Book Read Free

Gulag

Page 81

by Anne Applebaum


  48. Yuri Dombrovsky, p. 77. Translated with the help of Galya Vinogradova.

  49. Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago, vol. III, p. 455.

  50. Korolev, interview with the author.

  51. Pechora, interview with the author.

  52. Aksyonov, p. 382.

  53. Quoted in Adler, p. 141.

  54. Vilensky, Deti Gulaga, p. 460.

  55. Adler, p. 145.

  56. Olga Adamova-Sliozberg, “My Journey,” in Vilensky, Till My Tale Is Told, p. 70.

  57. Adler, p. xx.

  58. Merridale, p. 418.

  59. Cohen, p. 38.

  60. Rothberg, pp. 12–40.

  61. The most complete account of Solzhenitsyn’s life is Michael Scammell’s biography, Solzhenitsyn. Unless otherwise footnoted, all biographical information about him comes from there.

  62. Scammell, Solzhenitsyn, p. 415.

  63. Ibid., pp. 423–24.

  64. Ibid., pp. 448–49.

  65. Ibid., p. 485.

  66. Sitko, Gde moi veter?, p. 318.

  67. Rothberg, p. 62.

  68. Dyakov, pp. 60–67.

  26: The Era of the Dissidents

  1. Reprinted in Cohen, p. 183.

  2. Sobolev, p. 68.

  3. Prisoners of Conscience in the USSR, pp. 48–53.

  4. Committee on the Judiciary (Testimony of Avraham Shifter).

  5. GARF, 9410/2/497.

  6. Committee on the Judiciary (Testimony of Avraham Shifter).

  7. R. Medvedev, p. ix.

  8. Sobranie dokumentov samizdata, AS 143. (This is a collection of samizdat documents gathered by RFE-RL from the 1960s onward. The documents were not “published,” but rather photocopied, bound, numbered, and placed in a few major libraries.)

  9. Prisoners of Conscience in the USSR, pp. 18–23.

  10. Sobranie dokumentov samizdata, AS 127.

  11. Prisoners of Conscience in the USSR, pp. 18–23.

  12. Reddaway, Uncensored Russia, p. 11.

  13. Joseph Brodsky, pp. 26–27.

  14. Rothberg, pp. 127–33.

  15. Hoover, Josef Brodsky Collection, Transcript of the Brodsky Trial.

  16. Ibid.

  17. Browne, p. 3.

  18. Cohen, p. 42; Reddaway, Uncensored Russia, p. 19.

  19. Hopkins, pp. 1–14.

  20. Prisoners of Conscience in the USSR, p. 21.

  21. Browne, p. 9.

  22. Litvinov, The Trial of the Four, pp. 5–11.

  23. Browne, p. 13.

  24. Thirty years later, Chornovil, then a leading figure in the Ukrainian independence movement, became independent Ukraine’s first ambassador to Canada. Before he left, I interviewed him in Lvov, in 1990.

  25. Reddaway, Uncensored Russia, pp. 95–111.

  26. Ibid., p. 19.

  27. Info-Russ, #0044 (see Archives in Bibliography). This is where Vladimir Bukovsky has posted the documents he obtained while carrying out research for the trial of the Communist Party, described later in this book. The documents later became the subject of his 1996 book, Moskovskii protsess , published in French and Russian. Some are also stored at Hoover, Fond 89.

