The Essay That Helped Bring Down the Soviet Union
It championed an idea at grave risk today: that those of us lucky enough to live in open societies should fight for the freedom of those born into closed ones.
By Natan Sharansky
Mr. Sharansky, the author of The Case for Democracy, is a former spokesman for Andrei Sakharov. He spent nine years in Soviet prisons and the gulag.
'Fifty years ago this Sunday, this paper devoted three broadsheet pages to an essay that had been circulating secretly in the Soviet Union for weeks. The manifesto, written by Andrei Sakharov, championed an essential idea at grave risk today: that those of us lucky enough to live in open societies should fight for the freedom of those born into closed ones. This radical argument changed the course of history.
Sakharovs essay carried a mild title Thoughts on Progress, Peaceful Coexistence and Intellectual Freedom but it was explosive. Freedom of thought is the only guarantee against an infection of mankind by mass myths, which, in the hands of treacherous hypocrites and demagogues, can be transformed into bloody dictatorships, he wrote. Suddenly the Soviet Unions most decorated physicist became its most prominent dissident.
For this work and other thought crimes the Soviet authorities stripped Sakharov of his honors, imprisoned many of his associates and, eventually, exiled him to Gorky.
In 1968, when this work was published, I was a 20-year-old mathematician studying at the Moscow equivalent of M.I.T. Although we dared not discuss it, my peers and I lived a life of double-think: toeing the Communist Party line in public, thinking independently in private. Like so many others, I read Sakharovs essay in samizdat a typewritten copy duplicated secretly, spread informally and read hungrily.
Its message was unsettling and liberating: You cannot be a good scientist or a free person while living a double life. Knowing the truth while collaborating in the regimes lies only produces bad science and broken souls.
Sakharovs essay, which coincided with the Prague Spring, helped energize democratic dissident movements that were just budding in a post-Stalinist world. The largest of these was one I would soon join: the so-called refusenik movement to allow the Soviet Unions long-oppressed Jews the freedom to emigrate.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/20/opinion/andrei-sakharov-essay-soviet-union.html?
Martin Eden
(12,802 posts)That describes Hair Twitler's rise to power.
FakeNoose
(32,328 posts)... and Vladimir Putin is their Napoleon.