Chronicle of Current Events

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A Chronicle of Current Events
The Chronicle of the Current Events.jpg
A Chronicle of Current Events No 5,
31 December 1968 (front cover)
Editor <templatestyles src="Hlist/styles.css"></templatestyles>
List of editors
Categories political repression in the Soviet Union, samizdat, political abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union
Frequency bimonthly / quarterly
Publisher Soviet human rights movement
Total circulation 6 x 6 x 6 ... ?
First issue 30 April 1968
Final issue 31 December 1982
Country Soviet Union
Based in Moscow
Language Russian, English (translated since 1971)
Website A Chronicle of Current Events

One of the longest-running samizdat periodicals of the post-Stalin USSR, A Chronicle of Current Events (Russian: Хро́ника теку́щих собы́тий)[1] was an underground magazine[2] that became the main voice of the Soviet human rights movement, inside the country and abroad.[3]

Chronicle covered 424 political trials, in which 753 people were convicted. No one of the accused was acquitted. In addition, 164 people were declared insane and sent to compulsory treatment in a psychiatric hospital.[4]

The first issue of A Chronicle of Current Events appeared in Moscow on 30 April 1968.[5] Despite constant harassment by the Soviet authorities more than sixty issues of the Chronicle would be compiled and published (circulated) between April 1968 and July 1982. One issue (No 59) was confiscated; the last issue never went into circulation.

An unchallenged record

Today the Chronicle offers a unique historical overview of political repression in the Soviet Union, both in nature and extent. No other samizdat publication covered the entire country for so long, recording every aspect of human rights violation committed by the post-Stalin Soviet authorities at national and local level.

The periodical modelled itself on earlier more narrowly-focused underground publications and in the early 1970s its example was followed in Ukraine (Ukrainsky visnik, Ukraine Herald, 1970-1975) and Lithuania (Chronicle of the Catholic Church in Lithuania, 1972-1989). The Chronicle's precursors were produced by confessional and ethnic minority groups, the persecuted Baptists and Crimean Tatars.[6] A Chronicle of Current Events was created by dissenting members of Moscow's literary and scientific intelligentsia.[7] Its editors and contributors were particularly affected by the August 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia to which the third issue of the periodical [c 1] and many subsequent reports and "Samizdat update" entries were devoted.

In time the Chronicle's coverage extended to almost all the constituent nations, confessional and ethnic groups of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics,[8] the one exception being Islam and the Central Asian republics.

The first editor and typist of the Chronicle was Natalya Gorbanevskaya.[9] [10] She was a major contributor to the publication and responsible for introducing its regular "Samizdat update" section.[c 2] A participant in the 1968 Red Square demonstration, she was forced to undergo psychiatric examination, then[c 3] and later. In 1970 she was tried and convicted and sent to the Kazan Special Psychiatric Hospital,[c 4] from which she was released in 1972.[c 5]

Others stepped forward to take Gorbanevskaya's place (see Section 4 The Editors, below) and were themselves, in turn, subjected to various forms of harassment and intimidation. This pattern would be repeated more than once over the next 13 years.

Origins and Background to Issue No 1

By the early 1960s critically minded adults and youngsters in Moscow (later they would be known as dissidents) were confronted by a growing range of information about ongoing political repressions in the Soviet Union. For example, in letters home from the prison camps the writers Yuli Daniel and Andrey Sinyavsky, sentenced and imprisoned in 1966, told of far greater numbers of political prisoners than they and others had previously believed to exist.[11]:147

For the circle of future editors, this picture was amplified by Anatoly Marchenko's My Testimony, a seminal text which began circulating in samizdat in December 1967.[12][13] It provided a detailed account of his time in labor camps and Soviet prisons (1960-1965), as well as describing the conditions there.[13][14]:58 Through other contacts and friends, sometimes during prison or camp visits, older and younger generations in Moscow began to learn of the repressive measures being used in Ukraine and the Russian provinces.[13]

This growth in the unofficial, alternative and uncensored circulation of information led a group including poet and translator Natalya Gorbanevskaya, writer Ilya Gabay and physicist Pavel Litvinov to consider organising a regular information bulletin. Rather than follow previous samizdat genres, the literary almanac (e.g. Phoenix, Syntaxis) or collections documenting a single trial (e.g. The White Book), the new periodical would process the steady flow of information by circulating regular reports and updates about searches, arrests, trials, conditions in prisons and camps and extrajudicial measures against protest and dissent — at least for the duration of 1968. That year marked the 20th anniversary of the UN Declaration of Human Rights and Nos 1–5 are titled Human Rights Year in the Soviet Union: until 1969 A Chronicle of Current Events was the sub-title of the periodical.