  28. Reddaway, Uncensored Russia, p. 24.

  29. Ibid., pp. 1–47; also Chronicle of Current Events.

  30. Hopkins, p. 122.

  31. Ratushinskaya, p. 67.

  32. Marchenko, My Testimony, p. 17.

  33. Ibid., pp. 220–27.

  34. Sitko, interview with the author.

  35. Ratushinskaya, pp. 60–62.

  36. Viktor Shmirov, conversation with the author, March 31, 1998.

  37. Fedorov, interview with the author.

  38. Marchenko, My Testimony, p. 349.

  39. Fedorov, interview with the author.

  40. Ratushinskaya, pp. 174–75.

  41. Fedorov, interview with the author.

  42. Marchenko, My Testimony, p. 68.

  43. E. Kuznetsov, p. 169.

  44. Chronicle of Current Events, no. 32, July 17, 1974.

  45. Bukovsky, To Build a Castle, p. 45.

  46. Marchenko, My Testimony, pp. 90–91; E. Kuznetsov, pp. 165–66.

  47. Chronicle of Current Events, no. 6, February 1969, quoted in Reddaway, Uncensored Russia, p. 207.

  48. Chronicle of Current Events, ibid., quoted in Reddaway, ibid., pp. 20–216.

  49. Marchenko, My Testimony, p. 69.

  50. Sharansky, p. 236.

  51. Marchenko, My Testimony, p. 115; Tokes, p. 84.

  52. Sharansky, p. 235; Ratushinskaya, pp. 165–78.

  53. Sobranie dokumentov samizdata, AS 2598.

  54. Daniel, p. 35.

  55. Marchenko, My Testimony, pp. 65–69.

  56. Sobranie dokumentov samizdata, AS 2598.

  57. Chronicle of Current Events, no. 32, July 1974.

  58. Litvinov, The Trial of the Four, p. 17.

  59. Reddaway and Bloch, p. 305; Yakir.

  60. Chronicle of Current Events, no. 28, December 1972.

  61. Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe (Testimony of Alexandr Shatravka and Dr. Anatoly Koryagin).

  62. Chronicle of Current Events, no. 33, December 1974.

  63. Viktor Shmirov, conversation with the author, March 31, 1998.

  64. Sobranie dokumentov samizdata, AS 3115.

  65. Bukovsky gave an account of his experience at a Warsaw press conference in 1998. The text appears on the Info-Russ Web site (see Archives in Bibliography).

  66. Bukovsky, Moskovskii protsess, pp. 144–61.

  67. Reddaway and Bloch, pp. 48–49; Seton-Watson, pp. 257–58.

  68. Bukovksy, To Build a Castle, p. 357.

  69. Reddaway and Bloch, pp. 176, 140, and 107.

  70. Info-Russ, #0202.

  71. Reddaway and Bloch, p. 226.

  72. Nekipelov, p. 132.

  73. Reddaway and Bloch, pp. 220–21; Nekipelov, p. 132.

  74. Prisoners of Conscience in the USSR, p. 190; photograph on p. 194.

  75. Reddaway and Bloch, p. 214.

  76. Prisoners of Conscience in the USSR, pp. 197–98.

  77. “Three Voices of Dissent,” Survey, no. 77 (Autumn 1970).

  78. Nekipelov, p. 115.

  79. Reddaway and Bloch, p. 348.

  80. Ibid., pp. 79–96.

  81. Ibid., pp. 178–80.

  82. Info-Russ, #0204.

  83. Ibid.

  27: The 1980s: Smashing Statues

  1. Reprinted in Reavey, pp. 8–9.

  2. Beichman and Bernstam, pp. 145–89.

  3. Prisoners of Conscience in the USSR, pp. 20 and 119; Alekseeva.

  4. Beichman and Bernstam, p. 182.

  5. Reagan, pp. 675–79.

  6. Berdzenishvili, interview with the author.

  7. Ibid.

  8. Bukovsky, To Build a Castle, p. 408.

  9. Ibid.

  10. Berdzenishvili, interview with the author.

  11. Ratushinskaya, p. 236.

  12. Walker, p. 142.

  13. Reddaway, “Dissent in the Soviet Union.”

  14. Gorbachev, p. 24.

  15. Remnick, p. 50.

  16. Ibid., pp. 264–68.

  17. K. Smith, pp. 131–74; Remnick, p. 68.

  18. Remnick, pp. 101–19; K. Smith, pp. 131–74.

  19. USSR: Human Rights in a Time of Change.

  20. “Lata Dissidentów,” Karta, no. 16, 1995.

  21. “On the Death of Prisoner of Conscience Anatoly Marchenko,” Amnesty International Press Release, May 1987 (ML).

  22. Ibid.

  23. The closure of the camps does not, for example, figure in Walker’s The Waking Giant; Matlock’s, Autopsy on an Empire; Brown’s The Gorbachev Factor; or Kaiser’s Why Gorbachev Happened. The important exception is Remnick’s Lenin’s Tomb, which includes a chapter on the last prisoners of Perm-35.

  24. Paul Hofheinz, former Moscow-based reporter, conversation with the author, February 13, 2002.

  25. Matlock, p. 275.

&n
bsp; 25. Remnick, p. 270.

