up of the Holodomor. CUNY Academic Works (2020). Retrieved October 25, 2024.
- Galka-Giaquinto, Michael. The Holodomor, 90 Years Later. Cato Institute (December 1, 2022). Retrieved October 25, 2024.
- Why Do Some on the Western Left Support Putin?. Europinion (May 23, 2023). Retrieved October 30, 2024.
- ↑ Maloney, Wendi. Jurij Dobczansky: Working with Libraries in Ukraine During War. Library of Congress (December 7, 2022). Retrieved March 16, 2025.
- ↑ Dobczansky, Jurij. Affirmation and Denial: Holodomor-related Resources Recently Acquired by the Library of Congress. Holodomor Studies 1 (2 [Summer-Autumn 2009]) (2009). p. 155–164. Retrieved 2025-03-18.