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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,346 --> 00:00:03,555 Viewers like you make this program possible. 2 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 3 00:00:03,589 --> 00:00:05,419 Support your local PBS station. 4 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 5 00:01:00,060 --> 00:01:03,132 "December 4, 1921." 6 00:01:03,166 --> 00:01:06,445 "Samara District, Soviet Russia." 7 00:01:06,480 --> 00:01:11,105 "Today I came upon a group of men in a makeshift cemetery" 8 00:01:11,140 --> 00:01:13,521 "digging a mass grave." 9 00:01:13,556 --> 00:01:16,006 "When I asked where the bodies were," 10 00:01:16,041 --> 00:01:17,387 "one of them explained..." 11 00:01:19,424 --> 00:01:21,253 "We are trying now to make a place" 12 00:01:21,288 --> 00:01:23,428 "to put the future corpses." 13 00:01:23,462 --> 00:01:27,397 "We are afraid we won't have the strength to do it later." 14 00:01:29,917 --> 00:01:32,747 "As I looked at them, I wondered if any of those men" 15 00:01:32,782 --> 00:01:36,993 "thought he might be digging his own grave." 16 00:01:37,027 --> 00:01:41,135 Will Shafroth, American Relief Administration. 17 00:01:50,524 --> 00:01:55,460 In July 1921, noted Russian author Maxim Gorky 18 00:01:55,494 --> 00:01:57,738 issued a plea to the West. 19 00:01:59,257 --> 00:02:02,846 "Gloomy days have come for the country of Tolstoy," 20 00:02:02,881 --> 00:02:06,264 "Dostoyevsky, Mendeleev," Gorky wrote. 21 00:02:06,298 --> 00:02:09,853 "I ask for prompt aid to the Russian people." 22 00:02:09,888 --> 00:02:13,581 "Give bread and medicine." 23 00:02:13,616 --> 00:02:15,963 Gorky never mentioned Vladimir Lenin 24 00:02:15,997 --> 00:02:18,138 or his Bolshevik revolution. 25 00:02:21,244 --> 00:02:24,765 Russia had suffered a drought, which was not unusual. 26 00:02:24,799 --> 00:02:29,079 The famine of 1921 was. 27 00:02:29,114 --> 00:02:31,875 It would become the worst natural disaster in Europe 28 00:02:31,910 --> 00:02:34,775 since the Black Plague in the Middle Ages. 29 00:02:36,708 --> 00:02:39,538 There was this historical coincidence 30 00:02:39,573 --> 00:02:41,437 of a number of social forces: 31 00:02:41,471 --> 00:02:43,542 the collapse of the tsarist regime, 32 00:02:43,577 --> 00:02:45,199 the outbreak of civil war, 33 00:02:45,234 --> 00:02:47,788 the policies of the Bolsheviks themselves. 34 00:02:50,031 --> 00:02:53,207 The government carried out mass requisitioning of grain, 35 00:02:53,242 --> 00:02:56,417 which prevented peasants from feeding themselves 36 00:02:56,452 --> 00:03:00,041 or even having enough seed to carry on next season 37 00:03:00,076 --> 00:03:03,217 planting a new crop. 38 00:03:07,152 --> 00:03:09,534 Herbert Hoover, the new secretary of commerce 39 00:03:09,568 --> 00:03:11,501 under President Warren Harding, 40 00:03:11,536 --> 00:03:14,849 spotted Gorky's plea in a newspaper. 41 00:03:14,884 --> 00:03:17,611 Hoover was also the director 42 00:03:17,645 --> 00:03:19,475 of the American Relief Administration, 43 00:03:19,509 --> 00:03:22,443 known as the ARA. 44 00:03:22,478 --> 00:03:24,721 For most Americans, 45 00:03:24,756 --> 00:03:28,104 Herbert Hoover is associated with the Great Depression. 46 00:03:28,138 --> 00:03:29,899 But back in the 1920s, 47 00:03:29,933 --> 00:03:33,351 his image was one of being a very efficient... 48 00:03:33,385 --> 00:03:36,388 a hardheaded humanitarian 49 00:03:36,423 --> 00:03:38,252 who knew how to get the food through. 50 00:03:38,287 --> 00:03:42,256 No one in the West had better credentials 51 00:03:42,291 --> 00:03:46,295 to answer Gorky's request than Herbert Hoover. 52 00:03:46,329 --> 00:03:49,850 Hoover was a Stanford-trained mining engineer 53 00:03:49,884 --> 00:03:51,990 who had operated in Australia, China, 54 00:03:52,024 --> 00:03:54,510 and Russia's Ural Mountains, 55 00:03:54,544 --> 00:03:57,720 and knew the logistics of moving men and materiel 56 00:03:57,754 --> 00:03:59,929 around the world. 57 00:03:59,963 --> 00:04:04,554 When World War I broke out, he was asked to organize the relief 58 00:04:04,589 --> 00:04:07,350 of an entire nation. 59 00:04:07,385 --> 00:04:10,664 There were seven million Belgians 60 00:04:10,698 --> 00:04:13,874 living under German occupation. 61 00:04:13,908 --> 00:04:16,463 So it became Hoover's responsibility 62 00:04:16,497 --> 00:04:19,224 to provide daily food assistance 63 00:04:19,259 --> 00:04:20,950 that would keep all those people alive. 64 00:04:20,984 --> 00:04:25,161 And Hoover showed that he had the administrative talents 65 00:04:25,195 --> 00:04:29,441 as well as the humanitarian sympathies to pull this off. 66 00:04:29,476 --> 00:04:33,963 And he became an American hero and even an international hero. 67 00:04:41,419 --> 00:04:43,593 After the war, 68 00:04:43,628 --> 00:04:45,837 the Paris Peace Conference asked the United States 69 00:04:45,871 --> 00:04:49,047 to feed tens of millions in 21 countries 70 00:04:49,081 --> 00:04:53,534 throughout war-torn Europe and the Near East. 71 00:04:53,569 --> 00:04:58,401 The U.S. created the ARA with Herbert Hoover as its head. 72 00:05:00,507 --> 00:05:03,441 It has been said, and I think correctly, 73 00:05:03,475 --> 00:05:05,063 that Herbert Hoover was responsible 74 00:05:05,097 --> 00:05:10,551 for saving more lives than any person who has ever lived. 75 00:05:13,071 --> 00:05:16,661 He became known as the "Master of Emergencies" 76 00:05:16,695 --> 00:05:19,698 and the "Great Humanitarian," 77 00:05:19,733 --> 00:05:21,666 the embodiment of an America 78 00:05:21,700 --> 00:05:26,326 proud of its newfound sense of itself as an altruistic nation. 79 00:05:26,360 --> 00:05:31,192 Hoover accepted Russia's plea for help. 80 00:05:34,782 --> 00:05:38,855 Will Shafroth, 29, son of the governor of Colorado, 81 00:05:38,890 --> 00:05:41,996 joined other famine relief workers from the United States 82 00:05:42,031 --> 00:05:44,827 and headed for Moscow. 83 00:05:44,861 --> 00:05:48,555 Spurred by a sense of adventure and altruism, "Hoover's boys," 84 00:05:48,589 --> 00:05:50,142 as they came to be known, 85 00:05:50,177 --> 00:05:53,042 had done relief work after World War I 86 00:05:53,076 --> 00:05:56,114 and represented an America that emerged from the war 87 00:05:56,148 --> 00:05:57,702 as a world power. 88 00:06:00,463 --> 00:06:04,364 Now their idealism would be tested 89 00:06:04,398 --> 00:06:06,573 by a railroad system in disarray... 90 00:06:09,127 --> 00:06:10,749 a forbidding climate... 91 00:06:13,165 --> 00:06:16,134 a ruthless government suspicious of their motives... 92 00:06:17,929 --> 00:06:20,380 and the shear scale of starvation and death. 