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Vasily Grossman (1905-64), one of the greatest authors of the twentieth century, served for over 1,000 days with the Red Army as a war correspondent on the Eastern front. He was present during the street-fighting at Stalingrad, and his 1944 report ‘The Hell of Treblinka’, was the first eyewitness account of a Nazi death camp. Though he finished the war as a decorated lieutenant colonel, his epic account of the battle of Stalingrad, Life and Fate, was suppressed by Soviet authorities, and never published in his lifetime. Declared a ‘non-person’, Grossman died in obscurity. Only in 1980, with the posthumous publication in Switzerland of Life and Fate was his remarkable novel to gain an international reputation. This meticulously researched biography by John and Carol Garrard uses archival and unpublished sources that only became available after the collapse of the Soviet Union. A gripping narrative.
718 pages, Kindle Edition
First published March 6, 1996
Grossman certainly came to understand that broad Ukrainian collaboration had been an integral cog in the German machinery of murder. But he also knew that the whole subject of collaboration was verboten. Grossman faced the insoluble problem of writing a documentary account of the murder of 30,000 people by two dozen members of a German Einsatzkommando without explaining who aided and abetted. Given that he was determined to publish at least some morsel of the truth with the Soviet Union, he had to compromise. His normal technique was simply omission of awkward facts, not the slightest hint of covering up or distorting them. The result is yawning holes in the narrative of 'The Murder of the Jews in Berdichev', which is dated as being completed in 1944. For example, he mentions the October 30th 1941 shooting of the skilled workers kept alive to serve the Germans (and the Ukrainians) but omits the salient point that it was Ukrainians, not Germans, who pulled the trigger.
There is no sense, no truth in the present situation, whereby I am physically free, but my book, to which I gave my life, remains in jail. After all, I wrote the book; I have not renounced it, and will never do so. Twelve years have passed since I began writing this book. I still think, as I did when writing it, that I spoke the truth. I wrote the book out of love and pity for ordinary people, out of my belief in them. I ask you to release my book.
You examine Soviet life from an absolutely non-Soviet viewpoint, you cast doubt upon everything. We are not concerned when someone speaks about the dark pages of our life, as long as they do it from a Soviet viewpoint. If we accept what you say, then it is impossible to understand how we won the war. According to you, we should never have won. It is impossible to understand why we won. The party and the people would not forgive us if we published your book. That would only increase the loss of life.