When Stalin Starved Ukraine: The Genocide That Russia Has Tried to Cover Up for Decades | Open Culture

Since its launch last month, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has sent observers around the world scrambling for context. It is a fact, for example, that Russia and Ukraine were once “together” in the communist mega-state that was the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. But it is also a fact that such Soviet togetherness hardly ensured warm feelings between the two lands. An especially relevant chapter of their history is known in Ukraine as the Holodomor, or “death by starvation.” Spanning the years 1932 and 1933, this period of famine resulted in three to six million lives lost — and that according to the lower accepted estimates. Source: When Stalin Starved Ukraine: The Genocide That Russia Has Tried to Cover Up for Decades | Open Culture