93 00:06:22,416 --> 00:06:25,177 They would be among the first Americans to see 94 00:06:25,212 --> 00:06:26,869 the earth-shaking revolution 95 00:06:26,903 --> 00:06:30,079 that Vladimir Lenin and his Bolsheviks had wrought 96 00:06:30,113 --> 00:06:32,219 and the first to feel the tensions 97 00:06:32,253 --> 00:06:34,808 that would mark U.S.-Soviet relations 98 00:06:34,842 --> 00:06:36,568 for much of the century. 99 00:06:43,817 --> 00:06:46,406 On September 1, 1921, 100 00:06:46,440 --> 00:06:49,201 the first ship carrying American relief supplies 101 00:06:49,236 --> 00:06:51,272 arrived from Hamburg, Germany, 102 00:06:51,307 --> 00:06:54,793 and docked at Petrograd, the former St. Petersburg. 103 00:06:57,589 --> 00:07:01,973 It began to unload 700 tons of rations that had been in storage 104 00:07:02,007 --> 00:07:03,664 since the European relief. 105 00:07:08,462 --> 00:07:11,879 The ARA's goal in Russia was to do what it had done 106 00:07:11,914 --> 00:07:13,916 in postwar Europe: 107 00:07:13,950 --> 00:07:17,678 feed children, mainly in the cities. 108 00:07:17,713 --> 00:07:21,441 Feeding one million seemed a manageable task. 109 00:07:24,029 --> 00:07:26,756 Within a week, the first ARA feeding station opened 110 00:07:26,791 --> 00:07:29,587 in Petrograd School number 27. 111 00:07:35,524 --> 00:07:40,460 The menu was white bread, corn grits, rice, milk, cocoa, 112 00:07:40,494 --> 00:07:42,910 and sugar. 113 00:07:42,945 --> 00:07:48,502 At a time when there was not a spark of hope anywhere, 114 00:07:48,537 --> 00:07:52,126 unexpectedly, without any reason, 115 00:07:52,161 --> 00:07:55,923 nobody could explain why Americans came, 116 00:07:55,958 --> 00:08:00,238 why they provide food for children. 117 00:08:07,556 --> 00:08:10,282 The "Chicago Tribune" began running a story 118 00:08:10,317 --> 00:08:13,769 that would captivate America. 119 00:08:17,669 --> 00:08:20,051 It also appealed for funds. 120 00:08:24,607 --> 00:08:28,059 Private donations began to flow to the ARA. 121 00:08:35,135 --> 00:08:37,689 Five days after his arrival in Moscow, 122 00:08:37,724 --> 00:08:41,693 Will Shafroth was part of an ARA scouting party sent east 123 00:08:41,728 --> 00:08:44,869 to evaluate the famine in the Volga valley. 124 00:08:53,049 --> 00:08:57,778 People had fled their villages, desperate to escape the famine. 125 00:09:02,611 --> 00:09:05,027 At the station at Kazan on the northern Volga, 126 00:09:05,061 --> 00:09:07,477 Shafroth noted "wretched creatures 127 00:09:07,512 --> 00:09:11,274 huddled together in compact masses like a seal colony." 128 00:09:14,554 --> 00:09:18,558 Most were children whose mothers had deserted them or had died. 129 00:09:30,535 --> 00:09:33,365 Shafroth and his fellow scouts then drove to a home 130 00:09:33,400 --> 00:09:35,402 for orphaned and abandoned children 131 00:09:35,436 --> 00:09:38,992 whose lice-ridden clothes had to be destroyed. 132 00:09:40,580 --> 00:09:43,065 "I saw emaciated little skeletons, 133 00:09:43,099 --> 00:09:47,587 "whose gaunt faces and toothpick legs testified to the truth 134 00:09:47,621 --> 00:09:50,831 of the report that they were dying daily by the dozen." 135 00:09:54,248 --> 00:09:56,803 "The stench was nauseating." 136 00:09:58,528 --> 00:10:02,774 He served with the ARA in Poland right after the war, 137 00:10:02,809 --> 00:10:06,364 but he had never witnessed scenes of horror like this. 138 00:10:09,056 --> 00:10:13,474 Shafroth witnessed the same or worse in Simbirsk, 139 00:10:13,509 --> 00:10:17,720 in Sengiley, in Samara. 140 00:10:22,138 --> 00:10:25,348 Once the richest grain-growing province in the Volga valley, 141 00:10:25,383 --> 00:10:28,731 Samara was now at the heart of the famine. 142 00:10:30,768 --> 00:10:33,874 My father wrote about one children's home 143 00:10:33,909 --> 00:10:39,362 in Samara where 283 children were confined to three rooms. 144 00:10:45,299 --> 00:10:48,475 "They were sitting on the floor, 145 00:10:48,509 --> 00:10:51,029 "and when I asked the brave little lady where they slept, 146 00:10:51,064 --> 00:10:53,998 "she pointed to the floor and said, 'There. 147 00:10:54,032 --> 00:10:56,483 "We have no other place for them.' 148 00:10:56,517 --> 00:11:00,073 "And then she had those little, hungry, homeless waifs 149 00:11:00,107 --> 00:11:02,489 sing for me." 150 00:11:16,261 --> 00:11:19,886 My dad said he had to turn away. 151 00:11:19,920 --> 00:11:22,820 It was more than he could stand. 152 00:11:28,308 --> 00:11:32,899 In October 1921, Colonel Walter L. Bell, 153 00:11:32,933 --> 00:11:35,073 a National Guardsman from Syracuse, 154 00:11:35,108 --> 00:11:38,180 was dispatched into the abyss of the unknown... 155 00:11:38,214 --> 00:11:42,253 Ufa in Bashkiria, 725 miles from Moscow, 156 00:11:42,287 --> 00:11:45,808 at the foot of the Ural Mountains. 157 00:11:45,843 --> 00:11:49,570 His relief district would expand east across the Urals 158 00:11:49,605 --> 00:11:51,641 to the edge of Siberia. 159 00:11:54,817 --> 00:11:58,269 "It is impossible to describe the suffering and misery 160 00:11:58,303 --> 00:12:01,203 that presented itself on every side." 161 00:12:05,483 --> 00:12:08,210 "I found the only food was made from weeds 162 00:12:08,244 --> 00:12:13,456 mixed with ground-up bones, tree bark, and clay." 163 00:12:14,837 --> 00:12:18,082 The famine was awful. 164 00:12:18,116 --> 00:12:23,225 People were eating almost everything 165 00:12:23,259 --> 00:12:25,158 that could be swallowed. 166 00:12:25,192 --> 00:12:28,575 They ate straw from the roof. 167 00:12:31,060 --> 00:12:34,788 Using this straw and such substitutes of food, 168 00:12:34,823 --> 00:12:36,686 they became ill and they look 169 00:12:36,721 --> 00:12:38,896 something like fat men, 170 00:12:38,930 --> 00:12:42,762 but it was the beginning of their illness. 171 00:12:48,733 --> 00:12:54,635 We had a camel... two camels our family had. 172 00:12:54,670 --> 00:12:58,847 Finally, of course, we ate him, our family. 173 00:12:58,881 --> 00:13:06,095 So we ate all cats, dogs, horses, everything. 174 00:13:09,098 --> 00:13:11,169 Shafroth and Bell wired their reports 175 00:13:11,204 --> 00:13:13,551 to Colonel William Haskell in Moscow, 176 00:13:13,585 --> 00:13:15,691 a retired Army officer who was the director 177 00:13:15,725 --> 00:13:18,487 of the ARA's Russian relief. 178 00:13:20,109 --> 00:13:24,044 Haskell began to grasp the enormity of the problem. 179 00:13:24,079 --> 00:13:27,910 In October 1921, he wired Hoover in Washington 180 00:13:27,945 --> 00:13:30,499 that the starvation would peak in the winter 181 00:13:30,533 --> 00:13:34,434 and affect 16 million people. 182 00:13:40,371 --> 00:13:42,028 Hoover realized the challenge 183 00:13:42,062 --> 00:13:45,307 was not hunger, as in postwar Europe. 