When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991,
pundits offered a variety of reasons for its failure: economic,
political, military. Few thought to add a fourth, more elusive cause:
the regime’s total loss of credibility.
This
hard-to-measure process had started in 1956, when Premier Nikita
Khrushchev gave his so-called secret speech to party leaders, in which
he denounced Josef Stalin’s purges and officially revealed the existence
of the gulag prison system. Not long afterward, Boris Pasternak allowed
his suppressed novel “Doctor Zhivago” to be published in the West, tearing another hole in the Iron Curtain. Then, in 1962, the literary magazine Novy Mir caused a sensation with a novella set in the gulag by an unknown author named Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn.
That novella, “A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich,” took
the country, and then the world, by storm. In crisp, clear prose, it
told the story of a simple man’s day in a labor camp, where he stoically
endured endless injustices. It was so incendiary that, when it
appeared, many Soviet readers thought that government censorship had
been abolished.
Solzhenitsyn was no
youthful beginner. Born a hundred years ago, on Dec. 11, 1918, just 14
months after the Bolshevik Revolution, he was virtually the same age as
the Soviet state and had experienced every phase of its development. As a youth and college student he had been swept up in the revolutionary
euphoria of the communist experiment and fervently believed in the
premises of Marxism-Leninism. In World War II he served as the commander
of an artillery sound-ranging battalion and was awarded two medals for
valor.
But Solzhenitsyn’s promising career was
brutally cut short by his arrest in February 1945 on a charge of
anti-Soviet activities; he was swiftly sentenced to eight years of hard
labor in the gulag. His crime? Criticizing Stalin and the Soviet Army in
letters exchanged with a school friend on another front.
This
Dickensian reversal of fortune plunged Solzhenitsyn into despair, but
it also opened his eyes to the hideous underbelly of Soviet communism
and gave him glimpses of the reign of terror and lies that had kept it
going for so long. He had already written poems, stories and half a
novel, most of them on patriotic themes; he now resolved to dedicate the
rest of his writing life to exposing the monstrous machine that had, as
he later discovered, murdered or incarcerated millions like himself. ... [mehr] https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/11/opinion/solzhenitsyn-soviet-union-putin.html
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