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My Testimony -  Anatoly Marchenko (Soviet Gulag)
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My Testimony - Anatoly Marchenko (Soviet Gulag)

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Product details

Condition
Secondhand
Location
South Africa
Product code
bhb7
Bob Shop ID
638817536

Penguin , 1971, softcover, 430 pages, condition:  good.

Marchenko, an innocent man, was condemned to the Gulag after being falsely arrested under a judicial system that existed to restock Soviet jails and the slave labor camps underpinning the USSR's centralized economy. His courage in opposing that system ultimately led to his early death. He recounts in clear prose his experience and that of his fellow prisoners of their punishment and re-education by overwork, malnutrition and gratuitous cruelty. It's an indictment of the most murderous political regime in history. That the daily horrors and injustices Marchenko documents are being repeated today in similar forms and varying degrees in places like Burma, China, Cuba, No. Korea and Venezuela makes "My Testimony" an important and timely read. It's a must for American and Western European leftists, but anyone interested in the fate of those who fail to embrace group-think and social leveling under communism will find it worthwhile.

Anatoly Marchenko (1938 1986) was a Soviet dissident, author, and human rights campaigner, who became one of the first two recipients (along with Nelson Mandela) of the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought of the European Parliament when it was awarded to him posthumously in 1988.

Marchenko, originally an apolitical oil driller from a poor background, turned to writing and politics as a result of several episodes of incarceration starting in 1958, during which he began to associate with other dissidents. Marchenko gained international fame in 1969 through his book, My Testimony, an autobiographical account written after his arrival in Moscow in 1966 about his then-recent sentences in Soviet labour camps and prisons. After limited circulation inside the Soviet Union as samizdat, the book caused a sensation in the West after it revealed that the Soviet gulag system had continued after the death of Joseph Stalin.