184 00:13:45,341 --> 00:13:49,621 Soviet Russia faced the greatest famine in history. 185 00:13:49,656 --> 00:13:54,281 Feeding one million children would only scratch the surface. 186 00:13:54,316 --> 00:13:56,836 He needed to feed adults as well. 187 00:13:58,872 --> 00:14:02,703 That would mean funding from Congress. 188 00:14:04,844 --> 00:14:06,776 Yet he worried Americans would be reluctant 189 00:14:06,811 --> 00:14:08,537 to spend their tax dollars on people 190 00:14:08,571 --> 00:14:11,781 whose Communist government many saw as monstrous 191 00:14:11,816 --> 00:14:14,888 and intent on spreading revolution. 192 00:14:17,097 --> 00:14:20,204 We had had a Red scare in our own domestic politics 193 00:14:20,238 --> 00:14:25,002 in 1919, 1920, a general strike in Seattle, 194 00:14:25,036 --> 00:14:26,658 a bombing of the home 195 00:14:26,693 --> 00:14:29,938 of the attorney general of the United States, never solved. 196 00:14:29,972 --> 00:14:33,976 There were many reasons to fear that left-wing agitation, 197 00:14:34,011 --> 00:14:37,497 even of the Communist variety, was a serious menace. 198 00:14:39,809 --> 00:14:43,054 Hoover had a reputation not just as a humanitarian 199 00:14:43,089 --> 00:14:46,333 but also as a staunch anti-Communist. 200 00:14:46,368 --> 00:14:49,474 In postwar Central Europe, 201 00:14:49,509 --> 00:14:52,581 he had helped thwart Lenin's attempts to expand Communism 202 00:14:52,615 --> 00:14:54,686 by threatening to withhold relief supplies 203 00:14:54,721 --> 00:14:58,104 from countries sympathetic to the Bolsheviks. 204 00:14:58,138 --> 00:15:01,314 That worried the American left. 205 00:15:05,801 --> 00:15:09,287 Left-of-center people... legitimately, I think... 206 00:15:09,322 --> 00:15:13,291 suspected that his motivation here wasn't pure, 207 00:15:13,326 --> 00:15:15,845 because he had this counterrevolutionary record 208 00:15:15,880 --> 00:15:19,711 with respect to food relief in Eastern Europe. 209 00:15:19,746 --> 00:15:24,613 To them, a Socialist revolution or a Socialist regime in Russia 210 00:15:24,647 --> 00:15:26,926 was an experiment that should be encouraged. 211 00:15:29,031 --> 00:15:30,860 In Hoover's mind, 212 00:15:30,895 --> 00:15:33,967 there was no conflict between feeding people... 213 00:15:34,002 --> 00:15:36,556 giving sort of straightforward humanitarian relief 214 00:15:36,590 --> 00:15:38,213 on the one hand... 215 00:15:38,247 --> 00:15:42,424 and using food as a political weapon to stop Bolshevism. 216 00:15:42,458 --> 00:15:44,391 Bolshevism was wicked. 217 00:15:44,426 --> 00:15:45,530 It was evil. 218 00:15:45,565 --> 00:15:47,498 Stopping it was humanitarian. 219 00:15:47,532 --> 00:15:51,847 Hoover felt the example of American efficiency 220 00:15:51,881 --> 00:15:56,438 and generosity might do more than just feed the Russians. 221 00:15:56,472 --> 00:16:01,063 That was part of his pitch to President Warren Harding. 222 00:16:01,098 --> 00:16:03,410 He wanted and I think implied 223 00:16:03,445 --> 00:16:07,345 that food famine relief could, perhaps, 224 00:16:07,380 --> 00:16:08,657 lead to a regime change 225 00:16:08,691 --> 00:16:12,730 and that it might get rid of the Bolsheviks. 226 00:16:12,764 --> 00:16:15,008 He thought that by bringing in 227 00:16:15,043 --> 00:16:19,150 Americans with their talents and administrative expertise... 228 00:16:19,185 --> 00:16:20,772 their efficiency, if you will... 229 00:16:20,807 --> 00:16:25,018 that they could serve as an example to the Russians. 230 00:16:25,053 --> 00:16:28,470 Lenin was afraid that he would try to sneak arms in with food 231 00:16:28,504 --> 00:16:30,161 and try to organize a resistance. 232 00:16:30,196 --> 00:16:33,509 No, no, Hoover was not trying to do that at all. 233 00:16:35,822 --> 00:16:38,480 Hoover's primary argument for helping the Russians 234 00:16:38,514 --> 00:16:40,378 was an economic one. 235 00:16:40,413 --> 00:16:44,210 Feeding Russians would help American farmers 236 00:16:44,244 --> 00:16:46,660 who were sitting on huge surpluses. 237 00:16:46,695 --> 00:16:51,976 Hoover asked Congress for $20 million to buy surplus corn 238 00:16:52,011 --> 00:16:55,497 for an expanded relief program for children and for adults. 239 00:16:57,706 --> 00:16:59,673 Some in the House feared it would bolster 240 00:16:59,708 --> 00:17:01,399 the Bolshevik government. 241 00:17:01,434 --> 00:17:05,472 With unemployment reaching five million during a recession, 242 00:17:05,507 --> 00:17:08,510 some senators favored projects that would create jobs 243 00:17:08,544 --> 00:17:11,444 for Americans or help veterans in distress. 244 00:17:14,240 --> 00:17:18,865 Hoover supporters and the Farm Belt lobby carried the day. 245 00:17:18,899 --> 00:17:22,938 On December 22, 1921, with Harding's backing, 246 00:17:22,972 --> 00:17:25,182 Congress approved the purchase of surplus corn. 247 00:17:27,356 --> 00:17:30,083 Hoover also insisted the Soviets buy wheat seed 248 00:17:30,118 --> 00:17:35,468 to plant in the spring to secure the harvest of 1922. 249 00:17:35,502 --> 00:17:38,195 The ARA campaign in Russia 250 00:17:38,229 --> 00:17:42,958 would be the largest relief operation to date... 251 00:17:42,992 --> 00:17:46,962 and the first to provide relief to an adversary. 252 00:17:48,136 --> 00:17:50,690 The challenge was to get the food 253 00:17:50,724 --> 00:17:53,037 almost halfway around the world, 254 00:17:53,072 --> 00:17:56,523 where up to 100,000 Russians were dying every week. 255 00:18:06,119 --> 00:18:10,192 America's surplus corn and wheat seed began to move quickly 256 00:18:10,227 --> 00:18:13,402 from the heartland to the holds of oceangoing freighters. 257 00:18:20,616 --> 00:18:24,655 The first relief ships left New York in mid-January 1922, 258 00:18:24,689 --> 00:18:27,658 carrying 300,000 tons of grain. 259 00:18:30,074 --> 00:18:34,941 The task before the ARA workers in Russia was Herculean. 260 00:18:34,975 --> 00:18:37,806 During the child feeding, 261 00:18:37,840 --> 00:18:41,154 the ARA had divided Russia into ten districts. 262 00:18:41,189 --> 00:18:46,090 Each had an American supervisor and a small staff of Americans. 263 00:18:48,161 --> 00:18:50,715 Once again, these relief workers set off 264 00:18:50,750 --> 00:18:53,062 into the far corners of their districts, 265 00:18:53,097 --> 00:18:57,239 estimating the new needs, arranging for more warehouses 266 00:18:57,274 --> 00:18:59,655 to store 20 million bushels of corn 267 00:18:59,690 --> 00:19:01,588 and thousands of tons of seed... 268 00:19:03,970 --> 00:19:06,800 and directing the village committees 269 00:19:06,835 --> 00:19:10,666 to identify starving adults for the expanded relief. 