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Stanisław Kosior

Stanisław Vikentyevich Kosior (Russian: Станислав Викентьевич Косиор, 18 November 1889 – 26 February 1939), sometimes spelled Kossior, was a Soviet politician who was First Secretary of the Communist Party of Ukraine, Deputy Premier of the Soviet Union and member of the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU). He and his wife were both executed during the Great Purge.

Stanisław Kosior
Станислав Косиор
Kosior in 1920
First Secretary of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine
In office
14 July 1928 – 27 January 1938
Preceded byLazar Kaganovich
Succeeded byNikita Khrushchev
In office
25 March 1920 – 17 October 1920
Preceded byNikolay Bestchetvertnoi
Succeeded byVyacheslav Molotov
In office
30 May 1919 – 10 December 1919
Preceded byGeorgiy Pyatakov
Succeeded byRafail Farbman
Full member of the 16th and 17th Politburo
In office
13 July 1930 – 3 May 1938
Candidate member of the 15th Politburo
In office
19 December 1927 – 13 July 1930
Full member of the 14th, 15th Secretariat
In office
1 January 1926 – 12 July 1928
Personal details
Born
Stanislav Vikentyevich Kosior

(1889-11-18)18 November 1889
Węgrów, Siedlce Governorate, Russian Empire
Died26 February 1939(1939-02-26) (aged 49)
Moscow, Soviet Union
CitizenshipRussian Empire (subject)
Soviet Union
NationalityPolish
Political partyRSDLP (Bolsheviks) (1907–1918)
Russian Communist Party (1918–1938)
SpouseYelizaveta Sergeyevna
ChildrenTamara and Vladimir
Alma materSulin industrial elementary school
Signature

In 2010, the Kyiv, Ukraine Court of Appeal affirmed criminal charges against Kosior with complicity in the Soviet government-engineered famine and genocide known as the Holodomor.

Early career

Stanisław Kosior was born in 1889 in Węgrów in the Siedlce Governorate of the Russian Empire, in the region of Podlachia, to a Polish family of humble factory workers. Because of poverty, he migrated east to Yuzovka (modern Donetsk), where he worked at a steel mill. In 1907 he joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party and quickly became the head of the party's local branch. He was arrested and sacked from his job later that year, and the following year felt obliged to leave the area due to police activity. He used connections to get re-appointed at the Sulin factory in 1909, but was soon arrested again and deported to the Pavlovsk mine.[1] In 1913 he was transferred to Moscow and then to Kyiv and Kharkiv, where he organized local Communist cells. In 1915 he was arrested by the Okhrana, the Russian secret police, and exiled to Siberia.

After the February Revolution Kosior moved to Petrograd, where he headed the local branch of the Bolsheviks and the Narva municipal committee. After the October Revolution Kosior moved to the German-controlled areas of the Ober-Ost and Ukraine, where he worked for the Bolshevik cause. After the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, he moved back to Russia, where in 1920 he became Secretary of the CPSU. He was head of the Siberian branch of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from March 1922 to December 1925. In January 1926, he was appointed a Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU, working alongside the General Secretary, Joseph Stalin.

Holodomor

In July 1928, Kosior was appointed General Secretary of the Ukrainian SSR Communist Party. His return coincided with Stalin's decision to drive the peasants onto collective farms, a policy Kosior supported. Speaking to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, in November 1929, he argued that collectivisation was the only way to make progress in agriculture. In February 1930, he declared that Ukraine would be "completely collectivised in the course of the spring sowing campaign."[2]

In July 1930, he was elevated to the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. After the harvest in 1931, Kosior knew that collectivisation was causing a catastrophic fall in agricultural output in Ukraine - visiting Moscow in August, he warned Stalin's deputy, Lazar Kaganovich, that there would be a shortfall of 170 million poods (nearly three million tons) of grain, but Kaganovich blamed the problem on mass theft by Ukrainian peasants and forced Kosior to follow this opinion.[3][4]

