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MAY 9, 2016

BY PETER DICKINSON

On May 9, Ukraine’s President Petro Poroshenko laid flowers to pay tribute to veterans of World War II. Credit: Presidential
Administration of Ukraine

Across the former Soviet Union, May 9 is traditionally the date for Victory Day celebrations to mark the end of World War II.
In Ukraine, it can often feel as if the war never actually ended. Ever since Ukraine gained independence in 1991, World War II
has served as a proxy battleground for Ukrainians as they fight over the past in order to determine the future. In this
historically arrested society, the symbols and slogans of the conflict continue to retain the full potency of the 1930s and
1940s. Contemporary political and geopolitical arguments routinely descend into the gutter of World War II analogies. Most
alarmingly, the Russian hybrid war in Crimea and eastern Ukraine relies heavily on Kremlin efforts to portray Ukrainians as the
modern-day successors to Hitler's legions. These never-ending memory wars are a symptom of the larger totalitarian trauma
that defines today's Ukraine—a land scarred by the tragic distinction of having been at the epicenter of both Hitler and Stalin's
worst crimes against humanity. Understanding this unique totalitarian legacy in its entirety is the key to resolving Ukraine’s
identity crisis and bringing about a settlement with the past that will make sense to the entire nation.

After the fall of Kyiv to the Mongols in the thirteenth century and prior to the twentieth century, Ukraine had not achieved
statehood, instead spending hundreds of years partitioned within the borders of competing empires. This made the country
particularly vulnerable to the rival totalitarian tendencies unleashed in the chaotic aftermath of World War I. The fight for
control of Ukraine was to play a central role in both the Nazi and Soviet stories, with devastating consequences. Among other
things, Ukraine was the chief battlefield of the Russian Civil War, the primary focus of Stalin’s 1930s murder machine, and the
greatest prize of Hitler’s 1941 Operation Barbarossa. For an extended period stretching from the Russian Revolution until the
1950s, Ukraine was quite literally the deadliest place on the planet—a laboratory of totalitarian terror that claimed the lives of
between fifteen and twenty million Ukrainians. In an age of unparalleled destruction, Ukraine was the primary killing field.
Ukraine’s status as the chief victim of Nazi and Communist totalitarianism has largely escaped the attention of international
observers, primarily because we are not yet accustomed to thinking of twentieth century Ukraine as a separate entity.
Nevertheless, the very real results of this totalitarian experience continue to stare us in the face. Ukraine’s contemporary
demographic divisions are the direct product of ethnic cleansing campaigns and mass population shifts masterminded in
Moscow and Berlin. On a more indiscernible level, the totalitarian inheritance is evident in common feelings of alienation from
the state and the almost total absence of faith in authority. It polarizes the past, making consensus impossible and forcing
Ukrainians toward the extremes of the political spectrum.

We can also identify echoes of the totalitarian era in the culture of secret histories and conspiracy theories that continue to
thrive today. It is detectable in everything from the absence of national leaders to the habit of viewing government corruption
as a victimless crime. Perhaps most importantly, this totalitarian legacy enables Russia’s hybrid war, creating fertile ground
for the Kremlin’s emotionally charged information attacks.

Russia’s exploitation of Ukraine’s totalitarian trauma has made it a national security priority and an international issue that can
no longer be ignored. In order to heal these historical wounds, Ukraine must stop looking at individual events like Stalin's
terror famine and the Nazi occupation in isolation. Instead, Ukraine needs to approach the country's twentieth century
totalitarian experience as a single narrative. This is essential in order to challenge negative perceptions of Ukraine and to
position today’s country as the world’s most prominent post-totalitarian society. Only then will Ukraine begin to make sense to
the outside world. Only then will Ukrainians of all backgrounds be capable of achieving closure and consolidating an inclusive
and coherent sense of national identity.

This process is already underway. For the second year, Ukrainians have marked the anniversary of the Nazi surrender with a
National Day of Memorial and Reconciliation. In contrast to the pomp and parades favored in Putin’s Russia, Ukrainians are
now being encouraged to reflect on the victims of the conflict. This new national day of remembrance also pointedly
recognizes the first two years of World War II when Hitler and Stalin worked together to carve up Eastern Europe
—something Soviet and modern Russian histories have long tried to avoid. The next stage in the process should be the
extension of this timeframe from 1939-45 to at least 1917-1954, allowing Ukraine to take on the role of global memory
keeper for all victims of twentieth-century totalitarianism.

To make this a reality, the Ukrainian government should develop plans for a vast memorial complex and museum designed to
highlight the horrors inflicted by the Nazi and Soviet regimes on the territory of Ukraine and elsewhere. A new national
memorial day is also required. The anniversary of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact on August 23 would seem to have
unimpeachable credentials as an appropriate date. This is already a recognized international day of remembrance for the
victims of Stalinism and Nazism, but Kyiv should seek to make it a far more significant affair and aim to play a central role in
observance of the memorials. The fact that this anniversary falls one day before Ukrainian Independence Day (August 24) will
serve to imbue it with further meaning and poignancy.

It would be right and proper for Ukraine to undertake the important international task of commemorating the victims of
mankind’s darkest epoch. It would also help today’s Ukrainians make sense of their country’s deeply troubled past. Rather
than being asked to take sides in a ghoulish zero-sum historical debate of apocalyptic proportions, future generations of
Ukrainians could honor those who perished and focus on keeping their collective memory alive. There would be no place for
divisions along ethnic, religious, linguistic, or other lines. Instead, all Ukrainians would be able to unite in recognition of their
shared totalitarian past and their collective commitment to avoid repeating such horrors in the future. No country suffered
more in the twentieth century, and no country has more to gain from achieving meaningful closure.

Peter Dickinson is publisher of Business Ukraine magazine and Lviv Today, and editor-at-large at The Odessa Review. He
was previously chief editor of Ukraine Today and What’s On Kyiv.
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