270 00:19:13,359 --> 00:19:16,569 They traveled over the flat expanses of the Russian steppes 271 00:19:16,603 --> 00:19:20,124 for silent days in crude sleighs, 272 00:19:20,159 --> 00:19:21,919 by train if they could find a private car. 273 00:19:25,025 --> 00:19:29,064 Their greatest physical threat was typhus, spread by lice. 274 00:19:30,652 --> 00:19:33,413 They're afraid to travel with ordinary Russians 275 00:19:33,448 --> 00:19:38,487 in third-class cars because of lice. 276 00:19:38,522 --> 00:19:39,902 They're traveling along in a sled, 277 00:19:39,937 --> 00:19:42,181 and they get out and they go into a peasant hut 278 00:19:42,215 --> 00:19:46,668 for the night and they see the walls crawling with lice. 279 00:19:48,808 --> 00:19:52,156 So they go back in the sled, they bundle up, and they know 280 00:19:52,191 --> 00:19:55,884 "Mr. Louse," as they called him, couldn't survive in that cold. 281 00:19:58,645 --> 00:20:02,477 The ARA had to expand its staff. 282 00:20:02,511 --> 00:20:05,445 With no more than 200 American supervisors in Russia 283 00:20:05,480 --> 00:20:11,831 at any one time, it hired 120,000 Russians to do the work. 284 00:20:11,865 --> 00:20:14,005 They invited those who could speak 285 00:20:14,040 --> 00:20:17,250 at least a little bit English or other foreign languages. 286 00:20:17,285 --> 00:20:20,667 For ARA, it was practical reasons. 287 00:20:20,702 --> 00:20:23,256 They had an education. 288 00:20:23,291 --> 00:20:25,879 Because most Communists were without any education, 289 00:20:25,914 --> 00:20:29,642 no languages, but the Russian authorities, 290 00:20:29,676 --> 00:20:33,577 they interpreted this as an opportunity for the ARA 291 00:20:33,611 --> 00:20:38,478 to find people who would be able to support 292 00:20:38,513 --> 00:20:40,031 counterrevolutions, all these things. 293 00:20:40,066 --> 00:20:41,792 So, different perceptions. 294 00:20:41,826 --> 00:20:47,004 Will Shafroth's Samara district was divided into eight regions, 295 00:20:47,038 --> 00:20:49,627 each with at least one warehouse. 296 00:20:52,043 --> 00:20:54,391 Every village had a committee of local citizens 297 00:20:54,425 --> 00:20:56,496 who decided who got fed. 298 00:20:59,568 --> 00:21:04,746 Shafroth would supervise 16,000 Russians in 900 kitchens. 299 00:21:09,785 --> 00:21:12,374 In his sprawling Ufa Urals district, 300 00:21:12,409 --> 00:21:14,997 Walter Bell faced even greater challenges. 301 00:21:16,896 --> 00:21:21,003 The population of that district was almost nine million 302 00:21:21,038 --> 00:21:23,592 and the territory is bigger than France. 303 00:21:23,627 --> 00:21:26,146 And there were only five or six Americans 304 00:21:26,181 --> 00:21:28,666 supervising the operations. 305 00:21:28,701 --> 00:21:31,082 They didn't know Russian at all. 306 00:21:31,117 --> 00:21:34,051 They knew nothing about Bashkir and Bashkiria. 307 00:21:34,085 --> 00:21:36,087 They kept asking each other, 308 00:21:36,122 --> 00:21:38,642 "Have you ever heard about those Bashkirs?" 309 00:21:38,676 --> 00:21:41,230 They, they didn't know that such people exist. 310 00:21:44,061 --> 00:21:46,581 The Bashkirs had been a nomadic people 311 00:21:46,615 --> 00:21:50,964 who settled in what would become Russia's lawless wild east. 312 00:21:54,623 --> 00:21:57,108 In addition to the Muslim Bashkirs 313 00:21:57,143 --> 00:21:58,731 who were hostile to the Russians 314 00:21:58,765 --> 00:22:00,422 and had a reputation for plunder, 315 00:22:00,457 --> 00:22:03,494 Bell's district contained Kazakhs, 316 00:22:03,529 --> 00:22:05,945 who for centuries had attacked the Bashkirs 317 00:22:05,979 --> 00:22:08,396 and hated the Russians. 318 00:22:08,430 --> 00:22:12,952 "The diplomatic entanglements involved," Bell would write, 319 00:22:12,986 --> 00:22:15,230 "make the Paris Peace Conference seem 320 00:22:15,264 --> 00:22:17,266 like a well-conducted private school." 321 00:22:19,372 --> 00:22:22,410 Walter Bell faced a formidable task. 322 00:22:22,444 --> 00:22:25,689 Unlike Shafroth, he had no previous experience 323 00:22:25,723 --> 00:22:27,656 with relief work. 324 00:22:33,282 --> 00:22:36,182 Vladimir Lenin kept a watchful eye on the ARA. 325 00:22:39,427 --> 00:22:42,844 In February, the Cheka... his secret police... 326 00:22:42,878 --> 00:22:47,296 ordered its agents "to purge the ARA of undesirable elements." 327 00:22:49,022 --> 00:22:53,130 These agents began to infiltrate ARA offices, 328 00:22:53,164 --> 00:22:56,582 hired as Russian assistants. 329 00:22:56,616 --> 00:22:59,308 They reported to Alexander Eiduk, 330 00:22:59,343 --> 00:23:02,381 a Cheka agent who was the Soviet government's liaison 331 00:23:02,415 --> 00:23:04,555 with the ARA. 332 00:23:04,590 --> 00:23:08,904 Was there any political activity made by the ARA? 333 00:23:08,939 --> 00:23:12,632 Did they meet any suspicious persons here? 334 00:23:12,667 --> 00:23:14,772 Did they agitate against anything? 335 00:23:14,807 --> 00:23:18,293 Did you notice any anti-Communist slogans 336 00:23:18,327 --> 00:23:20,709 in their declarations? 337 00:23:22,539 --> 00:23:27,095 Eiduk also tried to undermine the ARA's American staff. 338 00:23:27,129 --> 00:23:32,756 One target was David Kinne, the 29-year-old district supervisor 339 00:23:32,790 --> 00:23:37,001 of Saratov Province on the Volga. 340 00:23:37,036 --> 00:23:40,453 Cheka agents had secret instructions from their chiefs 341 00:23:40,488 --> 00:23:42,938 to use every American weakness 342 00:23:42,973 --> 00:23:45,458 to get control over American supply. 343 00:23:45,493 --> 00:23:50,049 And David Kinne was a perfect match for them 344 00:23:50,083 --> 00:23:52,500 because he was an alcoholic. 345 00:23:54,950 --> 00:23:59,748 The Cheka exploited Kinne's weakness. 346 00:23:59,783 --> 00:24:02,924 The Soviet notion is if they can get control of the food, 347 00:24:02,958 --> 00:24:07,860 they can funnel it to the people they want to get the food, 348 00:24:07,894 --> 00:24:10,587 and they can keep the food away from people 349 00:24:10,621 --> 00:24:13,452 they don't want receiving the food. 350 00:24:15,074 --> 00:24:18,215 Poretskii, that guy from Cheka 351 00:24:18,249 --> 00:24:21,218 who was supervising American operations in Saratov, 352 00:24:21,252 --> 00:24:23,462 he knew exactly what he was doing. 353 00:24:25,878 --> 00:24:29,191 The Cheka agents took over Kinne's operation 354 00:24:29,226 --> 00:24:32,988 and diverted food from children to their political allies. 355 00:24:34,680 --> 00:24:38,235 It took several months before the ARA could reclaim 356 00:24:38,269 --> 00:24:41,031 American control in Saratov province. 