Addressing a plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (of which he had been a member since 1926) he blamed the failure on middle ranking officials and party members who listened to the complaints of peasants that the quotas were too high. "Not only did they not fight; not only did they fail to organise the collective farm masses in the struggle for bread against the class enemy, they often followed along with this peasant mood", he said.[5]

On Stalin's orders, Kosior pushed through a decree “On grain procurements” on 15 January 1932, which increased the power of the central government in Kharkiv to direct the confiscation of grain in the regions. The fact that he imposed this measure, "in spite of starvation in Ukrainian villages", was the first several examples cited by the Kyiv Court of Appeal in its 2010 resolution that judged Kosior to have been complicit in genocide.[6] The court also recorded that on 1 February, he and Vlas Chubar co-signed a decree “On Seed”, directing local committees to deny any seed aid to Ukraine’s collective farms; on 17 March he signed a decree “On seed reserves”, which led to increased repression of peasants who were resisting the confiscation of grain; and on 29 March, he pushed through a decree “On Polissia", under which 5,000 peasant families were deported from the Polissia region of Ukraine.[6]

In April 1932, after touring the countryside, Kosior wrote to Stalin to say that there had been trouble from hungry peasants refusing to sow grain, and delicately requested that food be sent to Ukraine, which prompted an angry rejection, and seemingly made Stalin suspect that Kosior was not ruthless enough.[7] "The worst aspect of this situation is Kosior's silence," he told Kaganovich, when other leading Ukrainian communists pleaded for help. When Kosior submitted a formal request for relief to the Politburo in Moscow, in June it was turned down flat, and Kaganovich warned him his "mistakes" would be held as an example to other regional party leaders of how not to do their job. This was because Kosior's attempt to find an accommodation between Moscow's demands and the crisis in the countryside had turned Stalin against him. He told Kaganovich that Kosior was "maneuvring" and engaging in "rotten diplomacy" and being "criminally frivolous." He considered sacking Kosior and sending Kaganovich in his place.[8] However, Kosior and his deputy, Pavel Postyshev, met Stalin, who agreed to reduce Ukraine's grain quota. That seemed to settle their differences.

In November, Kosior delivered a speech blaming the trouble in the countryside on Ukrainian nationalists.[9] In 1935 he was awarded the Order of Lenin "for remarkable success in the field of agriculture".[10]

 
Stanislav Kosior at the Kremlin in 1935. From left to right are Trofim Lysenko, Kosior, Anastas Mikoyan, Andrei Andreyev and Joseph Stalin

The Great Purge

Kosior loyally supported Stalin at the start of the Great Purge. He was one of eight Soviet leaders whom the defendants at the first of the Moscow Show Trials, in August 1936, were forced to confess that they plotted to assassinate.[11] Five of the lists of people to be executed early in the purge were cosigned by him.[12] At a plenum of the Central Committee of the CPSU in December 1936, he delivered a personal attack on Nikolai Bukharin, who had been the leading opponent of collectivisation, calling him a liar. At the next plenum, he called for Bukharin and Alexei Rykov to be arrested, but voted against executing them.[13] This did not earn him Stalin's trust.

In January 1938 he was recalled to Moscow, and replaced by Nikita Khrushchev. This was a sign of Stalin's continued mistrust. He told Khrushchev that Kosior "wasn't doing a good job". Khrushchev wrote in his memoirs that he objected to the transfer, partly because he liked Kosior, whom he described as "a fairly mild-mannered person, pleasant and intelligent", but Stalin overruled him.[14] Kosior was appointed head of the Soviet Control Office and deputy prime minister of the USSR.

