Alexander Ginzburg

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Alexander Ilyich Ginzburg
Александр Ильич Гинзбург
dissident movement in the Soviet Union
SpouseArina Sergeevna Zholkovskaya-Ginzburg
Childrentwo sons: Alexander and Alexey

Alexander "Alik" Ilyich Ginzburg (Russian: Алекса́ндр Ильи́ч Ги́нзбург, IPA:

Georgy Vins
) and their families, as part of a prisoner exchange.

Biography

A nephew of Yevgenia Ginzburg, and semi-orphan, Alexander Ginzburg, was educated in Moscow, and worked as a lathe operator and part time journalist after leaving school, then as an actor, but had to give up acting in 1959, after falling from a third storey window.[1]

Dissident work

At the end of 1959, Ginzburg issued the USSR's first samizdat literary magazine Phoenix, with Yuri Galanskov.[2] He also cofounded the poetry almanac Sintaksis.[2] After three issues, he was expelled from Moscow University, arrested and sentenced to two years in a labour camp. Released in 1962, he was unable to find regular work, but continued to patronise underground art, by distributing literature and holding private film shows. He was returned to Lubyanka prison for a short time in 1964.

In December 1965, Alexander Ginzburg documented the trial of writers Yuli Daniel and Andrei Sinyavsky (Sinyavsky–Daniel trial). Having obtained a copy of closed-door court proceedings from the court stenographer, he compiled a White Book documenting the trial. He then sent copies of the book with his address to the KGB and the Chief Prosecutor's Office.[1]: 8  The book also circulated in samizdat and was smuggled to the West. In December 1966, he summoned before the KGB and ordered to repudiate the White Book, which he refused to do. He was arrested on 23 January 1967. His case was linked with Galanskov's, though the only direct link between their activities was that they both relied on the same typist, Vera Lashkova. They were co-defendants at the Trial of the Four, at the conclusion of which, on 12 January 1968, Ginzburg was sentenced to five years of forced labour.

In a labour camp in

Vladimir Prison
.

Ginzburg was released when his five year prison term ended, on 22 January 1972, and was allowed to settle in Tarusa, 50 miles south of Moscow.[3] He was a friend of Alexander Solzhenitsyn, with whom he initiated the Fund for the Aid of Political Prisoners.[4] Based on the royalties derived from Solzhenitsyn's book The Gulag Archipelago, it distributed funds and material support to political and religious prisoners across the Soviet Union throughout the 1970s and 1980s.[5] Ginzburg had power of attorney over the fund after Solzhenitsyn's expulsion from the USSR in February 1974, but in April, he was placed under police surveillance and forbidden to leave the district of Talusa where he lived, even to walk as far as the local cinema, and was forbidden to leave the house after 8.00pm.[6]

Ginzburg in 1979 after release to the USA

In 1976, Ginzburg became a founding member of the Moscow Helsinki Group, which monitored breaches of the human rights guarantees the Soviet government signed up to in the 1975 Helsinki accords. Ginzburg was given the task of monitoring the State's persecution of the smaller Christian denominations, for which he was, again, arrested in 1978 and sentenced to an eight-year prison term.[citation needed] In April 1979, he was with four other dissidents deprived of his citizenship and exchanged for two Soviets who had been jailed for espionage.[5]

Throughout his career, Ginzburg advocated nonviolent resistance. He believed in exposing human rights abuses by the Soviet Union and pressuring the government to follow its own laws. He made an effort to smuggle his writings abroad in order to increase external pressure on the Soviets.

References

  1. ^ .
  2. ^ a b "The Scene" (PDF). Digital Collections. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  3. ^ A Chronicle of Current Events (24): 144–45. 5 March 1972. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. ^ A Chronicle of Current Events (33): 170. 10 December 1974. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. ^ a b "Alexander Ginsburg". Telegraph.co.uk. 22 July 2002. Retrieved 1 December 2015.
  6. ^ A Chronicle of Current Events (32): 79. 17 July 1974. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

Further reading

Frontpage Mag: Remembering Alexander Ginzburg

Bibliography