JEWISH WORLD

By DENNIS PRAGER O ne of the most highly regarded books of the 20th century was Ernest Becker's The Denial of Death. Winner of the 1974 Pulitzer Prize, the book is regarded as a classic for its analysis of how human beings deny their mortality. But there is something people deny more than mortality: evil. Someone should write a book on the denial of evil; that would be much more important because while we cannot prevent death, we can prevent evil. The most glaring example of the denial of evil is communism, an ideology that, within a period of only 60 years, created modern total- itarianism and deprived of human rights, tortured, starved and killed more people than any other ideolo- gy in history. Why people ignore, or even deny, communist evil is the subject of a previous column as well as a Prager University video, "Why Isn't Com- munism as Hated as Nazism?" I will, therefore, not address that question here. I will simply lay out the facts. B ut before I do, I need to address another question: Why is it important that everyone know what communism did? Here are three reasons: First, we have a moral obligation to the victims not to forget them. Just as Americans have a moral obligation to remember the victims of American slavery, we have the same obligation to the billion vic- tims of communism, especially the 100 million who were murdered. Second, the best way to prevent an evil from reoccurring is to con- front it in all its horror. The fact that many people today, especially young people, believe communism is a viable — even morally superior — option for modern societies proves they know nothing about communism's moral record. Therefore, they do not properly fear communism — which means this evil could happen again. And why could it happen again? That brings us to reason number three. The leaders of communist regimes and the vast number of people who helped those leaders torture, enslave and murder — plus the many more people who reported on their neighbors for saying something objectionable to the communists — were nearly all normal people. Of course, some were psychopaths, but most were not. Which proves that any society — including free ones — can devolve into communism or some analogous evil. Now some facts: According to the authoritative The Black Book of Communism , written by six French scholars and published in the United States by Harvard University Press, the num- bers of people murdered — not people killed in combat; ordinary civilians trying to live their lives — by communist regimes were: Latin America: 150,000. Vietnam: 1 million. Eastern Europe: 1 million. Ethiopia: 1.5 million. North Korea: 2 million. Cambodia: 2 million. The Soviet Union: 20 million (many scholars believe the number was considerably higher). China: 65 million. These numbers are quite conser- vative. For example, in Ukraine alone, the Soviet regime and its Ukrainian Communist Party helpers starved 5 to 6 million to death with- in a two-year period. It is almost inconceivable that only 14 to 15 million other Soviet citizens were murdered. And, of course, these numbers do not describe the suffering endured by hundreds of millions of people who were not murdered: the systematic stripping people of their right to speak freely, to wor- ship, to start a business or even to travel without party permission; no noncommunist judiciary or media; the near-poverty of nearly all communist countries; the imprisonment and torture of vast numbers of people; and, of course, the trauma suffered by the hun- dreds of millions of friends and relatives of the murdered and imprisoned. T hese numbers don't tell you about the many starving Ukrainians who ate the flesh of peo- ple, often children, sometimes including their own; or the Romanian Christians whose com- munist prison guards forced them to eat feces to compel them to renounce their faith; or the frozen millions in the vast Soviet Siberian prison camp system known as the Gulag Archipelago; or the Viet- namese communists' routine prac- tice of burying peasants alive to ter- rorize people into supporting the communists. Or Mao Zedong's regular use of torture to punish opponents and intimidate peasants, like leading men through the streets with rusty wires through their testicles and burning the vaginas of wives of opponents with flaming wicks — Mao's techniques to terrorize peas- ants into supporting the Chinese Communist Party in its early days. People associate evil with darkness. But it is easy to look into the dark; it is very hard to stare into bright light. JEWISH WORLD • MARCH 19-25, 2021 15 The Denial Of Evil The need to know Communism’s history continued on page 27 To prevent an evil from reoccurring, confront it in all its horror. But today, many do not properly fear communism. PERSPECTIVE The Black Book Of Communism By Stéphane Courtois, Nicolas Werth, Et al. (Harvard University Press, 1999) 858p., $65 Wishing All Our Friends and Customers A Safe and Healthy, Passover 5781

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