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Chicago Tribune
November 11, 2001
SOVIET DISSIDENTS
Gone with the winds of change
By Reese Erlich.
Reese Erlich produced "The Russia Project," a two-hour radio
documentary hosted by Walter Cronkite, which airs on WBEZ-FM in December
Alexandr Tarasov was only 17 when he was thrown into the KGB's infamous
Lubyanka prison in Moscow. But Lubyanka, it turned out, was a country club
compared to what he faced next.
Tarasov had joined a fledgling Marxist-Leninist opposition group that said
the Soviet Union wasn't socialist enough. He and other members were sent to
psychiatric hospitals in 1975 on the grounds that anyone who criticized the
Soviet government from the left must be crazy.
"I was told that my views are proof of the fact that I am mentally
disabled," Tarasov said in a recent interview. KGB doctors gave Tarasov
electroshock 10 times and also induced insulin shock.
"A person is injected with insulin and then goes into a coma,"
Tarasov explained. "He is very close to death, and at the right time, he is
injected with glucose to save his life."
Such comas were used in the United States and Europe until the early 1950s to
treat schizophrenia, but the KGB used them to torture political prisoners.
Tarasov was released after one year, with no charges filed against him. He
suffered permanent injury to his spine and pancreas but today he lives an
otherwise normal life, working as a sociologist at a Moscow think tank.
Tarasov was one of thousands of Soviet political and religious dissidents who
faced arbitrary arrests, brutal prison conditions and sometimes torture in the
post-Stalin era. Tarasov's case never became well-known. Others became world
famous: Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Andrei Sinyavsky, Yuli Daniel, Natan Sharansky
and Andrei Sakharov, to name a few.
These Soviet dissidents developed a heroic image in the West, promoted by the
U.S. government and media. Vladimir Pozner, who now hosts a popular Russian news
interview program, said Western governments wanted people to believe that the
dissidents were freedom fighters supported by the masses of Soviets.
In fact, Pozner said, "The dissidents represented one-tenth of 1 percent
of the Soviet people."
If the dissidents had indeed reflected mass sentiment, then one would expect
them to be leaders in the new Russia, or at least to exercise political
influence.
But they don't.
Human-rights violations abound, even in the new Russia.
Rigged elections, large-scale government corruption, poverty, unemployment
and a barely functioning legal system are just some of the offenses.
Ludmilla Alexeyeva, who heads the Moscow Helsinki Group, a human-rights
organization, said rights violations "are a mass phenomena in all parts of
our country. The most painful for society are the vices of our legal system. We
would like an independent judiciary."
Former dissident Boris Kagarlitsky now leads a small social democratic party
in Russia.
"Russia is democracy guided through electoral fraud," he said.
"We are free to speak but not to choose. Those who are in power stay in
power, no matter what."
The former dissidents find themselves in a political dilemma similar to that
of Soviet times.
They don't face long jail sentences.
But their protests against human-rights violations are ignored by the
authorities. The difference this time is that they are also largely ignored by
the West.
Today virtually none of the dissidents who were so closely covered in the
Soviet era hold elective office in Russia, and they are largely ignored by
politicians and the public. The dissidents admit they hold little influence
today, and they had little popular support before the Soviet Union's collapse in
1991.
"The Soviet authorities would reproach the U.S. that the dissidents
weren't representing anyone," former dissident Larisa Bogaraz said in a
recent interview. "We wanted the situation to be just like that. Each
dissident could represent himself."
Pozner said the dissidents were very brave intellectuals, but most never
became organizers with a political program. They could never answer the
question: "Once the Soviet Union disappeared ... then what?"
Dissidents' history
The modern history of Soviet dissidents began on a blustery, overcast day in
1965. On Dec. 5, a group of about 20 Soviet intellectuals gathered in Moscow's
Pushkin Square. Foreign diplomats and media hovered nearby. So did KGB officers
in thick overcoats.
At precisely 6 p.m., the intellectuals began to pull hand-lettered paper
banners from under their coats. Before anyone could even read the banners, the
security forces hustled them into waiting black sedans and rushed them to jail.
At the jail, a hulking KGB official produced a crumpled banner and, without
having read it in advance, thrust it in the face of one of the protesting
intellectuals. The banner read, "Please respect the Soviet
Constitution."
The intellectuals had chosen Constitution Day for their protest and were
demanding that the Kremlin adhere to Soviet laws regarding free speech and
assembly.