Kosior was arrested, and stripped of all Party posts, on 3 May 1938. During Khrushchev's "Secret Speech" to the 20th Party Congress in 1956, he disclosed that Kosior's case was handled by Boris Rodos, a particularly notorious torturer employed by the NKVD, who was ordered to force a confession out of him.[15] Under interrogation, Kosior withstood brutal tortures, "but cracked when his sixteen-year-old daughter was brought into the room and raped in front of him."[16] After he had been broken, he was called to Stalin's office, to confront Grigory Petrovsky, the President of Ukraine, who refused to believe that Kosior was guilty. As Petrovsky described the meeting later:

They sat Kosior in a chair. He sat there depressed; it was obvious he had been through a lot. "Well talk!" "What can I say?" Kosior replied. "You know I'm a Polish spy." ... Then Stalin remarked triumphantly: "There, you see, Petrovsky, and you didn't believe Kosior became a spy. Now do you believe he's an enemy of the people?"[17]

Kosior was sentenced to death on 26 February 1939 by shooting and shot the same day by General Vasili Blokhin.[18] After Stalin's death, Kosior was rehabilitated by the Soviet government on 14 March 1956.

Family

Kosior was one of four brothers. The oldest, Vladislav Kosior, and one of his younger brothers, Iosif Kosior, were also active communists. Vladisla was executed during the Great Purge and Joseph died of an illness in 1937. Kosior's wife, Elizaveta, was arrested on 3 March 1938, accused of being the wife of a counter-revolutionary, and shot on 3 August 1938.[19] Their daughter, Tamara (1922-1938), who was raped in front of her father, committed suicide by throwing herself in front of a train.[18]

Kosior's son, Vladimir Stanislavovich, born in 1922, died in the Battle of Leningrad in the early days of December 1942. [20]

References

  1. ^ Haupt, Georges & Marie, Jean-Jacques (1974). Makers of the Russian revolution. London: George Allen & Unwin. p. 149. ISBN 0801408091.
  2. ^ Davies, R.W. (1980). The Industrialisation of Soviet Russia, volume 1: The Socialist Offensive, The Collectivisation of Soviet agriculture, 1929-1930. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard U.P. pp. 165, 242. ISBN 0-674-81480-0.
  3. ^ Snyder, Timothy (2010). Bloodlands: Europe between Hitler and Stalin. Basic Books. hdl:2027/heb.32352. ISBN 978-0-465-03147-4.
  4. ^ Davies, R.W.; Khlevniuk, Oleg V.; Rees, E.A. (2003). The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence 1931-36. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 55. ISBN 0-300-09367-5.
  5. ^ Applebaum, Anne (2018). Red Famine, Stalin's War on Ukraine. London: Penguin. p. 169. ISBN 978-0-141-97828-4.
  6. ^ a b "Resolution of the court Ukraine Kyiv Court of Appeal 2-A Solomyanska Street, Kyiv ruling in the name of Ukraine". Holodomor Museum. 16 October 2019. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  7. ^ Applebaum. Red Famine. pp. !77–78.
  8. ^ The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence. pp. 136, 141, 152, 180.
  9. ^ Applebaum. Red Famine. p. 289.
  10. ^ Guide to the history of the Communist Party and the Soviet Union 1898 – 1991. knowbysight.info
  11. ^ Report of Court Proceedings in the Case of the Trotskyite-Zinovievite Terrorist Centre. Moscow: People's Commissariat of Justice of the USSR. 1936. p. 37.
  12. ^ Slezkine, Yuri (2017). The House of Government, A Saga of the Russian Revolution. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton U.P. p. 755. ISBN 978-0-69119-272-7.
  13. ^ J.Arch Getty, and Oleg V.Naumov (1999). The Road to Terror, Stalin and the Self-Destruction of the Bolsheviks. New Haven: Yale U.P. pp. 316–17, 413. ISBN 0-300-07772-6.
  14. ^ Khrushchev, Nikita (1971). Khrushchev Remembers. Sphere. pp. 29, 76, 88–89.
  15. ^ Khrushchev, Nikita. "Special Report to the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union ("The Secret Speech"" (PDF). Khrushchev's Secret Speech - Full Annotated Text. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  16. ^ Figes, Orlando (2007) The Whisperers, Allen Lane, London, ISBN 0312428030, p. 248
  17. ^ Medvedev, Roy (1976). Let History Judge, The Origins and Consequences of Stalinism. Nottingham: Spokesman. p. 295.
  18. ^ a b "Коссиор Станислав Викентьевич (1889-1939)". Семейные истопии. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  19. ^ "Косиор, Елизавета Сергеевич". Память о весправии. Sakharov Centre. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  20. ^ in Russian. https://www.geni.com/people/Vladimir-Kosior/6000000074365304972