357 00:24:45,138 --> 00:24:48,832 In March, David Kinne was dismissed from the ARA 358 00:24:48,866 --> 00:24:51,697 and sent out of Russia a broken man. 359 00:25:03,018 --> 00:25:07,333 American relief ships got as far as the Baltic Sea, 360 00:25:07,367 --> 00:25:11,061 only to become icebound in February and for much of March. 361 00:25:14,443 --> 00:25:17,032 It was the coldest winter in 15 years. 362 00:25:19,621 --> 00:25:21,554 "The Lord seems to have a particular animus 363 00:25:21,589 --> 00:25:25,109 toward the Russian people," an ARA staffer mused. 364 00:25:25,144 --> 00:25:27,698 "He cuts off the rain in the summer 365 00:25:27,733 --> 00:25:30,425 and freezes up the Baltic in winter." 366 00:25:38,606 --> 00:25:42,230 While touring his district in the fall of 1921, 367 00:25:42,264 --> 00:25:45,474 47-year-old Walter Bell contracted typhus. 368 00:25:47,200 --> 00:25:49,996 His Russian assistants drove him for three days 369 00:25:50,031 --> 00:25:52,620 back to Ufa, delirious. 370 00:25:55,484 --> 00:26:00,559 He was unconscious for three weeks and almost died. 371 00:26:00,593 --> 00:26:04,459 Harold Blandy, Bell's assistant in Ufa, 372 00:26:04,493 --> 00:26:06,047 also came down with typhus. 373 00:26:07,393 --> 00:26:10,569 Harold Blandy had a big heart. 374 00:26:10,603 --> 00:26:12,363 Harold Blandy was the type who could not 375 00:26:12,398 --> 00:26:14,573 simply go into a children's home and inspect it. 376 00:26:14,607 --> 00:26:16,229 He had to go into a children's home 377 00:26:16,264 --> 00:26:20,924 and interact with the children, put his hand on the kid's head. 378 00:26:23,823 --> 00:26:27,068 It wasn't a surprise to the Ufa Americans 379 00:26:27,102 --> 00:26:31,003 that Blandy caught typhus. 380 00:26:31,037 --> 00:26:33,730 Blandy died a week later. 381 00:26:36,180 --> 00:26:39,149 To the Russians, his death warranted a tribute... 382 00:26:39,183 --> 00:26:42,980 an elaborate funeral procession in Moscow. 383 00:26:44,637 --> 00:26:49,711 To the ARA, anyone who caught typhus, much less died from it, 384 00:26:49,746 --> 00:26:52,024 was an embarrassment. 385 00:26:52,058 --> 00:26:54,751 To be outwitted by lice was to fall short 386 00:26:54,785 --> 00:26:58,099 of being a cautious and efficient relief worker. 387 00:27:03,622 --> 00:27:06,003 When Walter Bell recovered, 388 00:27:06,038 --> 00:27:08,385 he resumed his tour of some of the remotest parts 389 00:27:08,419 --> 00:27:09,766 of his district. 390 00:27:11,802 --> 00:27:15,944 He found a home in what he called "the wilds of Russia." 391 00:27:21,605 --> 00:27:24,366 He would stop at a village and spend days at a time 392 00:27:24,401 --> 00:27:26,990 with the local Bashkirs and Soviet officials, 393 00:27:27,024 --> 00:27:29,786 including Eiduk's Cheka agents. 394 00:27:34,100 --> 00:27:37,345 "He out thinks these people," a colleague noted, 395 00:27:37,379 --> 00:27:39,727 "and wins them by his courtesy." 396 00:27:41,970 --> 00:27:45,560 The other directors of the ARA regions, 397 00:27:45,594 --> 00:27:51,117 they were not polite with Russian authorities. 398 00:27:51,152 --> 00:27:53,913 And I have read some letters. 399 00:27:53,948 --> 00:27:58,055 They were full of sarcasm, irony, 400 00:27:58,090 --> 00:28:01,818 and sometimes they used rather rude words. 401 00:28:01,852 --> 00:28:06,512 Mr. Bell, he was polite, 402 00:28:06,546 --> 00:28:10,447 and sometimes, when there were his mistake, 403 00:28:10,481 --> 00:28:14,244 he accepted that he was not right. 404 00:28:19,180 --> 00:28:22,355 "One big reason for the friendly contact 405 00:28:22,390 --> 00:28:24,703 "that existed between us and the authorities 406 00:28:24,737 --> 00:28:27,982 "was whenever we had an important question to decide, 407 00:28:28,016 --> 00:28:30,985 we had a conference with the ones concerned." 408 00:28:33,056 --> 00:28:37,370 Bell was older than most of the ARA workers. 409 00:28:37,405 --> 00:28:40,477 And it was easier for local population 410 00:28:40,511 --> 00:28:43,273 to perceive him as a boss. 411 00:28:43,307 --> 00:28:47,001 He's Colonel Bell. 412 00:28:47,035 --> 00:28:51,005 He's, as the Russians would say, "Polkovnik Bell." 413 00:28:51,039 --> 00:28:52,972 And we're dealing with a country here 414 00:28:53,007 --> 00:28:55,837 that has just seen a civil war, 415 00:28:55,872 --> 00:28:58,081 Whites and Reds going back and forth. 416 00:28:58,115 --> 00:29:00,255 Military authority counts for something. 417 00:29:04,466 --> 00:29:07,159 With the Baltic frozen and supplies running low, 418 00:29:07,193 --> 00:29:09,506 Polkovnik Bell told his colleagues 419 00:29:09,540 --> 00:29:11,232 he was forced to put the children's kitchens 420 00:29:11,266 --> 00:29:13,268 on half rations. 421 00:29:15,098 --> 00:29:17,721 Yet he continued to feed the children 422 00:29:17,756 --> 00:29:21,587 of both Russians and Bashkirs with their cooperation, 423 00:29:21,621 --> 00:29:23,244 not interference. 424 00:29:30,838 --> 00:29:33,633 On February 6, 1922, 425 00:29:33,668 --> 00:29:37,741 the first American ship carrying corn to feed Russian adults 426 00:29:37,776 --> 00:29:41,469 docked at Novorossiysk on the Black Sea. 427 00:29:41,503 --> 00:29:44,334 Six weeks had passed since Congress had voted. 428 00:29:47,095 --> 00:29:49,822 The next link in the chain to feed the starving Russians 429 00:29:49,857 --> 00:29:53,032 would be a crucial one, and the weakest. 430 00:29:56,070 --> 00:29:59,901 Years of war had wrecked 80% of Russia's railroads. 431 00:30:02,939 --> 00:30:04,354 An American journalist wrote 432 00:30:04,388 --> 00:30:06,287 of locomotives resting in graveyards 433 00:30:06,321 --> 00:30:10,015 "silently like sleeping monsters"... 434 00:30:10,049 --> 00:30:13,501 of "miles of sick box cars on sidings 435 00:30:13,535 --> 00:30:15,814 like rows of skeletons." 436 00:30:19,403 --> 00:30:24,477 The corn had traveled by ship almost 5,500 miles in 16 days. 437 00:30:28,516 --> 00:30:33,038 The trip from Novorossiysk to Samara was only 1,300 miles, 438 00:30:33,072 --> 00:30:35,834 yet it would take 21 days. 439 00:30:38,077 --> 00:30:41,253 "The dilapidated railroads were urged to do the impossible," 440 00:30:41,287 --> 00:30:45,878 Will Shafroth wrote, "and they did it." 441 00:30:45,913 --> 00:30:49,433 Shafroth received a small first installment of corn 442 00:30:49,468 --> 00:30:51,677 in mid-March. 443 00:30:51,711 --> 00:30:53,886 And actually the Bolsheviks paid 444 00:30:53,921 --> 00:30:56,578 to railroad workers with American corn 445 00:30:56,613 --> 00:30:58,891 to make the trains run. 446 00:30:58,926 --> 00:31:00,789 And it was a big help 447 00:31:00,824 --> 00:31:03,378 because Russian government didn't have money 448 00:31:03,413 --> 00:31:05,242 and didn't have food to pay them. 449 00:31:09,039 --> 00:31:12,146 With relief workers desperately waiting for more supplies, 450 00:31:12,180 --> 00:31:16,115 entire trains began to disappear. 