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Goodbye Stalin Museum

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Soviet cogitations: 4340
Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 20 Jul 2007, 06:59
Ideology: Marxism-Leninism
Forum Commissar
Post 09 Apr 2012, 22:52
Georgia has decided to change the Stalin Museum in Koba's hometown, turning it into a Stalinist Crimes Museum.

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AFP wrote:
Georgia to transform Stalin museum into repression memorial
A museum dedicated to Georgia's most infamous son Joseph Stalin in his hometown Gori will be transformed into a memorial to the victims of his Soviet-era repression, the government said on Monday.
The existing museum in the eastern Georgian city, which attracts dozens of elderly communists every year to mark Stalin's birthday, "is a surreal relic of Soviet totalitarianism", Georgian Culture Minister Nicoloz Rurua told AFP.
He said during a visit to the museum that it would in future "commemorate victims of Stalinism" and that in its current form it was "incompatible" with present-day Georgia and its future.
"Such a museum cannot exist in a country which is still confronting the vestiges of the Soviet empire," he said in apparent reference to Georgia's strained relations with its former imperial master and their brief war in 2008 over the Kremlin-backed separatist region of South Ossetia.
"History cannot be erased and this very difficult page in our country's history must be adequately displayed within these walls," he said.
The Gori museum was opened in 1937 in a small brick hut where the Soviet dictator was born.
In 1957, a grand granite and marble structure was constructed nearby to house an exhibition aimed at chronicling and glorifying Stalin's life.
In 2010, keen to erase Soviet legacy, Georgia's fervently pro-Western government removed a huge bronze statue of Stalin which had stood in Gori's main square since 1952.
It will be replaced with a monument to those killed by the Soviet dictator and to victims of the Russia-Georgia war.
A law was adopted last year banning the public display of Soviet symbols and prohibiting former Communist and KGB officials from holding public office.
An annual "Soviet Occupation Day" was also launched -- a commemoration of the Red Army invasion in 1921 which forced independent Georgia into the USSR.
Born Joseph Dzhugashvili in Gori in 1878, Stalin ruled the Soviet Union with an iron fist from the late 1920s until his death in 1953.
He is accused by historians of causing the deaths of millions of Soviet citizens in brutal Gulag prison camps and through the forced collectivisation of agriculture.
However there are still relatively few memorials in the former Soviet Union and particularly Russia to the victims of the horrific repression carried out by the Stalin regime.
But Georgia's few Communists retain no political influence or popular support in the country today.
The government's drive to break with its Soviet past has infuriated the Kremlin, prompting president-elect Vladimir Putin to once accuse Georgia of trying to erase from the collective memory of the people of the former Soviet Union "their common past and their heroic history".


Also on Ria Novosti:

http://en.ria.ru/culture/20120409/172708392.html


And an Image Gallery
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"It does not suffice to reject the error; we must overcome it, explain it and outgrow it." - Antonio Labriola
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 22 Oct 2004, 15:15
Ideology: Marxism-Leninism
Party Bureaucrat
Post 09 Apr 2012, 23:36
Lol wut? Maybe the people in Gori running the museum could have some say in the matter? Or has the central government in Tbilisi kept this Stalin museum afloat for decades? That would actually be pretty funny. In any case, if they go through with this, I guess the people from the old museum will just pack up their gear and reopen it elsewhere if they can get the funding. And the "Stalinist Crimes Museum" will probably only get visited by bored school kids on those horrible mandatory school trips that nobody likes.
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 30 Mar 2010, 01:20
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Post 10 Apr 2012, 01:27
No 14 wrote:
And the "Stalinist Crimes Museum" will probably only get visited by bored school kids on those horrible mandatory school trips that nobody likes.
Have you been on one of those trips in Europe?
I'd often wondered about them and how appropriate it was to make school kids go to places like Auschwitz.
I just imagine many kids would think it was all some big laugh. Hardly appropriate.

As far as the Stalin museum... goes this is hardly remarkable ... surprised it didn't happen sooner really.
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 10 Aug 2010, 14:21
Party Member
Post 10 Apr 2012, 04:01
What a bunch of bastards.
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"Mao was just a degenerated Trotsky." Dagoth Ur
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 04 Aug 2004, 20:49
Embalmed
Post 10 Apr 2012, 08:18
Accusations of "Stalinist totalitarianism" from a "totalitarian" leader. Does the Shak have any sense of irony?
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"Phil Spector is haunting Europe" -Dr. Karl H. Marx
Soviet cogitations: 4361
Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 08 Nov 2007, 06:31
Ideology: Other Leftist
Politburo
Post 10 Apr 2012, 13:19
'Culture minister'?


The ruling class is ever so blatant.
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 24 Feb 2012, 23:00
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Post 10 Apr 2012, 13:40
Quote:
I'd often wondered about them and how appropriate it was to make school kids go to places like Auschwitz.

