Soviet dissidents: Difference between revisions

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* {{cite journal|author=Tonge, William|title=Psychiatry and political dissent|journal=[[The Lancet]]|date=20 July 1974|volume=304|issue=7873|pages=150–152|doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(74)91569-4|pmid=4135437}}
* {{cite journal|author=Tonge, William|title=Psychiatry and political dissent|journal=[[The Lancet]]|date=20 July 1974|volume=304|issue=7873|pages=150–152|doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(74)91569-4|pmid=4135437}}
* {{cite book|author=Tria, Massimo|chapter=L'invasione vista dai sovietici, fra approvazione e dissenso|trans-chapter=The imaginative invasion of the Soviets, from approval to dissent|editor=Caccamo, Francesco; Helan, Pavel; Tria, Massimo (eds.)|title=Primavera di Praga, risveglio europeo|trans-title=Prague Spring, European awakening|date=2011|publisher=Firenze University Press|isbn=8864532692|pages=97–126|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ruSmH9fkEBMC&pg=PA97|language=Italian}}
* {{cite book|author=Tria, Massimo|chapter=L'invasione vista dai sovietici, fra approvazione e dissenso|trans-chapter=The imaginative invasion of the Soviets, from approval to dissent|editor=Caccamo, Francesco; Helan, Pavel; Tria, Massimo (eds.)|title=Primavera di Praga, risveglio europeo|trans-title=Prague Spring, European awakening|date=2011|publisher=Firenze University Press|isbn=8864532692|pages=97–126|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ruSmH9fkEBMC&pg=PA97|language=Italian}}
* {{cite book|author=Trigos, Ludmilla|chapter=The decembrists and dissidence: myth and anti-myth from the 1960s–1980s|title=The decembrist myth in Russian culture|date=2009|publisher=Macmillan|isbn=0230619169|pages=141–160|chapter-url=http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1057/9780230104716_7}}
* {{cite book|author=Vaissié, Cécile|title=Pour votre liberté et pour la nôtre: le combat des dissidents de Russie|trans-title=For your and our freedom: the struggle of Russian dissidents|date=1999|publisher=Laffont|isbn=2221090470|language=French}}
* {{cite book|author=Vaissié, Cécile|title=Pour votre liberté et pour la nôtre: le combat des dissidents de Russie|trans-title=For your and our freedom: the struggle of Russian dissidents|date=1999|publisher=Laffont|isbn=2221090470|language=French}}
* {{cite journal|author=Vaissié, Cécile|title="La Chronique des évenements en cours". Une revue de la dissidence dans l'URSS brejnévienne|journal=Vingtième Siècle. Revue d'histoire|date=July–September 1999|jstor=3770704|issue=63|pages=107–118|doi=10.2307/3770704|trans-title=A Chronicle of Current Events. A review of dissidence in the Brezhnev USSR|language=French}}
* {{cite journal|author=Vaissié, Cécile|title="La Chronique des évenements en cours". Une revue de la dissidence dans l'URSS brejnévienne|journal=Vingtième Siècle. Revue d'histoire|date=July–September 1999|jstor=3770704|issue=63|pages=107–118|doi=10.2307/3770704|trans-title=A Chronicle of Current Events. A review of dissidence in the Brezhnev USSR|language=French}}

Revision as of 19:57, 3 March 2016

Soviet dissidents were persons who disagreed with certain features in the embodiment of Soviet ideology and who were willing to speak out against them.[1] As concerns the communist world, it is commonly recognized that that the dissident "sits apart" from the regime.[2]

The dissidents were small groups of marginalized intellectuals whose modest challenges to the Soviet regime met protection and encouragement from correspondents.[3] Soviet dissidents who criticized the state faced possible legal sanctions under Articles 70, 72, 142, 190.1, and 227 of the Soviet Criminal Code[4] and faced the choice of exile, the mental hospital, or the labor camp.[5] Prison after prison, decade after decade, the dissident movement created vivid awareness of Soviet Communist tyranny.[6] Due to a half century of Soviet repression, Soviet scientists who had managed to emigrate greatly enriched American science.[7]

