Holodomor

From Liberpedia

Holodomor (Голодомо́р) refers primarily to the 1932—1933 Kremlin-caused genocide of Ukrainians through starvation. The 1921-1923 and 1946-1947 Kremlin-caused genocides can also be called Holodomors.

Kremlin-caused famines/genocides in Ukraine

Holodovka/Holodomor 1921—1923

1921-1923, famine caused by Lenin:

Man - not nature - was the cause of the first mass starvation in Soviet Ukraine. In this respect, the Ukrainian famine of 1921-1923 was very different from the contemporaneous Russian famine, but quite akin to the Ukrainian famine of 1932-1933. Since starvation in Ukraine was the result of a policy of plunder by Lenin’s government, the responsibility lies with the Soviet state.
The first man-made famine in Soviet Ukraine 1921-1923
The famine may have been averted in Ukraine, given the fact that food reserves from previous years existed there. Unfortunately, the Soviet government transferred massive amounts of grain from Ukraine to Russia before and during the famine. In 1920 grain was requisitioned with much violence by special military expeditions (see Surplus appropriation system) and Committees of Poor Peasants, and in 1921 an unusually heavy tax in kind was imposed on the peasants of Ukraine. As a result, in the fall of 1921 famine ensued.
Famine of 1921–1923

Holodomor 1932—1933

Экспорт СССР 1926/27-1933, СССР в цифрах ЦУНХУ Госплана СССР, 1935 (Soviet grain export 1926-1933) [1]

Holodomor (Голодомор, Голодомо́р 1932—1933 років, Голодомор в Україні (1932—1933) [2]) was the 1932-1933 famine in Ukraine decided by Stalin:

The Soviet regime dumped 1.7 million tons of grain on the Western markets at the height of the Famine. It exported nearly a quarter of a ton of grain for every Ukrainian who starved to death.
Facts About the 1933 Famine-Genocide in Soviet Occupied Ukraine


Holodovka/Holodomor 1946—1947

Kremlin denial

The russian government, legal and spiritual successor of the Soviet one who committed it, keeps denying it:

tankie denial

2022

See also