Gareth Jones (journalist)


Gareth Richard Vaughan Jones was a Welsh journalist who first reported in the Western world, without equivocation and under his own name, the existence of the Soviet famine of 1932–33, including the Holodomor. Earlier reports by Malcolm Muggeridge, writing as an anonymous correspondent, had appeared in the Manchester Guardian.

Early life and education

Born in Barry, Glamorgan, Jones attended Barry County School, where his father, Major Edgar Jones, was headmaster until around 1933. His mother, Annie Gwen Jones, had worked in Russia as a tutor to the children of Arthur Hughes, son of Welsh steel industrialist John Hughes, who founded the town of Hughesovka, modern-day Donetsk, in Ukraine.
Jones graduated from the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth in 1926 with a first-class honours degree in French. He also studied at the University of Strasbourg and at Trinity College, Cambridge, from which he graduated in 1929 with another first in French, German, and Russian. After his death, one of his tutors, Hugh Fraser Stewart, wrote in The Times that Jones had been an "extraordinary linguist". At Cambridge he was active in the Cambridge University League of Nations Union, serving as its assistant secretary.

Career

Teaching, private secretary

After graduating, Jones taught languages briefly at Cambridge, then in 1930 was appointed Foreign Affairs Adviser to David Lloyd George, former British Prime Minister, thanks to an introduction by Dr Tom Jones. That summer, Jones made his first brief "pilgrimage" to Donetsk.

Germany

Later in the 1930s, Jones became a reporter for the Western Mail in Cardiff. In late January and early February 1933 he was in Germany covering the accession to power of the Nazi Party, and was in Leipzig on the day Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor. A few days later on 23 February in the Richthofen, "the fastest and most powerful three-motored aeroplane in Germany", Jones became one of the first foreign journalists to fly with Hitler as he accompanied Hitler and Joseph Goebbels to Frankfurt where he reported for the Western Mail on the new Chancellor's tumultuous acclamation in that city. He wrote that if the Richthofen had crashed the history of Europe would have changed.

Soviet Union

The following month, March 1933, Jones travelled to the Soviet Union and on 7 March eluded authorities to slip into the Ukrainian SSR, where he kept diaries of the man-made starvation he witnessed. On his return to Berlin on 29 March, he issued his press release, which was published by many newspapers, including The Manchester Guardian and the New York Evening Post:
This report was unwelcome in a great many of the newspapers, as the intelligentsia of the time was still in sympathy with the Soviet regime.
On 31 March, The New York Times published a denial of Jones's statement by Walter Duranty under the headline "Russians Hungry, But Not Starving". Duranty called Jones' report "a big scare story". Timothy Snyder writes that "Duranty's claim that there was 'no actual starvation' but only 'widespread mortality from diseases due to malnutrition' echoed Soviet usages and pushed euphemism into mendacity. This was an Orwellian distinction; and indeed George Orwell himself regarded the Ukrainian famine of 1933 as a central example of a black truth that artists of language had covered with bright colors."
In the article, Kremlin sources denied the existence of a famine; part of the New York Times headline was: "Russian and Foreign Observers in Country See No Ground for Predications of Disaster."
On 13 April, Jones published a detailed analysis of the famine in the Financial Times, pointing out its main causes: forced collectivization of private farms, removal of 6–7 millions of "best workers" from their land, forced requisitions of grain and farm animals and increased "export of foodstuffs" from USSR.
On 13 May the New York Times published a strong rebuttal of Duranty from Jones, who stood by his report:
In a personal letter from Soviet Foreign Commissar Maxim Litvinov to Lloyd George, Jones was informed that he was banned from ever visiting the Soviet Union again.

Japan and China

Banned from the Soviet Union, Jones turned his attention to the Far East and in late 1934 he left Britain on a "Round-the-World Fact-Finding Tour". He spent about six weeks in Japan, interviewing important generals and politicians, and he eventually reached Beijing. From here he traveled to Inner Mongolia in newly Japanese-occupied Manchukuo in the company of a German journalist, Herbert Müller. Detained by Japanese forces, the pair were told that there were three routes back to the Chinese town of Kalgan, only one of which was safe.
The men were subsequently captured by bandits who demanded a ransom of 200 Mauser firearms and 100,000 Chinese dollars. The German journalist was released after two days to arrange for the ransom to be paid. On 1 August, Jones's father received a telegram: "Well treated. Expect release soon." On 5 August The Times reported that the kidnappers had moved Jones to an area southeast of Kuyuan and were now asking for 10,000 Chinese dollars, and two days later that he had again been moved, this time to Jehol. On 8 August the news came that the first group of kidnappers had handed him over to a second group, and the ransom had increased to 100,000 Chinese dollars again. The Chinese and Japanese governments both made an effort to contact the kidnappers.

Death

On 17 August 1935, The Times reported that the Chinese authorities had found Jones's body the previous day with three bullet wounds. The authorities believed that he had been killed on 12 August, the day before his 30th birthday. There was a suspicion that his murder had been engineered by the Soviet NKVD, as revenge for the embarrassment he had caused the Soviet regime. Lloyd George is reported to have said:

Legacy

Film

2008 Ukrainian film :uk:Живі |The Living is a documentary about the Great Famine of 1932–33 and Jones's attempts to uncover it. The Living premiered 21 November 2008 at the Kyiv Cinema House. It was screened in February 2009 at the European Film Market, in spring 2009 at the Ukrainian Film Festival in Cologne, and in November 2009 at the Second Annual Cambridge Festival of Ukrainian Film. It received the 2009 Special Jury Prize Silver Apricot in the International Documentary Competition at the Sixth Golden Apricot International Film Festival in July 2009 and the 2009 Grand Prize of Geneva in September 2009.
In 2015, a feature film titled Mr. Jones, based on Jones' famine reporting, was announced. In April 2016 it was announced that the Oscar-nominated Polish director Agnieszka Holland would direct the picture. English actor James Norton plays Gareth Jones. In January 2019, the film was selected to compete for the Golden Bear at the 69th Berlin International Film Festival. In September 2019 film won Grand Prix Golden Lions at the 44th Gdynia Film Festival.

Memorial

On 2 May 2006, a trilingual plaque was unveiled in Jones' memory in the Old College at Aberystwyth University, in the presence of his niece Margaret Siriol Colley, and the Ukrainian Ambassador to the UK, Ihor Kharchenko, who described him as an "unsung hero of Ukraine". The idea for a plaque and funding were provided by the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association, working in conjunction with the Association of Ukrainians in Great Britain. Dr Lubomyr Luciuk, UCCLA's director of research, spoke at the unveiling ceremony.
In November 2008, Jones and fellow Holodomor journalist Malcolm Muggeridge were posthumously awarded the Ukrainian Order of Merit at a ceremony in Westminster Central Hall, by Dr Kharchenko, on behalf of  Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko for their exceptional service to the country and its people.

Diaries

In November 2009, Jones' diaries recording the man-made genocide of the Great Soviet Famine of 1932–33 went on display for the first time in the Wren Library of Trinity College, Cambridge.