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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper examines the famine that took place in Russia in 1933 through the view of one man. The idea that Stalin orchestrated this little known situation is the theme of this piece. The book is critically examined. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA541HH.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Hidden Holocaust. The subtitle is important. The incidents discussed-unlike the true Holocaust-was hidden. What occurred was that Joseph Stalin, who was dictator at the time, came up with policies that
were not economically sound. Farming policies that changed the way the Russians would do business also created a situation where a famine would ensue. The Russian famine occurred in 1933.
The author lived the experience. He writes from his own recollection and certainly, there is a bias. At the same time, many anthropologists write as they experience an event and
while biased, there is much truth that likely comes from the story. Still, emotions are higher than if someone were writing the piece at arms length distance. Of course "walking
the walk" is sometimes more legitimate than just "talking the talk." In other words, emotions and all, the book stands up upon inspection. It rings true. Some of the observations
are chilling. Indeed, the subtitle is extremely relevant. It is somewhat like the Holocaust. The author writes of people dying in front of his eyes, bodies stacked and people eating
anything they could get their hands on. The book makes a case for the idea that the famine was in fact a method of killing Jews. It was the fault
of the government, and not an unfortunate or inevitable event. While the thesis is controversial, there is much support for his assumptions. The author makes his argument by presenting stories
and facts. The anecdotal evidence sometimes supersedes the known and accepted factual data, but in the end, when all is incorporated, the result is clear. Stalin killed many Jews by
allowing them to starve. This is unconscionable and the point of the book in part is that this happened with little attention. To this day, many people do not know
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