COLIN SHINDLER
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Home 1976

Soviet Jewry in 1976

31 December 1976Articles, Soviet Jewry, Soviet JewryColin Shindler

Despite the severe measures taken by the KGB last week against the organisers of the Jewish cultural seminar in Moscow, 1976 was a better year in some respects for the Jewish activist movement in the Soviet Union than the previous one. There were no trials (there were eight in 1975) and the activists adopted a…

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KGB threatens Moscow Cultural Seminar

17 December 1976Articles, Soviet Jewry, Soviet JewryColin Shindler

There are now grave doubts about whether the KGB will permit the Jewish cultural seminar to open in Moscow next Tuesday. Five of its 13 organisers were warned by the Deputy Minister of Culture last week that the symposium was a “provocation contrary to the interests of Soviet Jewry and to Marxist-Leninist ideology”. In addition,…

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What happened to Edward Kuznetsov?

10 December 1976Articles, Soviet JewryColin Shindler

There is growing disquiet among Moscow activists over the fate of Edward Kuznetsov. He was sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment in the first Leningrad trial, the sixth anniversary of which will be marked next week, but no one now knows for cerrtain where he is. A letter sent to him at the strict regime Potma…

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Moscow bends to World Pressure

19 November 1976Articles, Soviet Jewry, Soviet JewryColin Shindler

  There was rejoicing in Moscow this week—and indeed throughout the Jewish world—at the surprise announcement that the authorities were dropping their charges against two Jewish dissidents, Boris Chernobilsky and Iosif As. The two men had been held in prison since their arrest last month following sit-ins staged by a group of refuseniks. It had…

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Interview with Lydia Korenfeld

12 November 1976Articles, Soviet Jewry, Soviet JewryColin Shindler

Why did you apply to go to Israel? It’s a very simple yet very difficult question. We wanted to go to Israel because we wanted to bring up our children in a Jewish atmosphere. • So why did the Soviet authorities refuse to give you permission for over five years? You never know where…

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Lesson for the Left in Ponomarev Visit

5 November 1976Articles, Soviet Jewry, Soviet JewryColin Shindler

THE visit to Britain of Boris Ponomarev, like that of former KGB chief Alexander Shelepin last year, has been an unmitigated disaster for those who try to promote the human face of Soviet socialism Beginning with the uproar in Parliament and ending with a bevy of cat-and-mouse demonstrations, Ponomarev was quite clearly shaken by the…

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Why the activists finally lost patience

29 October 1976Articles, Soviet Jewry, Soviet JewryColin Shindler

The dramatic events of the past two weeks in Moscow, in which leading Jewish activists have been severely beaten and arrested because of their open demands for exit visas, have brought this issue’ to a head just at a time when the Kremlin would most have liked things to remain dormant—on the eve of the…

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Interview with Vitaly Rubin

22 October 1976Articles, Soviet Jewry, Soviet JewryColin Shindler

What is the current situation regarding Jews in the Soviet Union? It is a matter of life and death for them to be out of the country because of the catastrophic growth of anti-Semitism. Despite requests from the west, there has been no improvement at all in the religious facilities available for those who wish…

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Activists thirst for Jewish knowledge

10 September 1976Articles, Soviet Jewry, Soviet JewryColin Shindler

Although the Russians are continuing to harass their Jewish citizens, they appear to be refrain-ng from resorting to blatant cruelties which could form the nucleus of an issue between them and the Americans in the US presidential campaign. Last year, there were eight known trials of Jewish activists. Pour were young men tried for evasion,…

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The Long-term Refuseniks

3 September 1976Articles, Soviet Jewry, Soviet JewryColin Shindler

In the lull before the elections in the United States, the situation of the veteran refuseniks, appears to be as unchanging and heartbreaking as ever. A particularly tragic case is that the Slepak family in Moscow, Although Vladimir has been given numerous excuses for not being allowed to leave, the main one usually quoted by…

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