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Solzhenitsyn:
Still Telling the Truth
He
can be ignored, for a while, but never silenced.
By
NRs editors, November 21, 1994, issue of National Review
May 26-28, 2001
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On
May 27, 1994, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn returned to Russia after two
decades of exile. Later that year, NR's editors reflected on the
modern-day Isaiah.
leksandr Solzhenitsyn
will be remembered as one of the
prophetic voices of the twentieth century. Even if the world is
covered over with concrete, he memorably said, echoing Ilya Ehrenburg,
a blade of grass will grow through a crack. The blade of grass did
grow, into a revolution of freedom. Yet last week Solzhenitsyn felt
he had to address the Russian parliament. His blade of grass had
become a weedy tangle. He was greeted with boredom by the parliamentarians,
and largely ignored by the world press.
As usual, however, Solzhenitsyn was worth hearing. "We have moved
out of Communism in the most distorted, most absurd, most painful
way. What kind of state system do we have today? It's not democracy.
Let us admit that it is oligarchy
the power of a restricted
group of individuals."
When the old Soviet regime was forced by Solzhenitsyn's eminence
to send him into exile, he first in Paris and then throughout
the civilized world destroyed what was left of the moral
authority of Communism. Gulag Archipelago was a literary
and moral masterpiece. He and his wife had memorized the names of
the prisoners, zeks, in Soviet prison camps, refusing to
let them remain anonymous. Solzhenitsyn spoke with overwhelming
moral authority. He was like Walt Whitman's man who :suffered" and
was "there," like Elie Wiesel on Hitler's death camps.
Today he remains an Isaiah. His testimony about Russian oligarchic
corruption is searing, powerful. He can be ignored, for a while,
but never silenced.
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