LONDON -- The diaries of a British reporter who risked his reputation to expose the horrors of Stalin's murderous famine in Ukraine were put on public display for the first time Friday.
Welsh journalist Gareth Jones sneaked into Ukraine in March of 1933, at the height of a famine engineered by Soviet dictator Josef Stalin. Millions of people starved to death between 1932 and 1933 as the Soviet secret police emptied the countryside of grain and livestock as part of a campaign to force peasants into collective farms.
Jones' reporting was one of the first attempts to bring the disaster to the world's attention.
"Famine Grips Russia -- Millions Dying" read the front page of the New York Evening Post on March 29, 1933. "Famine on a colossal scale, impending death of millions from hunger, murderous terror ... this is the summary of Mr. Jones's firsthand observations," the paper said.
As starvation and cannibalism spread across Ukraine, Soviet authorities exported more than a million tons of grain to the West, using the money to build factories and arm its military.
Historians say that between 4 million and 5 million Ukrainians perished in what is sometimes referred to as the Great Famine.
Walking from
village to village, Jones recorded conversations with desperate people
scrambling for food, scribbling brief interviews in pencil on lined
notebooks. "They all had
the same story: 'There is no bread -- we haven't had bread for two
months -- a lot are dying,"' Jones wrote in one entry. "We are the
living dead," he quoted a peasant as saying. Jones'
eyewitness account had little effect on world opinion at the time.
Stalin's totalitarian regime tightly controlled the flow of information
out of the U.S.S.R., and many Moscow-based foreign correspondents --
some of whom had pro-Soviet sympathies -- refused to believe Jones'
reporting. The New York
Times' Walter Duranty, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, dismissed
Jones' article as a scare story. "Conditions are
bad, but there is no famine," Duranty wrote. Other correspondents
chimed in with public denials, and with his colleagues against him,
Jones was discredited. Eugene Lyons,
an American wire agency reporter who gradually went from communist
sympathizer to fierce critic of the Soviet regime, later acknowledged
the role that fellow journalists had played in trying to destroy Jones'
career. "Jones must
have been the most surprised human being alive when the facts he so
painstakingly garnered from our mouths were snowed under by our
denials," Lyons wrote in his 1937 autobiography, "Assignment in Utopia." Lyons'
admission came too late for Jones, who was killed by bandits in 1935
while covering Japan's expansion into China in the run-up to World War
II. The full circumstances of his death remain murky. Britain's World
War I-era prime minister, David Lloyd George, whom Jones had once
served as an aide, said the intrepid journalist might have been killed
because he "knew too much of what was going on." "I had always
been afraid that he would take one risk too many." Jones'
handwritten diaries are on show at the Wren Library at Trinity College
at the University of Cambridge, where he was a student, until
mid-December. The university said it was the first time that the
documents -- which had been in the care of Jones' family -- were being
publicly displayed.