File:Meiman dissidents.gif
Soviet dissidents in the upper row: Naum Meiman, Sofiya Kallistratova, Petro Grigorenko, his wife Zinaida Grigorenko, Tatyana Velikanova's mother, priest Father Sergei Zheludkov and Andrei Sakharov; in the lower row: Genrikh Altunyan and Alexander Podrabinek. Photo taken on 16 October 1977[8]
Moscow Helsinki Group members Yuliya Vishnevskya, Lyudmila Alexeyeva, Dina Kaminskaya, Kronid Lyubarsky in Munich, 1978
File:Orlov photo.jpg
Yuri Orlov, founder of the Moscow Helsinki Group founder
Yelena Bonner and Andrei Sakharov after their arrival for the conferment of the honorary doctorate in law from the University of Groningen, 15 June 1989

The 1950s–1960s

In the 1950s, Soviet dissidents started leaking criticism to the West by sending documents and statements to foreign diplomatic missions in Moscow.[9] In the 1960s, Soviet dissidents frequently declared that the rights the government of the Soviet Union denied them were universal rights, possessed by everyone regardless of race, religion and nationality.[10] In August 1969, for instance, the Initiating Group for Defense of Civil Rights in the USSR appealed to the United Nations Committee on Human Rights to defend the human rights being trampled on by Soviet authorities in a number of trials.[11]

The 1970s

"If we accept human rights violations as just "their way" of doing things, then we are all guilty." (Andrei Sakharov)[12]

The heyday of the dissenters as a presence in the Western public life was the 1970s.[13] The Helsinki Accords inspired dissidents in the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Poland to openly protest human rights failures by their own governments.[14] The Soviet dissidents demanded that the Soviet authorities implement their own commitments proceeding from the Helsinki Agreement with the same zeal and in the same way as formerly the outspoken legalists expected the Soviet authorities to adhere strictly to the letter of their constitution.[15] Dissident Russian and East European intellectuals who urged compliance with the Helsinki accords have been subjected to official repression.[16] 50 members of Soviet Helsinki Groups were imprisoned.[17] Сases of political prisoners and prisoners of conscience in the Soviet Union were divulged by Amnesty International in 1975[18] and by The Committee for the Defense of Soviet Political Prisoners in 1975[19] and 1976.[20][21]

US President Jimmy Carter in his inaugural address on 20 January 1977 announced that human rights would be central to foreign policy during his administration.[22] In February, Carter sent Andrei Dmitrievich Sakharov a letter expressing his support for the latter’s stance on human rights.[22][23] In the wake of Carter's letter to Sakharov, the USSR cautioned against attempts "to interfere' in its affairs under "a thought-up pretext of 'defending human rights.'"[24] Because of Carter's open show of support for Soviet dissidents, the KGB was able to link dissent with American imperialism through suggesting that such protest is a cover for American espionage in the Soviet Union.[25] The KGB head Yuri Andropov determined, "The need has thus emerged to terminate the actions of Orlov, fellow Helsinki monitor Ginzburg and others once and for all, on the basis of existing law."[26] According to Dmitri Volkogonov and Harold Shukman, it was Andropov who approved the numerous trials of human rights activists such as Andrei Amalrik, Vladimir Bukovsky, Vyacheslav Chornovil, Zviad Gamsakhurdia, Alexander Ginzburg, Natalya Gorbanevskaya, Pyotr Grigorenko, Anatoly Shcharansky, and others.[27]

Voluntary and involuntary emigration allowed the authorities to rid themselves of many political active intellectuals including writers Valentin Turchin, Georgi Vladimov, Vladimir Voinovich, Lev Kopelev, Vladimir Maximov, Naum Korzhavin, Vasily Aksyonov and others.[28]: 194  A Chronicle of Current Events covered 424 political trials, in which 753 people were convicted, and no one of the accused was acquitted; in addition, 164 people were declared insane and sent to compulsory treatment in a psychiatric hospital.[29]

According to Soviet dissidents and Western critics, the KGB had routinely sent dissenters to psychiatrists for diagnosing to avoid embarrassing publiс trials and to discredit dissidence as the product of ill minds.[30][31] On the grounds that political dissenters in the Soviet Union were psychotic and deluded, they were locked away in psychiatric hospitals and treated with neuroleptics.[32] Confinement of political dissenters in psychiatric institutions had become a common practice.[33] That technique could be called the "medicalization" of dissidence or psychiatric terror, the now familiar form of repression applied in the Soviet Union to Leonid Plyushch, Pyotr Grigorenko, and many others.[34] Finally, many persons at that time tended to believe that dissidents were abnormal people whose commitment to mental hospitals was quite justified.[28]: 96 [35] In the opinion of the Moscow Helsinki Group chairwoman Lyudmila Alexeyeva, the attribution of a mental illness to a prominent figure who came out with a political declaration or action is the most significant factor in the assessment of psychiatry during the 1960–1980s.[36]

Repression of the Helsinki Watch Groups

In 1977-1979 and again in 1980-1982, the KGB reacted to the Helsinki Watch Groups in Moscow, Kiev, Vilnius, Tbilisi, and Erevan by launching large-scale arrests and sentencing its members to in prison, labor camp, internal exile and psychiatric imprisonment.