451 00:31:16,150 --> 00:31:20,016 Shafroth wired Moscow that local officials in Samara 452 00:31:20,050 --> 00:31:24,365 had commandeered 95 corn cars for railroad employees. 453 00:31:27,402 --> 00:31:30,612 The authorities in Moscow had no control over their railroads. 454 00:31:32,614 --> 00:31:37,930 By mid-March, almost 7,000 freight cars had left the ports. 455 00:31:37,965 --> 00:31:41,934 At the end of the month, 60,000 tons of supplies were waiting 456 00:31:41,969 --> 00:31:43,763 for the empty cars to return. 457 00:31:57,639 --> 00:32:01,781 Forty-six trains from Odessa in Ukraine were stalled 458 00:32:01,816 --> 00:32:04,577 in one yard west of the Volga. 459 00:32:10,998 --> 00:32:13,759 Supplies from the Baltic via Moscow were stalled 460 00:32:13,793 --> 00:32:15,278 at another train yard. 461 00:32:21,974 --> 00:32:25,460 The result was like logjams on rivers. 462 00:32:28,463 --> 00:32:31,363 Trains were hemmed in. 463 00:32:31,397 --> 00:32:35,056 For three weeks, nothing could move. 464 00:32:37,300 --> 00:32:40,165 Relief supplies from both the Black Sea and the Baltic 465 00:32:40,199 --> 00:32:42,098 to much of the Volga valley 466 00:32:42,132 --> 00:32:45,894 and all of Walter Bell's Ufa-Urals district were stalled. 467 00:32:49,001 --> 00:32:51,210 An estimated 25,000 Russians 468 00:32:51,245 --> 00:32:53,937 died in these regions each week... 469 00:32:55,628 --> 00:32:58,804 75,000 more deaths by the end of March. 470 00:33:01,703 --> 00:33:06,191 People had been dying at this rate all over Russia all winter. 471 00:33:07,675 --> 00:33:12,093 Will Shafroth described a scene he witnessed in Samara. 472 00:33:14,095 --> 00:33:16,442 "I have seen piles of corpses, 473 00:33:16,477 --> 00:33:19,514 "half naked and frozen into the most grotesque positions 474 00:33:19,549 --> 00:33:24,174 "with signs of having been preyed upon by wandering dogs. 475 00:33:24,209 --> 00:33:27,350 "I have seen these bodies 476 00:33:27,384 --> 00:33:30,629 and it is a sight that I can never forget." 477 00:33:33,632 --> 00:33:36,186 Shafroth cabled Haskell in Moscow 478 00:33:36,221 --> 00:33:39,051 that the body of a Russian assistant who recently died 479 00:33:39,086 --> 00:33:43,055 from typhus had been dug up and eaten. 480 00:33:43,090 --> 00:33:45,920 Ten butcher shops, he said, 481 00:33:45,954 --> 00:33:48,026 had been closed for selling human flesh. 482 00:33:52,306 --> 00:33:55,447 Americans read that Shafroth himself had been eaten. 483 00:33:57,449 --> 00:34:02,385 The government tried to stop people eating corpses. 484 00:34:02,419 --> 00:34:06,113 And they led propaganda against this, 485 00:34:06,147 --> 00:34:09,185 and they tried to put guards in the cemeteries 486 00:34:09,219 --> 00:34:13,292 in order to prevent people from eating dead bodies. 487 00:34:15,467 --> 00:34:18,228 Grandma told me about it. 488 00:34:18,263 --> 00:34:20,127 When the dark was coming, 489 00:34:20,161 --> 00:34:25,684 they put a huge lock to save children, 490 00:34:25,718 --> 00:34:28,825 because children were the main target of cannibals. 491 00:34:28,859 --> 00:34:33,312 There were cases of killing children by their own mothers, 492 00:34:33,347 --> 00:34:36,591 by their own parents, and eating them. 493 00:34:36,626 --> 00:34:40,975 Some mothers did that for mercy. 494 00:34:41,009 --> 00:34:44,668 But some mothers killed them to feed other children, 495 00:34:44,703 --> 00:34:47,119 especially very small babies. 496 00:34:50,605 --> 00:34:53,505 And now, at the end of March 1922, 497 00:34:53,539 --> 00:34:56,646 dozens of trains with relief supplies were stalled. 498 00:34:58,924 --> 00:35:02,824 It was unclear why the first trains were detained. 499 00:35:02,859 --> 00:35:06,725 What was clear is that only the Russians could undo 500 00:35:06,759 --> 00:35:09,210 the train jam. 501 00:35:09,245 --> 00:35:13,283 Alexander Eiduk, the Russian in charge, 502 00:35:13,318 --> 00:35:16,942 told Haskell everything was under control. 503 00:35:16,976 --> 00:35:19,669 For two weeks, he did nothing. 504 00:35:19,703 --> 00:35:24,398 Another 50,000 Russians starved to death. 505 00:35:24,432 --> 00:35:27,918 If the American wheat seed were not planted that spring, 506 00:35:27,953 --> 00:35:30,300 there would be no harvest in the fall. 507 00:35:30,335 --> 00:35:33,614 The famine would continue another year. 508 00:35:33,648 --> 00:35:38,066 Haskell decided it was time for a showdown. 509 00:35:38,101 --> 00:35:41,173 He decides to send a cable 510 00:35:41,208 --> 00:35:43,693 in the clear... not coded, in the clear... 511 00:35:43,727 --> 00:35:45,350 to Herbert Hoover, 512 00:35:45,384 --> 00:35:47,800 meaning that the Kremlin would be able to see 513 00:35:47,835 --> 00:35:49,250 the message he was sending. 514 00:35:49,285 --> 00:35:53,254 And the message was the Soviets are not only not helping, 515 00:35:53,289 --> 00:35:55,049 they're being obstructionist, 516 00:35:55,083 --> 00:35:59,018 and that until he got better cooperation, 517 00:35:59,053 --> 00:36:01,435 all relief supplies from the United States 518 00:36:01,469 --> 00:36:03,506 ought to be held up at port. 519 00:36:10,685 --> 00:36:13,757 The engineer in Herbert Hoover had foreseen the limits 520 00:36:13,792 --> 00:36:16,208 of Russia's railroads. 521 00:36:16,243 --> 00:36:19,453 He had testified before Congress that $20 million worth of corn 522 00:36:19,487 --> 00:36:23,146 would test these limits. 523 00:36:23,181 --> 00:36:25,942 When Haskell's telegram arrived, 524 00:36:25,976 --> 00:36:28,634 Hoover was being blamed by his critics on the left 525 00:36:28,669 --> 00:36:32,845 for exaggerating Russia's transportation problem. 526 00:36:32,880 --> 00:36:36,539 He was attempting "to kill the Soviet government," they argued, 527 00:36:36,573 --> 00:36:39,266 by limiting relief supplies. 528 00:36:40,681 --> 00:36:42,303 Hoover could have silenced these critics 529 00:36:42,338 --> 00:36:44,788 by releasing Haskell's telegram. 530 00:36:44,823 --> 00:36:47,584 But he felt stirring up anti-Soviet feelings 531 00:36:47,619 --> 00:36:49,862 would be inappropriate for an agency 532 00:36:49,897 --> 00:36:52,796 "engaged in the business of saving human lives." 533 00:36:56,041 --> 00:36:58,423 Lenin's government got the message. 534 00:36:58,457 --> 00:37:02,565 It humiliated, then fired, Eiduk. 535 00:37:02,599 --> 00:37:05,188 It brought in Felix Dzerzhinski, 536 00:37:05,223 --> 00:37:07,570 People's Commissar of Transportation, 537 00:37:07,604 --> 00:37:10,089 better known as the founder of the Cheka 538 00:37:10,124 --> 00:37:14,784 and mastermind of the Red Terror during the civil war. 539 00:37:14,818 --> 00:37:18,753 He was the most feared man in Soviet Russia. 