  27. Walker, p. 147.

  28. Info-Russ, #0128.

  29. Ibid., #1404.

  30. Ibid., #0130.

  31. USSR: Human Rights in a Time of Change.

  32. The Recent Release of Prisoners in the USSR, Amnesty International Press Release, April 1987 (ML).

  33. Ibid.

  34. Amnesty International Weekly Update Service, April 8, 1987 (ML).

  35. Berdzenishvili, interview with the author.

  36. Amnesty International Newsletter, June 1988, vol. XVIII, no. 6 (ML).

  37. “Four Long-Term Prisoners Still Awaiting a Review,” Amnesty International Press Release, April 1990; also Amnesty International Newsletter, October 1990, vol. XX, no. 10 (ML); Klymchak was released by the end of the year.

  38. Matlock, p. 287.

  39. “Russian Federation: Overview of Recent Legal Changes,” Amnesty International Press Release, September 1993 (ML).

  40. Matlock, p. 295.

  41. Quoted in Cohen, p. 186.

  Epilogue: Memory

  1. Razgon, True Stories, p. 27.

  2. K. Smith, pp. 153–59.

  3. Alexander Yakovlev, Chairman of the Russian Presidential Commission on Rehabilitation of the Victims of Political Repression, conversation with the author, February 25, 2002.

  4. Merridale, pp. 407–8.

  5. Gessen.

  6. Alexander Yakovlev, conversation with the author, February 25, 2002.

  7. I described this incident in “Secret Agent Man,” The Weekly Standard, April 10, 2000.

  8. About 130 skeletons were discovered in the cellar of a west Ukrainian monastery in July 2002, for example. Moscow Times, July 18, 2002.

  9. Applebaum, “Secret Agent Man,” The Weekly Standard , April 10, 2000.

  10. Olga Adamova-Sliozberg, “My Journey,” in Vilensky, Till My Tale Is Told, p. 16.

  11. Andrew Alexander, “The Soviet Threat Was Bogus,” The Spectator, April 20, 2002.

  12. Vidal.

  Appendix: How Many?

  1. Bacon, pp. 8–9.

  2. Conquest, The Great Terror, p. 485.

  3. Getty, p. 8.

  4. Zemskov, “Arkhipelag Gulag,” pp. 6–7; Getty, Ritterspoon, and Zemskov, Appendixes A and B, pp. 1048–49.

  5. Getty, Ritterspoon, and Zemskov, p. 1047.

  6. Bacon, p. 112.

  7. Pohl, The Stalinist Penal System, p. 17.

  8. Pohl, ibid., p. 15; Zemskov, “Gulag,” p. 17.

  9. The best summary to date of the debate about the post-1991 statistical revelations can be found in Bacon, pp. 6–41 and 101–22: the 18 million in his figure, based on turnover rates and available statistics. For the record, Dugin claims that 11.8 million people were arrested between 1930 and 1953, but I find this hard to reconcile with the 8 million known to have been arrested by 1940, particularly given the huge numbers arrested and released during the Second World War (Dugin, “Stalinizm, Legendy i Fakty”).

  10. Overy, p. 297; Zagorulko, pp. 331–33.

  11. Pohl, The Stalinist Penal System, pp. 50–52; Zemskov, “Gulag,” pp. 4–6.

  12. Polyan, p. 239.

  13. Pohl, The Stalinist Penal System, p. 5.

  14. Pohl, ibid., p. 133.

  15. Although some have been published. See Getty, Ritterspoon, and Zemskov, pp. 1048–49.

  16. GARF, 9414/1/OURZ. These figures were compiled by Alexander Kokurin.

  17. Berdinskikh, p. 28.

  18. Pohl, The Stalinist Penal System, p. 131.

  19. Getty, Ritterspoon, and Zemskov, p. 1024.

  20. Courtois, p. 4.

  21. Razgon, pp. 290–91.

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  MEMOIRS AND WORKS OF LITERATURE

  Adamova-Sliozberg, Olga, Put, Moscow, 1993

  Aituganov, I. P., Krugi ada, Kazan, private publication, 1998

  Akhmatova, Anna, The Poems of Akhmatova, ed. and trans. Stanley Kunitz and Max Hayward, Boston, 1967

