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OPINION, By Alex Massie, The Scotsman
Scotland's National Newspaper Online
Glasgow, Scotland, Thursday, June 26, 2003
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JOSEPH Stalin was in a benevolent mood on Christmas Day, 1933, lavishing
praise on carefully selected favourites. "You have done a good job in your
reporting the USSR, though you are not a Marxist, because you try to tell
the truth about our country," he told Walter Duranty, the award-winning
Moscow correspondent with the New York Times.
Stalin might have been a monster, but he could recognise an opportunist when
he saw one. He told Duranty: "I might say that you bet on our horse to win
when others thought it had no chance and I am sure you have not lost by it."
The tyrant was right. Duranty had predicted Stalin's rise and as the
Communist leader climbed to power, so too did Duranty's coverage of the
Soviet Union win him fame and fortune. Confirmation of his place in the
pantheon of American journalism had come when he received a Pulitzer Prize
in 1932 for his reporting on Stalin's Five Year Plan. The Pulitzer board
praised Duranty's stories for their "scholarship, profundity, impartiality,
sound judgment and exceptional clarity".
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"Famine is Ravaging In Ukraine' T. Shevchenko" Poster by Heorhiy Shevtsov, 1993 (Click on image to enlarge it)
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Now, a well-organised and impassioned campaign by Ukrainians in the United
States, Canada and around the world has persuaded the Pulitzer to convene a
committee to consider revoking Duranty's prize. The Pulitzer board has
received thousands of postcards and letters demanding that it correct,
however belatedly, what Ukrainians view as a historic wrong. Seventy years
ago, the Ukraine was just about the most desperate, ghastly place on Earth.
Stalin's henchmen had, wrote Malcolm Muggeridge in the Fortnightly Review,
"gone over the country like a swarm of locusts and taken away everything
edible".
In 1932-33, as many as ten million Ukrainians died in an act of merciless
state-sponsored genocide as Stalin determined to crush any remaining
vestiges of Ukrainian national identity.
Muggeridge called Duranty "the greatest liar of any journalist I have met in
50 years of journalism", while George Orwell included Durantyâ?Ts name on
the list of Communist sympathisers he submitted to the Foreign Office.
Duranty frequently and casually admitted he knew famine was sweeping the
Ukraine, but was fond of commenting that "you can't make an omelette without
breaking eggs".
To date, the Pulitzer has declined to comment on when the sub-committee
investigating Duranty's prize will report its findings.
No Pulitzer has ever been revoked, although the Washington Post returned the
prize its correspondent, Judith Cooke, received in 1981 after her harrowing
story of an eight-year-old heroin addict, entitled Jimmy's World, was
revealed to be a fabrication.
Jimmy never existed, just as, for Duranty, the starving millions of the
Ukraine might as well have never lived. They were, after all, just an
impediment to the heroic construction of the Soviet Union.
The Scotsman Online, Glasgow, Scotland, Thursday, June 26, 2003
http://www.thescotsman.co.uk/opinion.cfm?id=696012003
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