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Black Lebeda

June 2006

History

192 pages, 6 x 9

978-0-88146-015-5

$40.00s, Cloth

Illustrations, index, bibliography

MUP/H701

Black Lebeda
The Russian Famine Diary of ARA Kazan District Supervisor J. Rives Childs, 1921–1923

Edited by Jamie H. Cockfield

The meticulously kept diary of J. Rives Childs, part of the American Relief Administration,1921–1923

The diary, which begins in the days before Childs enters Soviet Russia in 1921 and ends rather abruptly in August 1923, about six months before he left, is a detailed, in-depth view of Childs's Russian experience. There is first an account of the inner workings of the American Relief Administration (ARA) at all levels, from Moscow to the workers in the kitchens that fed the starving children, and later adults. It also gives a vivid picture of the grisly famine conditions, not only in Kazan, but in the countryside as well, since Childs was early involved in field work, establishing orphanages and kitchens to feed the starving. In this capacity, he had to deal with local governments, now in the control of the Communist Party, and his narration of his experiences gives probably one of the first insights into the workings of the Party in local govern-ment. Yet the journal also gives an account of the lives of those enemies of the Soviets that did not get out, the bourgeois and aristocratic elements, who were hostile to the new system. Frequently, these citizens, who were educated and had often learned English, came to work for the ARA, and Childs witnessed their sad lives and the suspicion they experienced from the Soviet government. The diary also gives a firsthand view of the early days of Lenin's famous New Economic Policy (NEP), which was really a partial return to old capitalism. This move on the part of the Soviet government was designed to jumpstart the prostrate economy, and Childs, a self-proclaimed socialist, curiously found this turnabout fascinating and became an ardent proponent of it.

JAMIE H. COCKFIELD, born in Charleston, South Carolina, holds a B.A. and M.A. from the University of South Carolina; and Ph.D. from the University of Virginia (1972). He has taught at Mercer University since 1972, acting as chair of the History Department three times. He has also served on the boards of the Macon Symphony, the Macon Concert Association, the Macon-Bibb County Board of Elections, and the board of directors of Tattnall Academy. He chaired the Bibb County Republican Party and was president of the Macon Council on World Affairs. He is the author of Dollars and Diplomacy (Duke, 1981), With Snow on Their Boots (St. Martin’s, 1998), and White Crow (Pralger, 2002).

Titles of Related Interest

Between War and Peace: Woodrow Wilson and the American Expeditionary Force in Siberia,
1918–1921

Carl Vinson: Patriarch of the Armed Forces

The Devious Dr. Franklin: Benjamin Franklin’s Years in London

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