Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pope ties plight of Ukraine today to Stalin’s famine

- By Nicole Winfield

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis on Wednesday linked the suffering of Ukrainians now to the 1930s “genocide artificial­ly caused by Stalin,” when the Soviet leader was blamed for creating a man-made famine in Ukraine believed to have killed more than 3 million people.

Francis’ linking of the plight of Ukrainian civilians today to those killed by starvation 90 years ago and his willingnes­s to call it a “genocide” caused by Josef Stalin marked a sharp escalation in papal rhetoric against Russia.

As of this year, only 17 countries have officially recognized the famine, known as the Holodomor, as a genocide, according to the Holodomor Museum in Kyiv.

In comments at the end of his weekly Wednesday general audience, Francis renewed calls for prayers for the “terrible suffering of the dear and martyred Ukrainian people.”

He recalled that Saturday marks the 90th anniversar­y of the start of the famine, which Ukraine commemorat­es every fourth Saturday of November with a Day of Memory.

“Saturday begins the anniversar­y of the terrible genocide of the Holodomor, the exterminat­ion by starvation artificial­ly caused by Stalin between 1932-1933,” Francis said. “Let us pray for the victims of this genocide and let us pray for so many Ukrainians — children, women, elderly, babies — who today are suffering the martyrdom of aggression.”

Academic opinion remains divided about whether the famine constitute­s a “genocide,” with the main question being whether Stalin intentiona­lly wanted to kill Ukrainians as an attempt to quash an independen­ce movement against the Soviet Union, or whether the famine was primarily the result of official incompeten­ce along with natural conditions. Regardless, the “great famine” seeded lingering Ukrainian bitterness toward Soviet Russian rule.

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