Stalin, His Mask and a Museum
 
 
 
Stalin
Stalin in death.  This is one of the bronze death masks made of Stalin after his death
in March 1953.  Photo source www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=101545
 
Blue Bar
 

John Sherry, one of my former students, recently visited the Joseph Stalin Museum in Gori, Georgia and sent me some pictures (both below).  As I was reading about the museum, I was struck by the fact that (a) it existed; (b) that it still existed in Georgia given the recent hostilities between Russia and Georgia; and (c) that the museum contained a bronze copy of the death mask of Stalin (a death mask is a cast taken from the face of a dead man, which, in this case, was then made into a bronze mask supposedly twelve in number according to wikipedia).

The museum grounds also contain a very small wooden "house," allegedly Stalin's birthplace way back in 1878, and Stalin's personal, armor-plated, Pullman train carriage which he used during and after World War II.

Stalin Train
Stalin's Armored Train Car

Well, the death mask got me to thinking.  That's weird.  Who made it?  Why?  When?  Where are the other copies? I had many questions, and I have to say that most of them I have not yet been able to answer, but I found out some surprising things about Stalin's death, which I had always known occurred on 5 March 1953 after he had suffered a stroke a few days earlier.

  • 1st, and this should not be a surprise, there are conflicting accounts of just what happened during Stalin's final days and how he died.  There is, of course, a lot of missing documentation (and a lot of missing people!).
  • 2nd, quite a bit of time elapsed between when Stalin was stricken and when medical help finally arrived.  That is hard to believe that no one was worried about the absence of Stalin for over fourteen hours.
  • 3rd, there have been allegations that Stalin was poisoned with warfarin, a rat poison that prevents the blood from clotting. (Michael Wines, New Study Supports Idea Stalin Was Poisoned)
  • 4th, a "ps", just a reminder that Stalin was embalmed after his death and placed in the Lenin Mausoleum on Red Square where he remained until October 1961 when he was removed on Khrushchev's orders and "re-buried" next to the Kremlin wall

Was there a conspiracy against Stalin?  According to Alexander Fursenko and Vitaly Afiani, The Death of Iosif Stalin, International Affairs (Moscow, June 2003), Stalin's communist party leaders left his dacha sometime between 4 and 6 am on the morning of Sunday, 1 March.

Researchers attempted to restore the sequence of events on the basis of the reminiscences of Khrushchev and the guards. In the morning, about 11 hours, when he usually got up from bed, Stalin showed no signs of being around (to quote the security idiom, "there was no movement" in the rooms). Oddly enough, the guards, though feeling anxious, waited till six in the afternoon, when lights went on in one of the rooms. But even after that Stalin gave no signs of being around. The guards still waited till approximately 11 p.m. and it was only after the arrival of a courier with Central Committee mail that they entered the small dining room and, on seeing Stalin prostrate on the floor, rushed to call the Security Directorate chief and USSR State Security Minister S.D. Ignatyev, and, that done, informed Malenkov.21

Khrushchev and Bulganin visited the house in the night (though for some reason they did not enter the room, where Stalin was lying). After them Beria and Malenkov came twice, ordering the guards not to disturb the sleeping leader. Sensing that something was wrong, the guards showed more insistence this time. But doctors showed up only in the morning of March 2 with Health Minister A.F. Tretyakov and the Kremlin Medical Administration chief, I.I. Kuperin.

Whenever the stroke had occurred, it was clear was that the leader had remained without medical help for several hours.

On March 4 they informed the public. At 6:30 in the morning the Moscow Radio broke off its broadcasts and the announcer Yury Levitan read "the governmental communication" about Stalin's illness.
Stalin Statue
A Stalin statue still standing tall at
the Stalin Museum in Gori

Seems clear to me that whatever the medical problem was that Stalin suffered, Soviet leadership did not rush medical aid to his side.  It looks like the stroke/hemorrhage occurred on the morning of March 1st, but doctors arrived only on the morning of March 2nd.