"This KGB official was slightly taken aback," Alexeyeva said.
"Very soon after that, all the demonstrators were released."
The early political dissidents were almost exclusively academics,
professionals and other intellectuals seeking greater political freedoms within
the Soviet system. Some, such as Solzhenitsyn, were die-hard anti-communists.
Some were liberal advocates of Western-style political systems; others were
Marxists. The Soviet authorities treated them all as enemies of the state.
In 1966, Daniel and Sinyavsky were tried and convicted for publishing
"anti-Soviet" articles in a French magazine. Both were sent to prison
camps.
"Yuli had been wounded during the war, and he had a crippled hand,"
said Bogaraz, his wife at that time. "He was forced to unload rail
cars."
Medical care and food were bad, she said: "no vegetables, no fruits, no
vitamins."
In the course of his life, Daniel served 19 1/2 years in prison. He died in
Russia in 1988, and Sinyavsky died in exile in France in 1997.
The dissidents organized informal support committees among fellow
intellectuals and received widespread publicity in the West. Some, such as
Solzhenitsyn, began to develop anti-communist political programs. But most never
saw themselves as a movement that advocated clear political alternatives.
"I never understood politics," Bogaraz said. "My feelings are
on the side of liberal values."
U.S. influence
Kagarlitsky, who spent 13 months in prison during the Brezhnev years, said
the U.S. government sought to influence the dissidents. U.S. Embassy officials
held clandestine meetings with them, offered support, and broadcast their views
on Voice of America and Radio Liberty.
"You become dependent on the people who are friendly to you,"
Kagarlitsky said. Physicist Sakharov "started as democratic socialist. The
longer he dealt with their international apparatus, the more he shifted to the
right politically, including saying that the Americans did it right bombing
Vietnam," Kagarlitsky said.
In some cases, the U.S. strongly supported extreme nationalists, knowing
their views were anti-democratic. Solzhenitsyn, who won a Nobel Prize for his
novels about Stalinist prison camps, also rejects Western democracy and calls
for benevolent authoritarianism based on Russian Christian values.
After Solzhenitsyn's triumphant return and national tour of Russia in 1994,
his views became more widely known. After initially considering a run at
elective office, he quickly gave up the idea because of lack of support. Today
he lives in almost complete political isolation in Moscow.
Some former Soviet dissidents did become political leaders--outside Russia.
Sharansky, a famous human-rights activist and Jewish refusenik, is a right-wing
Cabinet minister in Israel. Zviad Gamsakhurdia, jailed by the Soviets in the
1970s, became the first president of independent Georgia, but he was ousted
because of his extreme nationalism and died in 1993 while trying to get back in
power.
During the closing years of the Gorbachev era, Sakharov, historian Roy
Medvedev and a few other dissidents rose to positions of influence. Sakharov was
elected to the Congress of People's Deputies and was helping draft a new Soviet
Constitution when he died of a heart attack in 1989. Former political prisoner
Sergei Kovalyov is now the only remaining former dissident in the State Duma,
the lower house of parliament, but he has little power.
Shortly after Boris Yeltsin took power in 1991, the former dissidents fell
out of favor. The new rulers weren't interested in being criticized for
human-rights violations. And the dissidents failed to attract mass support
because they offered no practical program for solving the massive economic
collapse, growth in organized crime, ethnic warfare and other serious problems
afflicting Russia.
During Soviet times "they were dissenting against the authorities from a
moral point of view," Medvedev said. "They never developed a goal to
be political leaders. That's why there are few dissidents who are political
leaders."
Footsteps echo loudly on the marble stairway at the Andrei Sakharov Center in
Moscow. But few people hear them. Set next to a grassy park with large shade
trees, the Sakharov museum and archive were established to educate Russians
about the repression of the past. On any given day, a few researchers and
foreign tourists pass through.
The U.S. Agency for International Development initially funded the Sakharov
Center, but when that money was due to run out in December 2000, the center
almost closed. Boris Berezovsky, a Russian capitalist linked to widespread
corruption in the Yeltsin years, donated $3million to keep the center open.
The center tries to promote political activism. It brings together former
dissidents and intellectuals to protest the war in Chechnya, for example. But
few attend the meetings. And it's not a problem of government repression, admits
center director Yuri Samodurov.
"We don't have a feeling we are being watched," he said. "The
problem is there is no real public support."
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