When I went to a Holocaust museum when I was 12, it was completely lost on me and now in hindsight it was disrespectful but when a group of 30+ 12 year olds are being bored to tears by a tour guide you ignore him and mess around and ignore why you are there. For the most part many school trips are a waste of time in that sense.
“It is better to die standing than to live on your knees.“-Che Geuvara
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 28 Feb 2012, 16:12
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Post 10 Apr 2012, 14:21
Erichs_Pastry_Chef wrote:
Accusations of "Stalinist totalitarianism" from a "totalitarian" leader. Does the Shak have any sense of irony?


Meh... At least Stalinist totalitarianism was more or less socialist... And proles weren't particularly likely to get repressed. And it worked (at a great cost) to save the USSR from the Nazis and make'em an industrial superpower.

[Tinfoil Hat] Come to think of it, perhaps Georgia's current authoritarian leader ain't shutting it down to avoid celebrating totalitarianism at all... He's more more likely shuttin' it down to avoid unfavorable comparisons between him and Uncle Joe!!!
[/Tinfoil Hat]
Cm'on baby, eat the rich!!! - Motörhead
JAM
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 09 Mar 2012, 02:37
Ideology: Marxism-Leninism
Pioneer
Post 12 Apr 2012, 04:43
This is just another step taken by the Georgia government to move away from Russia's influence and please USA and its western allies. Remember that they have done the same thing with Stalin statue a couple years ago. I just wonder how far the Georgian Government can go to continue this pro-western policy and how much influence USA have over the Georgian Government right now. I really doubt that USA had nothing to do with the removal of the statue and now the opening of a museum, two clearly provocations to Moscow.
"If I could control Hollywood, I could control the world." -Joseph Stalin
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 01 Nov 2003, 13:17
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Forum Commissar
Post 12 Apr 2012, 19:10
This a move by the Georgians to assert their independence from Moscovite imperialism.
Happiness is in your ability to love others. - Leo Tolstoy
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 06 Dec 2009, 23:17
Philosophized
Post 12 Apr 2012, 19:33
Lol some independence.
Georgia is just another bitch of the US, like Kosovo for example.
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 09 Mar 2012, 02:37
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Pioneer
Post 12 Apr 2012, 19:37
Political Interest wrote:
This a move by the Georgians to assert their independence from Moscovite imperialism.


Is just moving from one imperialism to another.
"If I could control Hollywood, I could control the world." -Joseph Stalin
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 01 Nov 2003, 13:17
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Forum Commissar
Post 13 Apr 2012, 00:45
Quote:
Lol some independence.
Georgia is just another bitch of the US, like Kosovo for example.

Quote:
Is just moving from one imperialism to another.


That is true enough but this is the situation. Until a third force is formed, or a unified Caucasus, what alternative is there?
Happiness is in your ability to love others. - Leo Tolstoy
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 16 Nov 2005, 17:55
Party Bureaucrat
Post 13 Apr 2012, 00:56
So Georgia is supposedly asserting its independence from Muscovite imperialism by disavowing one of its own? Particularly when said Georgian saw the impressive development of Georgia and massive transfer of capital from Russia to Georgia. A thoroughly idiotic and counterintuitive move, to say the least.

Hopefully the museum exhibit gets moved to a place where it's much more appreciated. Maybe a place like Volgograd...
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"History is a set of lies agreed upon."
--Napoleon Bonaparte
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 22 Oct 2004, 15:15
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Party Bureaucrat
Post 13 Apr 2012, 19:27
Shigalyov wrote:
Have you been on one of those trips in Europe?
I'd often wondered about them and how appropriate it was to make school kids go to places like Auschwitz.
I just imagine many kids would think it was all some big laugh. Hardly appropriate.

As far as the Stalin museum... goes this is hardly remarkable ... surprised it didn't happen sooner really.


Nah, I was thinking of mandatory museum trips in general. I think seeing a concentration camp at some point can be quite instructive. An allied anti-fascist organisation happens to be sending a train with 1,000 European youths to Auschwitz next month (they are expected to return though - sorry, had to include a tasteless joke since we're on the subject of "treating it as a big laugh"
).

The thing is that visiting the remains of a concentration camp actually shows you what happened. It's quite different from a blatantly politicised "totalitarian museum" where nothing significant actually happened, which is just there as propaganda. Auschwitz was real, it happened. "Totalitarianism" is just some bullshit term made up by propagandists to attack a large section of the very people who died in those camps for Cold War reasons.
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 29 Jul 2011, 11:37
Ideology: Other Leftist
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Post 14 Apr 2012, 01:13
Like if anybody in present day post-communist countries cared about "Stalinist terror". Slovakia, unlike Georgia is one of the more sucessful post-communist countries and not extremely pro-communist, yet since 2008 (the start of the worldwide economic crisis) people are afraid to even say bad words about communists because the present day goverment is just so corrupt, inefficient and evil. People basically realized how really good communists were.