  Aksyonov, Vasily, Generations of Winter, New York, 1995

  Aleksandrovich, Vadim, Zapiski lagernogo vracha, Moscow, 1996

  Alin, D. E., Malo slov, a gorya rechenka, Tomsk, 1997

  Amalrik, Andrei, Involuntary Journey to Siberia, trans. Manya Harari and Max Hayward, New York, 1970

  Amster, Gerald, and Asbell, Bernard, Transit Point Moscow, New York, 1984

  Andreeva, Anna, Plavanye k Nebesnomu Kremlyu, Moscow, 1998

  Andreev-Khomiakov, Gennady, Bitter Waters: Life and Work in Stalin’s Russia, Boulder, CO, 1997

  Anonymous, Ekho iz Nebytiya, Novgorod, 1992

  Anonymous, Vo vlasti Gubcheka: Vospominania neizvestnogo protoiereya , Moscow, 1996

  Antonov-Ovseenko, Anton, Vragi naroda, Moscow, 1996

  Antsiferov, Nikolai, “Tri glavy iz vospominanii,” Pamyat , vol. 4, pp. 75–76

  Armonas, Barbara, Leave Your Tears in Moscow, Philadelphia and New York, 1961

  Astafyeva, Olga, V goda slepye: stikhi, Moscow, 1995

  Bardach, Janusz (with Kathleen Gleeson), Man Is Wolf to Man: Surviving Stalin’s Gulag, London, 1998

  Belousov, Viktor, Zapiski dokhodyagi, Ashkhabad, Turkmenistan, 1992

  Belyashov, V. M., Zhizn pereselentsev na Urale, Severouralsk, 1991

  Berger, Joseph, Nothing But the Truth, New York, 1971

  Bershadskaya, Lyubov, Rastoptannye zhizni, Paris, 1975

  Bondarevsky, Sergei, Tak bylo, Moscow, 1995

  Borin, Aleksandr, Prestupleniya bez nakazaniya: vospominaniya uznika GULAGa, Moscow, 2000

  Brodsky, Joseph, Less Than One, New York, 1986

  Buber-Neumann, Margarete, Under Two Dictators, trans. Edward Fitzgerald, London, 1949

  Buca, Edward, Vorkuta, trans. Michael Lisiniski and Kennedy Wells, London, 1976

  Bukovsky, Vladimir, To Build a Castle—My Life as a Dissenter, New York, 1978

  Burkhuis, L., Chuzhoi spektakl: kniga vospominanii, Riga, 1990

  Buxhoeveden, Baronness Sophie, Left Behind: Fourteen Months in Siberia During the Revolution, December 1917–February 1919, London, New York, and Toronto, 1929

  Bystroletov, Dmitri, Puteshestvie na krai nochi, Moscow, 1996

  Cederholm, Boris, In the Clutches of the Cheka, trans. F. H. Lyon, London, 1929

  Chetverikov, Boris, Vsego byvalo na veku, Leningrad, 1991

  Chirkov, Yuri, A bylo vse tak, Moscow, 1991

  Colonna-Czosnowski, Karol, Beyond the Taiga: Memoirs of a Survivor, Hove, Sussex, 1998

  Czapski, Jozef, The Inhuman Land, trans. Gerard Hopkins, London, 1987

  Czerkawski, Tadeusz, By-lem Zo-lnierzem Genera-la Andersa, Warsaw, 1991

  Daniel, Yuli, Prison Poems, trans. David Burg and Arthur Boyars, London, 1971

  Darel, Sylva, A Sparrow in the Snow, trans. Barbara Norman, New York, 1973

  Djilas, Milovan, Conversations with Stalin, trans. Michael Petrovich, New York, 1962

  Dmitriev, Helen, Surviving the Storms: Memory of Stalin’s Tyranny, trans. Cathleen A. McClintic and George G. Mendez, Fresno, CA, 1992

  Dolgun, Alexander, Alexander Dolgun’s Story: An American in the Gulag , New York, 1975

  Domaska, Les-lawa, Papiski, Marian, and the Małachovski family, Tryptyk Kaz-achstanấski, Warsaw, 1992

  Dombrovsky, Yuri, Menya ubit khoteli, éti suki, Moscow, 1997

  Dorogi za kolyuchuyu provoloku, vol. 3, Odessa, 1996

  Dostoevsky, Fyodor, The House of the Dead, trans. David McDuff, London, 1985

  Durasova, S. G., “Éto bylo strashnim sobytiem,” Istoricheskii Arkhiv, no. 6, 1999, pp. 69–84