External links

  •   Media related to Stanislaw Kosior at Wikimedia Commons

stanisław, kosior, stanisław, vikentyevich, kosior, russian, Станислав, Викентьевич, Косиор, november, 1889, february, 1939, sometimes, spelled, kossior, soviet, politician, first, secretary, communist, party, ukraine, deputy, premier, soviet, union, member, p. Stanislaw Vikentyevich Kosior Russian Stanislav Vikentevich Kosior 18 November 1889 26 February 1939 sometimes spelled Kossior was a Soviet politician who was First Secretary of the Communist Party of Ukraine Deputy Premier of the Soviet Union and member of the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union CPSU He and his wife were both executed during the Great Purge Stanislaw KosiorStanislav KosiorKosior in 1920First Secretary of the Communist Party Bolsheviks of UkraineIn office 14 July 1928 27 January 1938Preceded byLazar KaganovichSucceeded byNikita KhrushchevIn office 25 March 1920 17 October 1920Preceded byNikolay BestchetvertnoiSucceeded byVyacheslav MolotovIn office 30 May 1919 10 December 1919Preceded byGeorgiy PyatakovSucceeded byRafail FarbmanFull member of the 16th and 17th PolitburoIn office 13 July 1930 3 May 1938Candidate member of the 15th PolitburoIn office 19 December 1927 13 July 1930Full member of the 14th 15th SecretariatIn office 1 January 1926 12 July 1928Personal detailsBornStanislav Vikentyevich Kosior 1889 11 18 18 November 1889Wegrow Siedlce Governorate Russian EmpireDied26 February 1939 1939 02 26 aged 49 Moscow Soviet UnionCitizenshipRussian Empire subject Soviet UnionNationalityPolishPolitical partyRSDLP Bolsheviks 1907 1918 Russian Communist Party 1918 1938 SpouseYelizaveta SergeyevnaChildrenTamara and VladimirAlma materSulin industrial elementary schoolSignatureIn 2010 the Kyiv Ukraine Court of Appeal affirmed criminal charges against Kosior with complicity in the Soviet government engineered famine and genocide known as the Holodomor Contents 1 Early career 2 Holodomor 3 The Great Purge 4 Family 5 References 6 External linksEarly career EditStanislaw Kosior was born in 1889 in Wegrow in the Siedlce Governorate of the Russian Empire in the region of Podlachia to a Polish family of humble factory workers Because of poverty he migrated east to Yuzovka modern Donetsk where he worked at a steel mill In 1907 he joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party and quickly became the head of the party s local branch He was arrested and sacked from his job later that year and the following year felt obliged to leave the area due to police activity He used connections to get re appointed at the Sulin factory in 1909 but was soon arrested again and deported to the Pavlovsk mine 1 In 1913 he was transferred to Moscow and then to Kyiv and Kharkiv where he organized local Communist cells In 1915 he was arrested by the Okhrana the Russian secret police and exiled to Siberia After the February Revolution Kosior moved to Petrograd where he headed the local branch of the Bolsheviks and the Narva municipal committee After the October Revolution Kosior moved to the German controlled areas of the Ober Ost and Ukraine where he worked for the Bolshevik cause After the Treaty of Brest Litovsk he moved back to Russia where in 1920 he became Secretary of the CPSU He was head of the Siberian branch of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from March 1922 to December 1925 In January 1926 he was appointed a Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU working alongside the General Secretary Joseph Stalin Holodomor EditIn July 1928 Kosior was appointed General Secretary of the Ukrainian SSR Communist Party His return coincided with Stalin s decision to drive the peasants onto collective farms a policy Kosior supported Speaking to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in November 1929 he argued that collectivisation was the only way to make progress in agriculture In February 1930 he declared that Ukraine would be completely collectivised in the course of the spring sowing campaign 2 In July 1930 he was elevated to the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union After the harvest in 1931 Kosior knew that collectivisation was causing a catastrophic fall