Zhores Medvedev, The Puzzle of Stalin's Death, Russian Social Science Review (Armonk, NY, January/February 2004), also intimated that there was some sort of conspiracy afoot among party leadership to make sure that Stalin did die.

Medvedev wrote:

On 28 February Stalin invited Khrushchev, Bulganin, Malenkov, and Beria to supper, which began late in the evening. Khrushchev recalled the meal ending at 5 A.M. on Sunday, 1 March. Stalin drank a lot and was in a good mood. All the next day, Khrushchev was expecting a telephone call from him with an invitation to supper that evening, but no call came. “I couldn’t believe that a whole day would go by without Stalin summoning us.”

If the bodyguards are to be believed, no one called Stalin on Sunday, 1 March. Lozgachev, the commandant’s aide, whose account appears in Radzinsky’s book, reported that at 10 A.M. the security detail gathered in the kitchen waiting for a call from Stalin, who normally rose at 10 or 11 A.M. Butusova usually took his meals in to him. But 1 March was different. As Lozgachev tells it: “At 10:00 A.M. there was ‘no movement’ in his rooms—that was the expression we always used when he was sleeping.11:00 A.M. came, 12:00—still no movement. It began to seem strange.”

Lozgachev continues his narrative. “1:00 P.M. came, and there was still no movement. We became alarmed. 3:00 P.M., 4:00 P.M.—no movement . . . I was sitting there with Starostin, and he said: there’s something wrong, what shall we do? We wondered whether to go in there . . . 8:00 P.M.—still nothing. We didn’t know what to do. 9:00 P.M.—‘no movement.’ 10:00 P.M.—still none” [Radzinsky, Stalin, pp. 570–71]. It was not until 11 P.M. that Lozgachev made up his mind to take the Central Committee mail into Stalin’s quarters and see what had happened to him. Stalin was found lying on the floor in the small dining room. He was wearing pajama bottoms and an undershirt. The pajamas were soaked, and Stalin was ice-cold. He was paralyzed and unconscious and had evidently been lying there for several hours. Having carried him to a sofa and covered him with a blanket, the bodyguards started making calls, first to Ignat’ev and then, on Ignat’ev’s advice, to Malenkov.


Is it logical to believe that all the guards and staff would have just peacefully waited outside Stalin's door for hours?  There were also motion detectors throughout the dacha, and the security squad and staff knew that there was no movement from Stalin, but no one went in to check on him?

Stalin Porch
Stalin's Childhood Front Porch

Medvedev continued:

The first visit to the ailing leader at the Kuntsevo dacha, which culminated in an instruction “not to disturb the sleeping Stalin,” convinced the four leaders {Malenkov, Beria, Bulganin, Khrushchev] that Stalin would never again rise from his sickbed. They did not call in any doctors because that would have meant advertising what had happened.

Stalin was still living on the evening of 5 March, when a meeting was called—not a Central Committee Plenum, which might have been problematic in terms of explaining the reasons for having abolished Stalin’s Central Committee Presidium, but a general meeting of the Central Committee, the USSR Council of Ministers, and the Presidium of the USSR Supreme Soviet. The gathering lasted only forty minutes, but the decisions it handed down were deemed conclusive by both Party and government hierarchies. Stalin, being still alive, was named one of the eleven members of the new Central Committee Presidium.

An hour and twenty minutes after the meeting adjourned, the doctors pronounced Stalin dead.


References
:

  • Stalin Museum
  • There are also quite a few photos of the Stalin Museum available in Wikipedia commons
  • Another photo of the Stalin Death Mask
  • There are quite a few accounts available on the web of a visit to the Gori Museum.  Such as A Visit to Stalin's Birthplace
  • For extra credit please suggest to your instructor a relevant website for this unit of the course.  Send the title of the site, the url and a brief explanation why you find the information interesting and applicable to the material being studied this week.

 
 

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For information contact cevans@nvcc.edu