Eesti Elu
Solzhenitsyn: the dissident, the imperialist (3)
Eestlased Kanadas | 04 Feb 2022  | Eesti Elu
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It was only a few decades ago, when we welcomed the ‘Gulag Archipelago’ as an eyeopener for the world to finally grasp the cruelty of a totalitarian system and Communist repression in the Soviet Union.

Many Western apologists for the Kremlin were finally not only acknowledging the credibility of Solzhenitsyn’s personal experiences in Stalin’s prison colonies, they were extolling his writings as literary masterpieces and supporting his nomination for a Nobel Prize in Literature, which he won in 1970. He refused to travel to Stockholm to receive the prize fearing that the Soviet government would block his return home.

He was honoured by the Nobel committee for “the ethical force with which he has pursued the indispensable traditions of Russian literature”. The books had clearly outraged the Soviets and in 1974 the USSR stripped him of its citizenship, expelling him from the country. He then found a home in Cavendish, Vermont.

Solzhenitsyn’s Estonian connections: While imprisoned in Stalin’s Gulag, Solzhenitsyn be-friended Arnold Susi, a former Estonian education minister. After serving his sentence, he wrote the epic condemnation of Marxism, the ‘Gulag Archipelago’ while in hiding from Soviet authorities at the Susi family country home in occupied Estonia. When the writer resided in the USA this writer in the early 1980’s twice invited the most famous Soviet dissident at the time to Ottawa to be the guest speaker at the annual Baltic Evening on Parliament Hill, knowing that this would attract major attention among diplomats, politicians and media. The man had become the symbol of the Soviet persecuted anti-Kremlin movement. The invitation was extended to Solzhenitsyn by Alexis Rannit, research fellow and curator of Slavic collections at Yale University. Both times Solzhenitsyn declined.

Although he was recognized as a traditional Russian nationalist, the intensity and range of this personal belief had not yet been fully recognized. But this was quite evident from Solzhenitsyn’s commencement address at Harvard University in June 1978.


(Pikemalt saab lugeda Eesti Elu 4. veebruari 2022 paber- ja PDF/digilehest)

 
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Viimased kommentaarid

Kommentaarid on kirjutatud EWR lugejate poolt. Nende sisu ei pruugi ühtida EWR toimetuse seisukohtadega.
Chapter, verse! Please!08 Feb 2022 13:58
I wish that you would give us some specific references justifying your critique of Solzhenitsyn.
It's just possible that we might interpret the facts in the same manner, but I doubt it, and without them, countering to your invective is impossible. I don't know where to begin anymore than a mosquito in a nudist colony.
Particularly egregious is the doubt you cast on Solzhenitsyn's sincerity as a convert to Chrisianity. That's gratuitously outrageous and, more so, as you ally him with a gangster like Putin!
Stop reading the junk news found in 'The Toronto Star' and let me recommend, Vol.II of 'The Gulag Archipelago' for insights into Solzhenitsyn's conversion to faith (and much else).
For insights into today's Russia as a gangster state, Anna Polikovskaya's 'Putin's Russia' makes for an education.
Putin doesn't like nosy reporters, so he ordered a hit on her. She was shot dead in broad daylight by her front door.
W. Johanson07 Feb 2022 14:22
I'm reading the biography: Solzhenitsyn: A Soul in Exile by Joseph Pearce (Revised and Updated Ed. 2021). It is based on the author's interviews with the man himself. It also makes a clear case that Solzhenitsyn's conversion was firmly grounded on his Orthodox faith. Other biographies don't touch this aspect of his life.
Pertinent to today's issues, his Harvard Address is very much worth a read: https://www.americanrhetoric.c....
?05 Feb 2022 11:05
Solzhenitsyn is wrong about 1917?
Please tell us what transpired.

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