The Documentary Podcast

The great hunger: Stalin's famine in Kazakhstan

11 snips
Nov 9, 2025
Explore the devastating famine in Kazakhstan during the 1930s, which took the lives of over a third of its population. Discover the silence surrounding the tragedy within families and firsthand accounts of starvation and loss. Learn about traditional nomadic life, the impact of Soviet policies that led to mass displacement, and how music and literature have preserved the memory of this dark chapter. Hear personal survivor stories and how modern generations remember their ancestors and honor the victims of the famine.
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ANECDOTE

Family Silence Over Lost Children

  • Rose Kudabayeva discovers family photos and learns her grandparents lost four children in the famine they never spoke about.
  • The family's silence reflected fear and secrecy rooted in Soviet policies that caused the famine.
INSIGHT

Policies Destroyed Nomadic Livelihoods

  • Forced settlement, confiscation of wealth and collectivisation caused catastrophic disruption to nomadic Kazakh life.
  • Those three decrees, implemented by force, were the main drivers of the famine.
INSIGHT

Death Toll Proportionally Vast

  • The famine peaked in 1931 with massive population loss among Kazakhs, proportionally higher than the Ukrainian Holodomor.
  • Sabit Shildibai estimates nearly half the Kazakh population perished or were displaced.
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