From the members of the Moscow Helsinki Group, 1978 saw it members Yuri Orlov, Vladimir Slepak and Anatoly Shcharansky sentenced to lengthy labor camp terms and internal exile for "anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda" and treason. Another wave of arrests followed in the early 1980s: Malva Landa, Viktor Nekipelov, Leonard Ternovsky, Feliks Serebrov, Tatiana Osipova, Anatoly Marchenko, and Ivan Kovalev.[37]: 249  Soviet authorities offered some activists the "opportunity" to emigrate. Lyudmila Alexeyeva emigrated in 1977. The Moscow Helsinki Group founding members Mikhail Bernshtam, Alexander Korchak, Vitaly Rubin also emigrated, and Pyotr Grigorenko was stripped of his Soviet citizenship while seeking medical treatment abroad.[38]

The Ukrainian Helsinki Group suffered severe repressions throughout 1977-1982, with at times multiple labor camp sentences handed out to Mykola Rudenko, Oleksy Tykhy, Myroslav Marynovych, Mykola Matusevych, Levko Lukyanenko, Oles Berdnyk, Mykola Horbal, Zinovy Krasivsky, Vitaly Kalynychenko, Vyacheslav Chornovil, Olha Heyko, Vasyl Stus, Oksana Meshko, Ivan Sokulsky, Ivan Kandyba, Petro Rozumny, Vasyl Striltsiv, Yaroslav Lesiv, Vasyl Sichko, Yuri Lytvyn, Petro Sichko.[37]: 250–251  By 1983 the Ukrainian Helsinki Group had 37 members, of whom 22 were in prison camps, 5 were in exile, 6 emigrated to the West, 3 were released and were living in Ukraine, 1 (Mykhailo Melnyk) committed suicide.[39]

The Lithuanian Helsinki Group saw its members subjected to two waves of imprisonment for anti-Soviet activities and "organization of religious processions": Viktoras Petkus was sentenced in 1978; others followed in 1980-1981: Algirdas Statkevičius, Vytautas Skuodys, Mečislovas Jurevičius, and Vytautas Vaičiūnas.[37]: 251–252 

Currents of dissidence

Civil and human rights movement

In the 1960s, the early years of the Brezhnev stagnation, dissidents in the Soviet Union increasingly turned their attention towards civil and eventually human rights concerns. The fight for civil and human rights focused on issues of freedom of expression, freedom of conscience, freedom to emigrate, punitive psychiatry, and the plight of political prisoners. It was characterized by a new openness of dissent, a concern for legality, the rejection of any 'underground' and violent struggle.[40] The civil and human rights initiatives played a significant role in providing a common language and goal for many Soviet dissidents, and became a cause for diverse social groups in the dissident millieu, ranging from activists in the youth subculture to academics such as Andrei Sakharov.

Throughout the 1960s-1980s, dissidents in the civil and human rights movement engaged in a variety of activities: The documentation of political repression and rights violations in samizdat; individual and collective protest letters and petitions; unsanctioned demonstrations; an informal network of mutual aid for prisoners of conscience; and, most prominently, civic watch groups appealing to the international community. All of these activities came at great personal risk and with repercussions ranging from dismissal from work and studies to many years of imprisonment in labor camps and being subjected to punitive psychiatry.

Significantly, Soviet dissidents of the 1960s introduced the "legalist" approach of avoiding moral and political commentary in favor of close attention to legal and procedural issues. Following several landmark trials, coverage of arrests and trials in samizdat (unsanctioned press) became more common. This activity eventually led to the founding of the Chronicle of Current Events in April 1968. The unofficial newsletter reported violations of civil rights and judicial procedure by the Soviet government and responses to those violations by citizens across the USSR.[41]

The rights-based strategy of dissent merged with the idea of human rights. The human rights movement included figures such as Valery Chalidze, Yuri Orlov, and Lyudmila Alexeyeva. Special groups were founded such as the Initiative Group for the Defense of Human Rights in the USSR (1969) and the Committee on Human Rights in the USSR (1970). The signing of the Helsinki Accords (1975) containing human rights clauses provided civil rights campaigners with a new hope to use international instruments. This lead to the creation of dedicated Helsinki Watch Groups in Moscow (Moscow Helsinki Group), Kiev (Ukrainian Helsinki Group), Vilnius (Lithuanian Helsinki Group), Tbilisi, and Erevan (1976–77).[42]: 159–194 

Due to the contacts with Western journalists as well as the political focus during detente (e.g., the Jackson-Vanick amendment and the Helsinki Accords), dissidents active in the human rights movement were among those most visible in the West (next to refuseniks).