These moves like the Georgian goverment makes are just theatre for the West. Talking about "Stalinist crimes" and hating communists is generally a hobby of upper-middle class and upper class rightwingers.
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 22 Oct 2004, 15:15
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Party Bureaucrat
Post 14 Apr 2012, 15:30
You're Slovakian? I visited Slovakia on an exchange several years ago. How is the Communist Party there doing? What always strikes me is their electoral history. It seems that in 2002, they came out of nowhere to win 11 seats, and collapsed again after that, but I have no idea why that is. Do you know?
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 29 Jul 2011, 11:37
Ideology: Other Leftist
Pioneer
Post 14 Apr 2012, 23:32
No 14 wrote:
You're Slovakian? I visited Slovakia on an exchange several years ago. How is the Communist Party there doing? What always strikes me is their electoral history. It seems that in 2002, they came out of nowhere to win 11 seats, and collapsed again after that, but I have no idea why that is. Do you know?


The KSS (the Communist party) is one of the few parties that are not subsidised by the 2 dominant financial groups in Slovakia (Penta Group and J&T), so they didn't have almost any electoral campaign. They are one of the less corrupt parties, which is also why they will never be allowed to get any power. And the reason why almost nobody votes them is simple, over 40 year old common people generally vote the social-democratic (not scandinavian, more corrupt populism in reality) Smer party, which subtly manifactures its "really just communists by another name" (of course, that is bullshit) image to ensure torrents of votes from nostalgic voters, and has the side effect of being hated by rightwingers. Smer has absolutely won the lastest election by the way. Basically, populist pseudo-socdems have co-opted almost all pro-socialist sentiment.

And yes, I am Slovak. Where are you from btw, if I can ask?
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 24 Feb 2012, 23:00
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Pioneer
Post 14 Apr 2012, 23:47
Not to derail this thread but Neuron, how do people feel about the communist past? More positivly than other EBloc countries or worse. I know that in Hungary that they have banned the Hammer and Sickle.
“It is better to die standing than to live on your knees.“-Che Geuvara
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Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 29 Jul 2011, 11:37
Ideology: Other Leftist
Pioneer
Post 15 Apr 2012, 14:02
Banning communist symbols says absolutely nothing about the sentiment of the people. The people have no freaking power in any post-communist country. The only thing that it reflects is that a country's ruling class is reactionary. Here is an article written by a Hungarian woman about her childhood and youth in socialist era Hungary http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... -life.html . You really think the hammer and sickle was banned because "the people" wanted to ban it? There are many people in Hungary and Slovakia who hate socialism, there are many people who like that time period, and there are many, especially youth, who are ambivalent, think "it is all the same stuff, capitalism, socialism, both bad, in different ways", or simply view it neutrally as the past. In Slovakia, I think the sentiment is about average, more than 60 percent of people answered in a 2004 survey that their lives were better under socialism, but there are also people who think without communism we would be a "second Switzerland" (yeah right, even through in 1939 we had about 15x less electricity consumption than Austria, family size of 7 children because of infant mortality and right after the war, before the establishment of socialist rule in 1948, we almost had a famine in 1946-1947 and the only countries that sent us food aid were Canada and the USSR [which contributed despite suffering hunger in 1946-1947 as well]). Communists modernized life in less than a single generation, compare my grandfather's and father's upbringing - grandfather was one of 12 children, their home had no electricity, they occasionally had to hide in the basement from falling bombs because of WW2, little food except for grain products, hard agricultural labour from childhood, no running tap water, toilet - a wooden latrine. Compare it to my father's upbringing - he was one of 2 children (he has a brother), they lived in an apartment block with electricity, plumbing, flush toilet, shower, they had a radio, TV, a fairly hi-fi record player, a color film moviecamera (Praktika, made in GDR), he spent his childhood playing with other kids instead of working on a field, he had hobbies such as photography and making model airplanes, they had tons of books at home etc.

Many people think people in socialist countries were some diseased mud farming peasants who spent half of their day in "queues for small food rations" (food rationing was abolished in 1952-1953 in Czechoslovakia) and I am freaking tired of that bullshit stereotype. It was not a life as overtechnologized and luxurious as in the West, but in many ways, even more civilized than Western countries, by actually encouraging positive stuff and meaningful activities. Kids at that time didn't have as many sophisticated toys as Western kids, but that is why there were so many hobbies. There was a place and an activity for everyone. I deeply regret being born under capitalism. The computer dependance and addiction in the modern world is destroying society all in the name of fancy "social networking",iphones etc. Parents just feed their kids and leave them to do as they please instead of guiding them to be valuable members of society.

Many people back then did not realize what they had and wanted Western luxury, tropical fruits from South America every day, mansions, freedom to say anything. They got 300 Euro salaries, and wishy washy propaganda about how the European Union will save us by sending billions of euros to german banks to "pay for Greek debt".
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