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Writer applauds Russian foreign, criticizes domestic
policy
MOSCOW, February 26 (RIA Novosti) - Russian Nobel Prize-winning writer
Alexander Solzhenitsyn has applauded the country's foreign polices, but voiced
concerns about its declining moral and cultural standards and the growing social
gap.
Presenting the Soviet-era dissident writer's new article on Russian history,
his wife, Natalia Solzhenitsyna, said: "Alexander Isayevich believes a number of
appropriate steps have been made in international politics in recent years, and
Russia has regained a certain global authority, which is not over inflated."
Solzhenitsyn, 88, whose work exposed the horrors of Stalinist labor camps,
was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1970, but was imprisoned and
expelled from the Soviet Union in 1974 following the publication of his seminal
work The Gulag Archipelago. He returned to Russia in 1994 after 20 years in
exile in Europe and the United States.
But what is happening in Russia, including the growing cultural and economic
gap between ruling elite and society at large worries the writer, his wife said.
"Solzhenitsyn is basically provincial, and he really feels the misery of
those living outside the capital, but the authorities do not see it or choose
not to," she said.
Solzhenitsyn, dubbed as a "moral tonometer" of Russian society, has been
living near Moscow in recent years. Through rare interviews or opinions conveyed
by his wife, Solzhenitsyn has highlighted weakening moral standards and a
dramatic population decline in Russia plagued by low living standards, a
pandemic of alcoholism, drug abuse, and infectious diseases.
Russia's chief human rights ombudsman, Vladimir Lukin, echoed the concerns:
"An enormous gap between the rich and poor exists in our society, and it is
being bridged much slower than it should be."
Lukin said wages and pensions were often lower than the subsistence level and
urged measures to deter another 1917 revolution in Russia, the topic of
Solzhenitsyn's new article. "It is important to learn the lessons from history
and do everything to make sure it does not repeat itself," Lukin said.
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