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Opinion

Putin is trying to erase Stalin’s Jewish victims

The Russian leader is trying to alter history by sidelining his predecessor’s antisemitism

December 30, 2021 14:30
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Russian House of Soviets, Lenin on Moscow Square. St. Petersburg.
3 min read

New Year, 1953. British Jews looked forward to a year far better than the one that had just passed. In the summer of 1952, they had watched in horror the trial in Moscow, and subsequent execution, of Jewish writers and poets. This was followed by the false conviction and killing of Jewish communists in Prague during the Slánský trial. Their ashes were scattered on the icy streets of the Czech capital.

But there was no respite from Stalin’s paranoia about Jews. January 1953 saw the Doctors’ Plot, in which Jewish physicians were accused of poisoning leaders of the Kremlin.
Stalin was an inveterate antisemite, whose racism stretched back to his youth in Georgia when he was training to become a priest.

But the days of Stalin are not entirely behind us. This month, Russia’s Supreme Court attempted to whitewash his crimes by ordering the closure of Memorial International, which has documented and commemorated the countless victims of Stalinism, including many Jews. Over the last 30 years, Memorial built up a database of more than four million names. Its Jewish lawyer, Genri Reznik, said this week’s judgment reminded him of the Soviet show trials in the 1930s.

Unlike Germany’s archive of Stasi records or the institute of National Remembrance in Poland, Vladimir Putin clearly wishes to recalibrate the Soviet past for present consumption.