The same thing was true of the Cossacks of the North Caucasus and the Kazakhs, Stalin’s two other targets. “Of course,” the Russian commentator says, “Stalin did not intend to completely destroy the Ukrainians, the Cossacks or the Kazakhs.” In each case, some of their number participated in this crime; and Stalin, just like the Turks in World War I with regard to the Armenians, wanted to keep many of these people alive to serve as cannon fodder in a future war.“the population of Ukraine and especially its rural portion during the civil war mostly were opponents of the communist authorities. The majority of Ukrainians supported the Ukrainian Peoples Republic or one or another brand of anarchists.”
At the same time, between 1926 and 1939, the urban population of Ukraine almost doubled from 18.5 to 36.2 percent and the share of ethnic Ukrainians in it rose by 12.9 percent to 60.2 percent, Sokolov notes. “But much more important is that the [Ukrainian] share of the population fell to 76.47 percent in comparison with 1926.” That means, he says, that “the growth of the urban population of Ukraine in this period occurred much more from the non-Ukrainian population, including those coming from other republics than would have been the case if in Ukraine there had been a normal process of industrialization and urbanization without the Holodomor genocide.” And thus, Sokolov concludes that it was “precisely after the Holodomor in Ukraine that the process of russification, especially in its eastern and southern regions gathered force.” At the same time, he reminds that the same thing happened in Cossack areas in the North Caucasus and in northern Kazakhstan – and for exactly the same reasons.By 1939 after the Holodomor, “the picture had fundamentally changed.” The ethnic Ukrainian share of the rural population had fallen by 1.8 percent, an indication that “Ukrainians suffered from collectivization significantly more than residents of other nationalities in rural areas.”
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