in agricultural output in Ukraine visiting Moscow in August he warned Stalin s deputy Lazar Kaganovich that there would be a shortfall of 170 million poods nearly three million tons of grain but Kaganovich blamed the problem on mass theft by Ukrainian peasants and forced Kosior to follow this opinion 3 4 Addressing a plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union of which he had been a member since 1926 he blamed the failure on middle ranking officials and party members who listened to the complaints of peasants that the quotas were too high Not only did they not fight not only did they fail to organise the collective farm masses in the struggle for bread against the class enemy they often followed along with this peasant mood he said 5 On Stalin s orders Kosior pushed through a decree On grain procurements on 15 January 1932 which increased the power of the central government in Kharkiv to direct the confiscation of grain in the regions The fact that he imposed this measure in spite of starvation in Ukrainian villages was the first several examples cited by the Kyiv Court of Appeal in its 2010 resolution that judged Kosior to have been complicit in genocide 6 The court also recorded that on 1 February he and Vlas Chubar co signed a decree On Seed directing local committees to deny any seed aid to Ukraine s collective farms on 17 March he signed a decree On seed reserves which led to increased repression of peasants who were resisting the confiscation of grain and on 29 March he pushed through a decree On Polissia under which 5 000 peasant families were deported from the Polissia region of Ukraine 6 In April 1932 after touring the countryside Kosior wrote to Stalin to say that there had been trouble from hungry peasants refusing to sow grain and delicately requested that food be sent to Ukraine which prompted an angry rejection and seemingly made Stalin suspect that Kosior was not ruthless enough 7 The worst aspect of this situation is Kosior s silence he told Kaganovich when other leading Ukrainian communists pleaded for help When Kosior submitted a formal request for relief to the Politburo in Moscow in June it was turned down flat and Kaganovich warned him his mistakes would be held as an example to other regional party leaders of how not to do their job This was because Kosior s attempt to find an accommodation between Moscow s demands and the crisis in the countryside had turned Stalin against him He told Kaganovich that Kosior was maneuvring and engaging in rotten diplomacy and being criminally frivolous He considered sacking Kosior and sending Kaganovich in his place 8 However Kosior and his deputy Pavel Postyshev met Stalin who agreed to reduce Ukraine s grain quota That seemed to settle their differences In November Kosior delivered a speech blaming the trouble in the countryside on Ukrainian nationalists 9 In 1935 he was awarded the Order of Lenin for remarkable success in the field of agriculture 10 Stanislav Kosior at the Kremlin in 1935 From left to right are Trofim Lysenko Kosior Anastas Mikoyan Andrei Andreyev and Joseph StalinThe Great Purge EditKosior loyally supported Stalin at the start of the Great Purge He was one of eight Soviet leaders whom the defendants at the first of the Moscow Show Trials in August 1936 were forced to confess that they plotted to assassinate 11 Five of the lists of people to be executed early in the purge were cosigned by him 12 At a plenum of the Central Committee of the CPSU in December 1936 he delivered a personal attack on Nikolai Bukharin who had been the leading opponent of collectivisation calling him a liar At the next plenum he called for Bukharin and Alexei Rykov to be arrested but voted against executing them 13 This did not earn him Stalin s trust In January 1938 he was recalled to Moscow and replaced by Nikita Khrushchev This was a sign of Stalin s continued mistrust He told Khrushchev that Kosior wasn t doing a good job Khrushchev wrote in his memoirs that he objected to the transfer partly because he liked Kosior whom he described as a fairly mild mannered person pleasant and intelligent but Stalin overruled him 14 Kosior was appointed head of the Soviet Control Office and deputy prime