Natalya Gorbanevskaya
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Life in Moscow
Gorbanevskaya was born in Moscow. She graduated from Leningrad University in 1964 and became a technical editor and translator.[1] Only nine of her poems had been published in official journals by the time she quit the USSR in 1975; the rest circulated privately (samizdat) or were published abroad (tamizdat).
Dissident activities
From 1968 onwards Gorbanevskaya was active in what was later called the Soviet "dissident movement."
She was founder and first editor of A Chronicle of Current Events, a samizdat publication that focused on the violation of basic human rights in the Soviet Union. Her contribution was to compile and edit the reports, and then type the first six carbon copies of the issue, the "zero-generation" copy, for further replication and distribution.[2]
Gorbanevskaya was also one of eight protesters in the 25 August 1968 Red Square demonstration against the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. Having recently given birth, she was not immediately tried with the other demonstrators. She used this time to follow the trial in the Chronicle of Current Events, and published the accumulated documentation abroad in French and Russian (Polden). The book appeared in English in 1972 as Red Square at Noon.[1][3]
In 1969, she signed An Appeal to The UN Committee for Human Rights.[4]
In December 1969 Gorbanevskaya was arrested. In July of the following year she was put on trial and found guilty of offences under Article 190-1 of the RSFSR Criminal Code, committed while of unsound mind. Gorbanevskaya was sentenced to indefinite confinement in a psychiatric hospital where she would be treated for "sluggish schizophrenia", a diagnosis commonly applied to dissidents. Gorbanevskaya was released from the Kazan Special Psychiatric Hospital in February 1972.[5][6][7]
Life in emigration
In December 1975, Gorbanevskaya emigrated to Paris. They concluded that in 1969–72 she had been committed to a psychiatric hospital for political, not medical reasons. There, French psychiatrists at their request examined Gorbanevskaya and found her to be mentally normal.[1][8]
For a time Gorbanevskaya was a celebrity figure in the West. In 1976 Joan Baez released a song dedicated to Gorbanevskaya called "Natalia", written by Roy Apps, Shusha Guppy and G.T. Moore, on the live album From Every Stage. Introducing the song, Baez criticized Gorbanevskaya's internment in the psychiatric hospital and said: "It is because of people like Natalya Gorbanevskaya, I am convinced, that you and I are still alive and walking around on the face of the earth."[1][9]
Adrienne Rich also wrote "For a Sister," from the book Diving into the Wreck: Poems 1971–1972, in acknowledgement of Gorbanevskaya and other women and their wrongful imprisonment.[10]
For thirty years, however, Gorbanevskaya was stateless until Poland granted her citizenship in 2005.
In 2005 Gorbanevskaya took part in They Chose Freedom, a four-part television documentary on the history of the Soviet dissident movement directed by Vladimir Kara-Murza Jr.
In 2008, she was a signatory of the Prague Declaration on European Conscience and Communism.[11]
Commemoration rally on Red Square, 2013
In August 2013, on the 45th anniversary of her arrest in Red Square, Ms. Gorbanevskaya returned there with nine other demonstrators to commemorate the protest. They were arrested on charges of holding an unsanctioned rally.[12]
Death
On 29 November 2013, Gorbanevskaya died in her house in Paris.[1][13]
Awards
In 2008, October, Gorbanevskaya received Poland's Marie Curie Award. The same year, Gorbanevskaya was nominated for the Angelus Central European Literature Award.[14][15][16][17][18]
On 22 October 2013 Gorbanevskaya received an honorary medal from Charles University in Prague for her lifelong commitment to the struggle for democracy, freedom and human rights.[19]
On 27 October 2014 Gorbanevskaya was awarded posthumously the highest Slovak award, the Order of the White Double Cross, for her lifelong efforts to defend democracy and human rights.[20]
Books and other publications
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See also
References
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- ↑ a b c d e Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ A Chronicle of Current Events Nos 1- 11, 30 April 1968 to 31 December 1969.
- ↑ A Chronicle of Current Events No 4, 30 October 1968 — 4.1 "The Trial of the Red Square demonstrators". Template:Webarchive
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- ↑ A Chronicle of Current Events No 11, 31 December 1969 – 11.1 "The Arrest of Gorbanevskaya."
- ↑ A Chronicle of Current Events No 15, 31 August 1970 – 15.1 "The Trial of Gorbanevskaya."
- ↑ A Chronicle of Current Events No 24, 5 March 1972 – 24.10 "News in Brief."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". Shusha Guppy herself also recorded it; it was included in her 1974 album Shusha.
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External links
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Links in English
- Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1". (English translation from a review, published in Novy Mir, No.7, 1997, p. 67–68).
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- 10 poems by Natalya Gorbanevskaya: Audio of her own reading with text translations into different languages
- Poems and texts by Gorbanevskaya at Prague Writers' Festival
Links in Russian
- List of publications
- Photographs and biography
- Биография
- Наталья Горбаневская. Что помню я о демонстрации
- Информация о демонстрации в бюллетене «Хроника текущих событий» Template:Webarchive
- Информация о суде над демонстрантами в бюллетене «Хроника текущих событий» Template:Webarchive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20071012132901/http://yale.edu/annals/sakharov/documents_frames/Sakharov_008.htm; Письмо Андропова в ЦК про демонстрацию (windows encoding)
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- Pages with script errors
- 1936 births
- 2013 deaths
- Activists from Moscow
- Writers from Moscow
- Saint Petersburg State University alumni
- Russian women poets
- Soviet women poets
- Soviet poets
- Soviet dissidents
- Soviet psychiatric abuse whistleblowers
- Psychiatric survivor activists
- Russian women activists
- Soviet translators
- Soviet emigrants to France
- 20th-century Russian women writers
- 20th-century Russian translators
- 20th-century Russian writers
- 20th-century Russian memoirists
- People associated with Kultura (magazine)
- Russian women memoirists