New York Art Beat

"Holodomor: Genocide by Famine" Exhibition

Showing at The Ukrainian Museum in the The Villages area.
This event has ended.
Media: Photography, Other

poster for "Holodomor: Genocide by Famine" Exhibition

The exhibition, Holodomor: Genocide by Famine, is one of a series of events taking place around the world to commemorate the 75th anniversary of what James Mace, the director of the U.S. Commission on the Ukraine Famine (1988), referred to as "the crime of the century that nobody's ever heard of."

The horrific event, known in Ukrainian as the Holodomor (literally, murder by starvation), took place in 1932-1933, less than twenty years after Ukraine was forcibly incorporated into the Soviet Union. Determined to force all Ukrainian farmers onto collective farms, to crush the burgeoning national revival, and to forestall any calls for Ukraine's independence, the brutal Communist regime of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin embarked on a campaign to starve the Ukrainian people into submission.

The Soviet government confiscated all the grain produced by Ukrainian farmers, withheld other foodstuffs, executed anyone trying to obtain food, and punished those who attempted to flee. As a result, in the land called the Breadbasket of Europe, millions of men, women, and children were starved to death.

Much of that information is included in Holodomor: Genocide by Famine, which consists of 96 panels of photographs, documents, government reports, eyewitness accounts, and other archival material detailing virtually every aspect of the tragedy.

Schedule

From 2008-05-27 To 2008-11-30

Fee

Adults $8, Seniors and Students with valid ID $6, Members and Children under 12 Free

Venue Hours

From 11:30 To 17:00
Closed on Mondays, Tuesdays, Holidays

Access

Between 2nd and 3rd Ave. Subway: 6 to Astor Place, W/R to 8th St. or F/V to 2nd Ave. and Houston St.
yahoo! map

Address

222 E 6th St., New York, NY 10003
Phone: 2122280110


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