minister of the USSR Kosior was arrested and stripped of all Party posts on 3 May 1938 During Khrushchev s Secret Speech to the 20th Party Congress in 1956 he disclosed that Kosior s case was handled by Boris Rodos a particularly notorious torturer employed by the NKVD who was ordered to force a confession out of him 15 Under interrogation Kosior withstood brutal tortures but cracked when his sixteen year old daughter was brought into the room and raped in front of him 16 After he had been broken he was called to Stalin s office to confront Grigory Petrovsky the President of Ukraine who refused to believe that Kosior was guilty As Petrovsky described the meeting later They sat Kosior in a chair He sat there depressed it was obvious he had been through a lot Well talk What can I say Kosior replied You know I m a Polish spy Then Stalin remarked triumphantly There you see Petrovsky and you didn t believe Kosior became a spy Now do you believe he s an enemy of the people 17 Kosior was sentenced to death on 26 February 1939 by shooting and shot the same day by General Vasili Blokhin 18 After Stalin s death Kosior was rehabilitated by the Soviet government on 14 March 1956 Family EditKosior was one of four brothers The oldest Vladislav Kosior and one of his younger brothers Iosif Kosior were also active communists Vladisla was executed during the Great Purge and Joseph died of an illness in 1937 Kosior s wife Elizaveta was arrested on 3 March 1938 accused of being the wife of a counter revolutionary and shot on 3 August 1938 19 Their daughter Tamara 1922 1938 who was raped in front of her father committed suicide by throwing herself in front of a train 18 Kosior s son Vladimir Stanislavovich born in 1922 died in the Battle of Leningrad in the early days of December 1942 20 References Edit Haupt Georges amp Marie Jean Jacques 1974 Makers of the Russian revolution London George Allen amp Unwin p 149 ISBN 0801408091 Davies R W 1980 The Industrialisation of Soviet Russia volume 1 The Socialist Offensive The Collectivisation of Soviet agriculture 1929 1930 Cambridge Mass Harvard U P pp 165 242 ISBN 0 674 81480 0 Snyder Timothy 2010 Bloodlands Europe between Hitler and Stalin Basic Books hdl 2027 heb 32352 ISBN 978 0 465 03147 4 Davies R W Khlevniuk Oleg V Rees E A 2003 The Stalin Kaganovich Correspondence 1931 36 New Haven Yale University Press p 55 ISBN 0 300 09367 5 Applebaum Anne 2018 Red Famine Stalin s War on Ukraine London Penguin p 169 ISBN 978 0 141 97828 4 a b Resolution of the court Ukraine Kyiv Court of Appeal 2 A Solomyanska Street Kyiv ruling in the name of Ukraine Holodomor Museum 16 October 2019 Retrieved 5 March 2021 Applebaum Red Famine pp 77 78 The Stalin Kaganovich Correspondence pp 136 141 152 180 Applebaum Red Famine p 289 Guide to the history of the Communist Party and the Soviet Union 1898 1991 knowbysight info Report of Court Proceedings in the Case of the Trotskyite Zinovievite Terrorist Centre Moscow People s Commissariat of Justice of the USSR 1936 p 37 Slezkine Yuri 2017 The House of Government A Saga of the Russian Revolution Princeton N J Princeton U P p 755 ISBN 978 0 69119 272 7 J Arch Getty and Oleg V Naumov 1999 The Road to Terror Stalin and the Self Destruction of the Bolsheviks New Haven Yale U P pp 316 17 413 ISBN 0 300 07772 6 Khrushchev Nikita 1971 Khrushchev Remembers Sphere pp 29 76 88 89 Khrushchev Nikita Special Report to the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union The Secret Speech PDF Khrushchev s Secret Speech Full Annotated Text Retrieved 5 March 2021 Figes Orlando 2007 The Whisperers Allen Lane London ISBN 0312428030 p 248 Medvedev Roy 1976 Let History Judge The Origins and Consequences of Stalinism Nottingham Spokesman p 295 a b Kossior Stanislav Vikentevich 1889 1939 Semejnye istopii Retrieved 7 March 2021 Kosior Elizaveta Sergeevich Pamyat o vespravii Sakharov Centre Retrieved 7 March 2021 in Russian https www geni com people Vladimir Kosior 6000000074365304972External links Edit Media related to Stanislaw Kosior at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stanislaw Kosior amp oldid 1127329385, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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