540 00:37:18,788 --> 00:37:22,274 It was very important symbolically. 541 00:37:22,309 --> 00:37:25,553 The dreadful Iron Felix was appointed 542 00:37:25,588 --> 00:37:27,624 as a railroad commissar. 543 00:37:27,659 --> 00:37:31,041 And every railroad worker understood. 544 00:37:31,076 --> 00:37:32,767 It's a sign. 545 00:37:32,802 --> 00:37:35,943 "We should do something, otherwise we will be shot." 546 00:37:35,977 --> 00:37:37,807 And the trains started to run. 547 00:37:58,483 --> 00:38:01,071 The corn was finally on its way. 548 00:38:03,073 --> 00:38:04,868 Its distribution would be planned 549 00:38:04,903 --> 00:38:08,941 in hundreds of ARA offices across Russia. 550 00:38:08,976 --> 00:38:13,877 Here the Americans still faced major hurdles. 551 00:38:13,912 --> 00:38:17,743 The culture clash was profound. 552 00:38:17,778 --> 00:38:20,884 A lot of the people the Americans hired 553 00:38:20,919 --> 00:38:23,439 had never really worked in an office before. 554 00:38:23,473 --> 00:38:24,992 If they had worked in an office, 555 00:38:25,026 --> 00:38:26,787 it wasn't like an American office. 556 00:38:26,821 --> 00:38:28,927 The Americans wanted you to get to work on time. 557 00:38:28,961 --> 00:38:31,688 You start work at 8:00. 558 00:38:31,723 --> 00:38:34,277 What the Americans found was the Russians would wander in late. 559 00:38:34,312 --> 00:38:36,348 "Well, there was a goat for sale up the street, 560 00:38:36,383 --> 00:38:38,074 and I had to go check that out." 561 00:38:38,108 --> 00:38:40,766 It would drive them nuts. 562 00:38:44,391 --> 00:38:48,533 There were even problems with the elite they hired. 563 00:38:48,567 --> 00:38:50,983 "With the best will in the world, 564 00:38:51,018 --> 00:38:54,504 it is rather difficult for an ex-princess to do cross-filing," 565 00:38:54,539 --> 00:38:57,473 wrote a relief worker from Montana. 566 00:39:00,407 --> 00:39:02,340 Especially baffling to the Americans 567 00:39:02,374 --> 00:39:04,825 was the sense of passivity and resignation 568 00:39:04,859 --> 00:39:07,206 on the part of peasants who came for help. 569 00:39:10,555 --> 00:39:15,698 Many Russians saw in that famine a sign of... 570 00:39:15,732 --> 00:39:19,046 a sort of God will, a sort of retribution 571 00:39:19,080 --> 00:39:21,704 for their bad behavior during the revolution. 572 00:39:21,738 --> 00:39:24,327 They seized church land. 573 00:39:24,362 --> 00:39:26,156 They killed priests. 574 00:39:26,191 --> 00:39:29,608 "So we can only suffer, because we deserved it." 575 00:39:31,438 --> 00:39:34,786 These Americans got pretty impatient with this. 576 00:39:34,820 --> 00:39:39,342 Their attitude was, "Look, it's time to get to work." 577 00:39:39,377 --> 00:39:41,240 This is their Protestant ethic speaking. 578 00:39:41,275 --> 00:39:42,759 "Your fate is in your hands. 579 00:39:42,794 --> 00:39:46,314 "Get up off your knees, start to help out, 580 00:39:46,349 --> 00:39:47,764 and let's get moving." 581 00:40:00,812 --> 00:40:05,437 Despite the culture clash, romance flourished. 582 00:40:05,472 --> 00:40:11,063 The Americans had comfortable quarters, food, and cars. 583 00:40:11,098 --> 00:40:13,480 Their Russian staff was mostly women. 584 00:40:17,794 --> 00:40:22,212 Of the 300 American supervisors, 26... nearly ten percent... 585 00:40:22,247 --> 00:40:24,836 came home with Russian brides. 586 00:40:36,744 --> 00:40:40,196 Weather had helped cause the famine. 587 00:40:40,230 --> 00:40:43,958 Now it once again delayed the relief. 588 00:40:43,993 --> 00:40:48,411 A spring thaw made it almost impossible to get the corn 589 00:40:48,446 --> 00:40:50,965 from the rail-heads to the villages. 590 00:41:03,219 --> 00:41:05,773 The return of winter helped. 591 00:41:15,162 --> 00:41:17,233 Horses were important... 592 00:41:17,267 --> 00:41:21,340 those which had not died or been eaten. 593 00:41:21,375 --> 00:41:26,242 Many were too weak to draw heavy loads over long distances. 594 00:41:30,660 --> 00:41:35,527 Where horsepower was lacking, some relied on camels. 595 00:41:35,562 --> 00:41:38,116 "The camel can live where the horse dies," 596 00:41:38,150 --> 00:41:40,601 the "Chicago Daily News" noted. 597 00:41:40,636 --> 00:41:42,948 "It grubs up herbage from under the snow. 598 00:41:42,983 --> 00:41:46,020 It will exist on anything." 599 00:41:48,471 --> 00:41:53,476 An ARA Russian inspector remembers seeing 2,500 wagons, 600 00:41:53,511 --> 00:41:55,651 drawn mostly by camels, 601 00:41:55,685 --> 00:41:58,895 leave Tsaritsyn and head for Leninsk. 602 00:42:02,830 --> 00:42:05,695 "In spite of the immensity of the steppes," he wrote, 603 00:42:05,730 --> 00:42:08,526 "it was impossible to see the beginning 604 00:42:08,560 --> 00:42:10,907 or the end of this train." 605 00:42:12,875 --> 00:42:16,603 "Even the oldest and most experienced teamsters admitted 606 00:42:16,637 --> 00:42:19,260 they had never seen such a sight." 607 00:42:39,453 --> 00:42:42,318 "Contrary to the popular imagination, 608 00:42:42,352 --> 00:42:45,459 the corn was not heralded with the ringing of church bells," 609 00:42:45,493 --> 00:42:48,427 an ARA physician wrote. 610 00:42:51,845 --> 00:42:55,434 "These people have borne so much 611 00:42:55,469 --> 00:42:58,334 that their emotions have long since exhausted." 612 00:43:12,797 --> 00:43:15,489 He observed the only surviving member of a family of five 613 00:43:15,523 --> 00:43:17,525 clutch her 21-day ration. 614 00:43:23,462 --> 00:43:26,362 My father said that there were a half a million people 615 00:43:26,396 --> 00:43:29,020 in his district who faced starvation 616 00:43:29,054 --> 00:43:31,194 when he began to distribute the corn. 617 00:43:33,576 --> 00:43:37,684 Every household got a month's supply... two pounds per day. 618 00:43:40,031 --> 00:43:42,550 That's the job he came to do, and he was doing it, 619 00:43:42,585 --> 00:43:43,828 and he was very pleased. 620 00:43:55,805 --> 00:43:58,843 People used to call that food "America." 621 00:43:58,877 --> 00:44:01,466 So, we were handed out "America." 622 00:44:01,500 --> 00:44:05,746 At home, people cooked soup out of it, fed their children. 623 00:44:05,781 --> 00:44:08,473 This, of course, was great help to us. 624 00:44:08,507 --> 00:44:12,373 My father used to say, "See, the Americans did the right thing, 625 00:44:12,408 --> 00:44:15,411 sent us help." 626 00:44:18,345 --> 00:44:21,693 Every day in his Ufa Ural Mountains district, 627 00:44:21,728 --> 00:44:26,180 Walter Bell fed 1.6 million Russians, Bashkirs, 628 00:44:26,215 --> 00:44:31,807 Tatars, and Kazakhs in 2,750 kitchens. 