  Dvorzhetsky, Vatslav, Puti bolshikh étapov, Moscow, 1994

  Dyakov, Boris, “Povest o perezhitom,” Oktyabr, no. 7, July 1964, pp. 49–142

  Efron, Ariadna, Miroedikha, Moscow, 1996

  ———, Pisma iz ssylki, Paris, 1985

  Efrussi, Yakov, Kto na “E?”, Moscow, 1996

  Eizenberger, Andrei, Esli ne vyskazhus–zadokhnus, Moscow, 1994

  Ekart, Antoni, Vanished Wi
thout Trace: Seven Years in Soviet Russia , London, 1954

  Evstonichev, A. P., Nakazanie bez prestupleniya, Syktyvkar, 1990

  Federolf, Ada, Ryadom s Alei, Moscow, 1996

  Fehling, Helmut, One Great Prison: The Story Behind Russia’s Unreleased POWs, Boston, 1951

  Fidelgolts, Yuri, Kolyma, Moscow, 1997

  Filshtinsky, Isaak, My shagaem pod konvoem: rasskazi iz lagernoi zhizni , Moscow, 1997

  Finkelberg, M. F., Ostavlyayu vam, Yaroslavl, 1997

  Fisher, Lipa, Parikmakher v GULAGe, trans. Zelby Beiralas, Tel-Aviv, 1977

  Fittkau, Gerhard, My Thirty-third Year, New York, 1958

  Florensky, Sv. Pavel, Sochineniya, vol. IV, Moscow, 1998

  Frid, Valery, 58–1–2: Zapiski lagernogo pridurka, Moscow, 1996

  Gagen-Torn, Nina, Memoria, Moscow, 1994

  Garaseva, A. M., Ya zhila v samoi beschelovechnoi strane, Moscow, 1997

  Gessen, Masha, “My Grandmother, the Censor,” Granta 64, London, January 1998

  Gilboa, Yehoshua, Confess! Confess!, trans. Dov Ben Aba, Boston and Toronto, 1968

  Ginzburg, Evgeniya, Journey into the Whirlwind [Krutoi marshrut ], trans. Paul Stevenson and Max Hayward, New York, 1967

  ———, Within the Whirlwind [Krutoi marshrut , Part II], trans. Ian Boland, New York and London, 1981

  Ginzburg, Lidiya, Blockade Diary, trans. Alan Meyers, London, 1995

  Gizatulin, R. Kh., Nas bylo mnogo na chelne, Moscow, 1993

  Gliksman, Jerzy, Tell the West, New York, 1948

  Gnedin, Evgeny, Vykhod iz labirinta, Moscow, 1994

  Golitsyn, Kirill, Zapiski Knyazya Kirilla Nikolaevicha Golitsyna, Moscow, 1997

  Golitsyn, Sergei, Zapiski utselevshego, Moscow, 1990

  Gorbachev, Mikhail, Memoirs, New York, 1996

  Gorbatov, Aleksandr, Years Off My Life, trans. Gordon Clough and Anthony Cash, London, 1964

  Gorchakov, Genrikh, L–1–105: Vospominaniya, Jerusalem, 1995

  ———, Sudboi nalozhenniye tseli, Jerusalem, 1997

  Gordeeva, Valeriya, Rasstrel cherez poveshenie, Moscow, 1995

  Gorky, Maxim, Sobranie sochinenii, Moscow, 1962

  Grachev, Yu. S. V., Irodovoi bezdne: vospominaniya o perezhitom, Moscow, 1993

  Gross, Jan Tomasz, and Grudzinska-Gross, Irena, eds., War Through Children’s Eyes, Stanford, CA, 1981

  Guberman, Igor, Shtrikhi i portrety, Moscow, 1994

  Herling, Gustav, A World Apart, trans. Andrzej Ciolkosz, London, 1951

  Ievleva, Valentina, Neprichesannaya zhizn, Moscow, 1994

  Imet silu pomnit, Moscow, 1991

  Intaliya, Moscow, 1995

  Ioffe, Mariya, Odna noch, New York, 1978

  Ishutina, Elena, Narym: dnevnik ssylnoi, New York, 1965

 

‹ Prev