-What evidence does TatiANA PRovide that the Famix was Man-made ?

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Famine Testimony of Tatiana Pawlichka
Famine Testimony of Tatiana Pawlichka
Not planted
plant
ground and ate.
CROP
Temains
n to help on the collectives. These people spoke Russian, and they were given provisions.
the villagers tried to go out in the field to look for gleanings, and the Communists would arest them
and shoot at them, and send them to Siberia, My aunt Tatiana Budenko, was taken away. They said she had stolen
the property of the collective farm.
Thát summer, the vegetables couldn't even ripen - people pulled them out of the ground - still green - and ate them.
eople ate leaves, nettles, milkweed, sedges By autump po one bad any chickens or cattle. Here and there, someone
nad a few potatoes or beets. People coming in from other villages told the very same story. They would travel an over
ying to get food. They would fall by the roadside, and none of us could do anything to help. When the ground froze,
they were just left lying there dead, in the spow: or. if they died in the house, they were dragged out to the cattie
shed, and they would lie there frozen until spring. There was no one to dig graves.
All the train stations were overflowing with starving, dving people, Everyone wanted to go to Russia [the Russian
SFSR] because it was said that there was no famine there, Very few fof those who left] returned. They all perished on
the way. They weren't allowed into Russia and were turned back at the border. Those who somehow managed to get
into Russia could save themselves.
In February of 1933, there were so few children left that the schools were closed. By this time, there wasn't a cat, dog
or sparrow in the village. In that month, my cousin Mykhailo Rudenko died; a month later my aunt Nastia Klymenko
and her son, my cousin Ivan, died, as well as my classmate, Dokia Klymenko.
There was cannibalism in our village. On my farmstead, an 18-year-old boy, Danylo Hukhlib, died, and his mother and
younger sisters and brothers cut him up and ate him. The Communists came and took them away, and we never saw
them again. People said they took them a little ways off and shot them right away - the little ones and the older ones
together.
At that time, I remember, I had heavy, swollen legs. My sister, Tamara, had a large, swollen stomach, and her neck
was long and thin like a bird's neck. People didn't look like people - they were more like starving ghosts.
The ground thawed, and they began to take the dead to the ravine in ox carts. The air was filled with the ubiquitous afpenti9
odor of decomposing bodies. The wind carried this odor far and wide. It was thus over all of Ukraine.
evirgune
Congressional Testimony presented before the United States Ukraine Famine Commission in Washington D. C., October
8, 1986
-What evidence does TatiANA PRovide that the Famie was
Man-made ?
-What evidence dses she pRovide thut the Famine was difectad
speafially gainst
he Ukkainian pesple!
-What would you have doNe
if you lived in the UkRain in 1932?
Page
p://faminegenocide.com/print/resources/testimony-pawlichka.html
Transcribed Image Text:Famine Testimony of Tatiana Pawlichka Famine Testimony of Tatiana Pawlichka Not planted plant ground and ate. CROP Temains n to help on the collectives. These people spoke Russian, and they were given provisions. the villagers tried to go out in the field to look for gleanings, and the Communists would arest them and shoot at them, and send them to Siberia, My aunt Tatiana Budenko, was taken away. They said she had stolen the property of the collective farm. Thát summer, the vegetables couldn't even ripen - people pulled them out of the ground - still green - and ate them. eople ate leaves, nettles, milkweed, sedges By autump po one bad any chickens or cattle. Here and there, someone nad a few potatoes or beets. People coming in from other villages told the very same story. They would travel an over ying to get food. They would fall by the roadside, and none of us could do anything to help. When the ground froze, they were just left lying there dead, in the spow: or. if they died in the house, they were dragged out to the cattie shed, and they would lie there frozen until spring. There was no one to dig graves. All the train stations were overflowing with starving, dving people, Everyone wanted to go to Russia [the Russian SFSR] because it was said that there was no famine there, Very few fof those who left] returned. They all perished on the way. They weren't allowed into Russia and were turned back at the border. Those who somehow managed to get into Russia could save themselves. In February of 1933, there were so few children left that the schools were closed. By this time, there wasn't a cat, dog or sparrow in the village. In that month, my cousin Mykhailo Rudenko died; a month later my aunt Nastia Klymenko and her son, my cousin Ivan, died, as well as my classmate, Dokia Klymenko. There was cannibalism in our village. On my farmstead, an 18-year-old boy, Danylo Hukhlib, died, and his mother and younger sisters and brothers cut him up and ate him. The Communists came and took them away, and we never saw them again. People said they took them a little ways off and shot them right away - the little ones and the older ones together. At that time, I remember, I had heavy, swollen legs. My sister, Tamara, had a large, swollen stomach, and her neck was long and thin like a bird's neck. People didn't look like people - they were more like starving ghosts. The ground thawed, and they began to take the dead to the ravine in ox carts. The air was filled with the ubiquitous afpenti9 odor of decomposing bodies. The wind carried this odor far and wide. It was thus over all of Ukraine. evirgune Congressional Testimony presented before the United States Ukraine Famine Commission in Washington D. C., October 8, 1986 -What evidence does TatiANA PRovide that the Famie was Man-made ? -What evidence dses she pRovide thut the Famine was difectad speafially gainst he Ukkainian pesple! -What would you have doNe if you lived in the UkRain in 1932? Page p://faminegenocide.com/print/resources/testimony-pawlichka.html
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