629 00:44:31,841 --> 00:44:35,707 One was a three-year-old boy. 630 00:44:38,537 --> 00:44:41,057 I still remember they gave us corn 631 00:44:41,092 --> 00:44:45,372 and sweetened condensed milk. 632 00:44:48,755 --> 00:44:52,103 I was little then, but I still remember the taste 633 00:44:52,137 --> 00:44:54,346 of that American canned condensed milk. 634 00:44:58,040 --> 00:45:00,318 Our father brought it to us. 635 00:45:03,217 --> 00:45:06,911 Thanks to this help I survived, 636 00:45:06,945 --> 00:45:10,673 and then studied and became a famous dancer. 637 00:45:23,859 --> 00:45:26,033 Before the corn and wheat seed arrived, 638 00:45:26,068 --> 00:45:31,383 up to five million Russians had starved to death. 639 00:45:31,418 --> 00:45:34,490 By August 1922, 640 00:45:34,524 --> 00:45:37,320 five months after the corn reached the villages, 641 00:45:37,355 --> 00:45:40,910 the ARA was feeding up to 11 million Soviet citizens 642 00:45:40,945 --> 00:45:44,258 every day in 19,000 kitchens. 643 00:45:54,061 --> 00:45:59,066 Jesus Christ brought 13 people bread. 644 00:45:59,101 --> 00:46:03,001 Herbert Hoover gave millions of people bread. 645 00:46:03,036 --> 00:46:08,766 You cannot find other example of such behavior in world history. 646 00:46:10,595 --> 00:46:14,564 Herbert Hoover had insisted the Russians buy wheat seed, 647 00:46:14,599 --> 00:46:17,913 which the peasants planted in the spring of 1922. 648 00:46:19,949 --> 00:46:21,882 The wheat harvested that fall 649 00:46:21,917 --> 00:46:24,471 ensured the famine would not return. 650 00:46:27,439 --> 00:46:31,512 The starvation in the Volga valley was finally over. 651 00:46:35,171 --> 00:46:38,036 "Whether the Russians or anyone else realizes it," 652 00:46:38,071 --> 00:46:40,073 the ARA's historian wrote, 653 00:46:40,107 --> 00:46:43,801 "we have saved a nation." 654 00:46:52,533 --> 00:46:56,434 The ARA's relief operation in Russia began to wind down. 655 00:47:05,581 --> 00:47:09,965 Will Shafroth soon wrote of his experience. 656 00:47:09,999 --> 00:47:12,830 "The thing which gives me the most satisfaction 657 00:47:12,864 --> 00:47:16,903 "is the gratitude with which our help was received, 658 00:47:16,937 --> 00:47:18,870 "from the simplest peasant who would have died 659 00:47:18,905 --> 00:47:21,942 "if he had not been fed by America, 660 00:47:21,977 --> 00:47:26,360 "from the mother whose children ate at an ARA kitchen. 661 00:47:26,395 --> 00:47:30,088 These are the people for whom we brought in the food." 662 00:47:33,402 --> 00:47:35,507 Nowhere was that gratitude greater 663 00:47:35,542 --> 00:47:37,647 than among Russia's 14 million Muslims, 664 00:47:37,682 --> 00:47:41,789 who paid Colonel Walter Bell a special tribute. 665 00:47:41,824 --> 00:47:45,414 This was an extraordinary moment 666 00:47:45,448 --> 00:47:50,419 when the local Muslim officials decide to show Bell... 667 00:47:50,453 --> 00:47:55,700 this infidel... a copy of the Koran. 668 00:47:55,734 --> 00:47:57,633 It was incredible. 669 00:47:57,667 --> 00:48:01,430 They had never shown it to anyone before, to any... 670 00:48:01,464 --> 00:48:03,881 to anyone who is not Muslim. 671 00:48:06,331 --> 00:48:09,369 And they had never shown it even to Russians, 672 00:48:09,403 --> 00:48:13,511 with whom they lived side by side for many years. 673 00:48:17,066 --> 00:48:20,518 Before he left Russia in July 1923, 674 00:48:20,552 --> 00:48:23,935 Bell, who served longer than any other ARA supervisor, 675 00:48:23,970 --> 00:48:28,250 was named honorary mayor of Ufa. 676 00:48:28,284 --> 00:48:32,910 He became known as the "idol of the Bashkirs." 677 00:48:35,567 --> 00:48:38,743 "I feel as though I were a part of them. 678 00:48:38,777 --> 00:48:41,746 "I have lived with them through the worst period of suffering 679 00:48:41,780 --> 00:48:43,334 "they have ever endured. 680 00:48:43,368 --> 00:48:48,097 "I have traveled into every corner of their republic, 681 00:48:48,132 --> 00:48:49,374 "slept under their roofs, 682 00:48:49,409 --> 00:48:52,412 "broken their bread 683 00:48:52,446 --> 00:48:55,691 and listened to their tales of woe and happiness." 684 00:48:59,143 --> 00:49:01,145 "They nursed me through typhus." 685 00:49:04,217 --> 00:49:08,462 "I feel as if I am part of their new existence." 686 00:49:16,746 --> 00:49:19,853 Herbert Hoover had hoped the ARA's efficiency 687 00:49:19,887 --> 00:49:24,340 would inspire the Russians to overthrow the Bolsheviks. 688 00:49:24,375 --> 00:49:27,343 Instead, it may have saved the Soviet regime. 689 00:49:29,311 --> 00:49:30,760 He himself in the late '20s 690 00:49:30,795 --> 00:49:33,936 said to a reporter named Henry Wolfe 691 00:49:33,971 --> 00:49:38,147 that he thought "he had set the Soviets up in business." 692 00:49:38,182 --> 00:49:41,495 Now, that was a kind of revelatory statement 693 00:49:41,530 --> 00:49:43,014 for him to make, 694 00:49:43,049 --> 00:49:49,262 because he had sold the program of emergency relief to Russia 695 00:49:49,296 --> 00:49:54,025 as something that would perhaps effect regime change. 696 00:49:56,545 --> 00:49:59,375 Hoover was president when the Great Depression began 697 00:49:59,410 --> 00:50:02,792 a decade after he rescued the Russians. 698 00:50:02,827 --> 00:50:04,932 As Americans went hungry, 699 00:50:04,967 --> 00:50:08,074 his image as the "Great Humanitarian" began to fade. 700 00:50:09,558 --> 00:50:13,596 The story of his Russian relief was soon forgotten. 701 00:50:13,631 --> 00:50:16,496 Yet the humanitarian spirit he planted 702 00:50:16,530 --> 00:50:18,946 in the American character lived on. 703 00:50:20,845 --> 00:50:24,538 Hoover was really, in some ways, the vanguard 704 00:50:24,573 --> 00:50:27,334 of that whole approach that has become associated 705 00:50:27,369 --> 00:50:29,060 with America in the last hundred years, 706 00:50:29,095 --> 00:50:32,339 namely that when there is a humanitarian tragedy 707 00:50:32,374 --> 00:50:36,136 in the world, whether from war or from famine or revolution 708 00:50:36,171 --> 00:50:39,346 or a typhoon or an earthquake, 709 00:50:39,381 --> 00:50:42,384 that Americans will be there to organize the relief. 710 00:50:44,903 --> 00:50:47,803 The memory of the American Relief Administration 711 00:50:47,837 --> 00:50:50,944 lives on in Russia by word of mouth 712 00:50:50,978 --> 00:50:53,774 among the families who were saved. 713 00:50:53,809 --> 00:50:57,123 My grandma told me many times, 714 00:50:57,157 --> 00:51:02,024 "Dear Anatoly, do not forget American help 715 00:51:02,059 --> 00:51:06,201 at the time of our national disaster." 716 00:51:06,235 --> 00:51:10,205 Among those people who were saved were my family, 717 00:51:10,239 --> 00:51:14,554 family of my father, of my grandmother. 718 00:51:14,588 --> 00:51:17,212 My family will never forget. 54926

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