Movements of deported nations

In 1944 THE WHOLE OF OUR PEOPLE was slanderously accused of betraying the Soviet Мotherland and was forcibly deported from the Crimea. [...] [O]n 5 September 1967, there appeared a Decree of the Presidium of the USSR Supreme Soviet which cleared us of the charge of treason but described us not as Crimean Tatars but as “citizens of Tatar nationality formerly resident in the Crimea”, thus legitimizing our banishment from our home country and liquidating us as a nation.

We did not grasp the significance of the decree immediately. After it was published, several thousand people traveled to the Crimea but were once again forcibly expelled. The protest which our people sent to the party Central Committee was left unanswered, as were also the protests of representatives of the Soviet public who supported us. The authorities replied to us only with persecution and court cases.

Since 1959 more than two hundred of the most active and courageous representatives have been sentenced to terms of up to seven years although they had always acted within the limits of the Soviet Constitution.

– Appeal by Crimean Tatars to World Public Opinion, Chronicle of Current Events Issue No 2 (30 June 1968)[43]

Several national or ethnic groups who had been deported under Stalin formed movements to return to their homelands. In particular, the Crimean Tatars aimed to return to Crimea, the Meskhetian Turks to South Georgia and ethnic Germans aimed to resettle along the Volga River near Saratov.

The Crimean Tatar movement takes a prominent place among the movement of deported nations. The Tatars had been refused the right to return to the Crimea, even though the laws justifying their deportation had been overturned. Their first collective letter calling for the restoration dates to 1957. [44] In the early 1960s, the Crimean Tatars had began to establish initiative groups in the places where they had been forcibly resettled. Lead by Mustafa Dzhemilev, they founded their own democratic and decentralized organization, considered unique in the history of independent movements in the Soviet Union.[45]: 131 [46]: 7 

Emigration movements

The emigration movements in the Soviet Union included the movement of Soviet Jews to emigrate to Israel and of the Volga Germans to emigrate to West Germany.

Soviet Jews were routinely denied permission to emigrate by the authorities of the former Soviet Union and other countries of the Eastern bloc.[47] A movement for the right to emigrate formed in the 1960s, which also gave rise to a revival of interest in Jewish culture. The refusenik cause gathered considerable attention in the West. The Volga Germans' failure to obtain permission to return gave rise to an emigration movement similar to the Jewish emigration movement of the late 1960s.[45]: 132 

Religious movements

The religious movements in the USSR included Russian Orthodox, Catholic, and Protestant movements. They focused on the freedom to practice their faith and resistance to interference by the state in their internal affairs.[46]: 8 

The Russian Orthodox movement remained relatively small. The Catholic movement in Lithuania was part of the larger Lithuanian national movement. Protestant groups which opposed the anti-religious state directives included the Baptists, the Seventh Day Adventists, and the Pentecostals. Similar to the Jewish and German dissident movements, many in the independent Pentecostal movement pursued emigration.

National movements

The national movements included the Russian national dissidents as well as dissident movements from Ukraine, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Georgia, and Armenia.

Among the nations that lived in their own territories with the status of republics within the Soviet Union, the first movement to emerge in the 1960s was the Ukrainian movement. Its aspiration was to resist the Russification of Ukraine and to insist on equal rights and democratization for the republic.[46]: 7 

In Lithuania, the national movement of the 1970s was closely linked to the Catholic movement.[46]: 7 

Literary and cultural

File:Сообщение ТАСС о высылке Солженицына.jpg
TASS press release on the expulsion of Alexandr Solzhenitzyn (Izvestia, 15 February 1974)

Several landmark examples of dissenting writers played a significant role for the wider dissident movement. These include the persecutions of Osip Mandelshtam, Boris Pasternak, Mikhail Bulgakov, and Joseph Brodsky, as well as the publication of The Gulag Archipelago by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.

