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PL
Po Wielkim Głodzie, w wyniku którego zmarło co najmniej 3,5 mln osób, bolszewicy stanęli przed problemem braku odpowiedniej liczby ludzi do pracy na roli. Postanowiono wobec tego na tereny najbardziej wyludnione z powodu głodu sprowadzić chłopów z Rosji i Białorusi oraz przesiedlić rolników z mniej dotkniętych głodem regionów Ukrainy. Akcja nie zakończyła się sukcesem, bowiem większość chłopów sprowadzonych na opustoszałe tereny wróciła z powrotem. After the Great Famine in Ukraine that killed at least 3.5 million people, the Bolsheviks faced a problem of a lack of resources and people to work on the land. Thus, a decision was made to bring to the most depopulated areas peasants from Russia and Belarus, as well as some farmers from other regions of Ukraine, less affected by the famine. The action did not succeed, as a majority of peasants who were brought to Ukrainian lands devastated by the Holodomor went back to their homes.
PL
The article discusses a wide range of aspects concerning the Holomodor – the Great Famine in the Soviet Union in the years 1932–1933. The author focuses on examining the processes of creating a collective image of the Great Famine and the role of individual memory of its survivors in building this image. Analyzing the memories of the survivors the author deals with distortions and myths which has grown up around the Holomodor. The significance of this disaster for the Ukrainian identity is also the subject of the analysis.
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