In literary world, there were dozens of literati who participated in dissident movement, including Vasily Aksyonov, Arkadiy Belinkov, Leonid Borodin, Joseph Brodsky, Georgi Vladimov, Vladimir Voinovich, Aleksandr Galich, Venedikt Yerofeyev, Alexander Zinoviev, Lev Kopelev, Naum Korzhavin, Vladimir Maximov, Viktor Nekrasov, Andrei Sinyavsky, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, and Varlam Shalamov.[48]

In the early Soviet Union, non-conforming academics were exiled via so-called Philosophers' ships. Later, figures such as cultural theorist Grigori Pomerants were among active dissidents.[46]: 327 

Other intersections of cultural and literary nonconformism with dissidents include the wide field of Soviet Nonconformist Art, such as the painters of the underground Lianozovo group, and artists active in the "Second Culture".

Other groups

Other groups included the Socialists, the movements for socioeconomic rights (especially the independent unions), as well as women's, environmental, and peace movements. [45]: 132 [46]: 3–18 

Identifying and solving the trouble

President Reagan delivering the March 23, 1983 speech initiating Star Wars program

US President Ronald Reagan attributed to the view that the "brutal treatment of Soviet dissidents was due to bureaucratic inertia."[49] On 14 November 1988, he held a meeting with Andrei Sakharov at the White House and said that Soviet human rights abuses are impeding progress and would continue to do so until the problem is "completely eliminated."[50] Whether talking to about one hundred dissidents in a broadcast to the Soviet people or at the U.S. Embassy, Reagan’s agenda was one of freedom to travel, freedom of speech, freedom of religion.[51] There is an opinion that Star Wars program, which was launched in the US under Ronald Reagan, was a major factor in the chain of events that led to the first defeat of the USSR in the Cold War and later to the collapse of the communist regime in the country.[52]

Dissidents about their dissent

Fellow dissident and one of the founders of the Moscow Helsinki Group Lyudmila Alexeyeva wrote:

What would happen if citizens acted on the assumption that they have rights? If one person did it, he would become a martyr; if two people did it, they would be labeled an enemy organization; if thousands of people did it, the state would have to become less oppressive.[46]: 275 

According to Soviet dissident Victor Davydoff, totalitarian system has no mechanisms that could change the behavior of the ruling group from within.[53] Any attempts to change this are immediately suppressed through repression.[53] Dissidents appealed to international human rights organizations, foreign governments, and there was a result.[53] The same should be used now as well; in the situation where the mass manipulation through the media brought the country to the point where people do not realize what happens in the country, when people do not understand what is going on in the world, one can only rely on the fact that those who know and understand will be able to find common language with people abroad and thus to change the situation.[53]

References

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  44. ^ Natella Boltyanskaya (30 December 2013). "Двадцать четвертая серия. История крымских татар". Voice of America (in Russian). Parallels, Events, People. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  45. ^ a b c Gerlant, Uta (2010). ""The Law is Our Only Language": Soviet Dissidents and Human Rights". Human Rights And History: A Challenge for Education. Berlin: Stiftung "Erinnerung, Verantwortung und Zukunft". pp. 130–141. ISBN 978-3-9810631-9-6.
  46. ^ a b c d e f g Alexeyeva, Ludmilla (1987). Soviet dissent: contemporary movements for national, religious, and human rights. Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. p. 275. ISBN 0-8195-6176-2.
  47. ^ Mark Azbel' and Grace Pierce Forbes. Refusenik, trapped in the Soviet Union. Houghton Mifflin, 1981. ISBN 0-395-30226-9
  48. ^ "Писатели-диссиденты: биобиблиографические статьи (начало)" [Dissident writers: bibliographic articles (beginning)]. Новое литературное обозрение [New Literary Review] (in Russian) (66). 2004.
  49. ^ Altshuler, Stuart (2005). From exodus to freedom: a history of the Soviet Jewry movement. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 61. ISBN 0742549364.
  50. ^ Lee, Gary (15 November 1988). "President receives Sakharov". The Washington Post.
  51. ^ Edwards, Lee (2005). The essential Ronald Reagan: a profile in courage, justice, and wisdom. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 136. ISBN 0742543757.
  52. ^ Ackerman, Galina (2006). "Еще раз о диссидентах – об их роли в падении советского режима" [Once again about dissidents – about their role in the fall of the Soviet regime]. Kontinent (in Russian) (128).
  53. ^ a b c d Гальперович, Данила (21 October 2015). "Для выхода "Хроники текущих событий" в России опять пришло время" (in Russian). Voice of America. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)

Further reading

Outsiders' works
Insiders' works

Audiovisual material

See also