A prototype already existed in bulletins by repressed groups that had begun recently begun publication in samizdat. Among them were a Baptist periodical, published since 1965, and, an example for the Chronicle's first editorial group, the informational bulletin of the Crimean Tatars, established in 1964.[15]:44[16]:285 Unlike these single-issue periodicals, which mainly circulated among their respective groups, the editors and contributors to the new publication[17] aimed to cover a broader spectrum of political repression and appeal to a wider audience.[13]

A turning point for the young dissident movement came in 1967 when Yuri Galanskov, Alexander Dobrovolsky and Vera Lashkova were arrested in Moscow for producing literary samizdat magazines. At the same moment Alexander Ginzburg was detained for collaborating with Galanskov on the White Book, a volume of documents about the trial of writers Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli Daniel. The Galanskov-Ginzburg trial, delayed until January 1968, and the public protests before and after the accused were convicted, formed the main subject of the first issue of the Chronicle, released on 30 April 1968.[c 6] Issue No 1 detailed the repressive measures taken by the authorities against individuals who signed the numerous petitions and collective letters concerning the trial.[c 7][18]

Publication process

The Chronicle was compiled in Moscow by anonymous editors, drawing on a network of informants throughout the Soviet Union. Known for its dry, concise style, it documented the extrajudicial harassment and persecution, the arrests and trials of those who opposed the regime for its denial of their rights; it carried further reports about their subsequent treatment in prisons, labor camps, and mental asylums.[c 8]

The Chronicle was produced by samizdat techniques, whereby typewritten texts were retyped by recipients and passed along in chain-letter fashion. The authors encouraged readers to utilize the same distribution channels in order to send feedback and local information: "Simply tell it to the person from whom you received the Chronicle, and he will tell the person from whom he received the Chronicle, and so on." This advice came with a warning: "But do not try to trace back the whole chain of communication yourself, or else you will be taken for a police informer."[c 9][19]

According to the 1936 Soviet Constitution then in force, the Chronicle was not an illegal publication, or so the editors maintained:[c 9]

"The Chronicle is in no sense an illegal publication, and the difficult conditions in which it is produced are created by the peculiar notions about law and freedom of information which, in the course of long years, have become established in certain Soviet organizations. For this reason the Chronicle cannot, like any other journal, give its postal address on the last page."

The authorities thought otherwise, as is reflected in the list of people harassed, detained and imprisoned for their part in the periodical's production and circulation (see Section 4, below: Editors). Some were given camp sentences — Sergei Kovalev, Alexander Lavut, Tatyana Velikanova and Yury Shikhanovich; some were sent to psychiatric hospitals — Natalya Gorbanevskaya. Others were persuaded to leave the country — Anatoly Yakobson, Tatyana Khodorovich.

Publication history

Beginnings: issues 1–27 (1968–72)

In honor of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the United Nations declared 1968 as the "International Year for Human Rights". In April Natalya Gorbanevskaya compiled the first issue of the Chronicle of Current Events. Its cover (dated 30 April 1968) carried the title: "The International Year for Human Rights in the Soviet Union" and, like every subsequent issue of the Chronicle, quoted the text of Article 19 of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights:

"Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers."

The issue reported on the trial of the Social Christian Union in Leningrad[c 10] and already carried information from the camps. Its main focus, however, was the trial of Galanskov and Ginzburg in Moscow.[20]:84

As the first compiler of the Chronicle and its typist, Gorbanevskaya produced the "zero-generation" copy based on information from her friends in Moscow, using a typewriter purchased on the semi-legal grey market. She made six copies which were then secretly distributed to friends, who made further carbon-copies on their own typewriters, passing them on, in turn, to friends and trusted acquaintances.

Gorbanevskaya was arrested on 24 December 1969, while compiling issue 11. She managed to hide the source papers, which had handwriting which could identify other authors, in her desk, and additional information was hidden in her coat. The KGB missed both of these hiding places. Issue 11 was released on schedule and included a report on Gorbanevskaya's arrest.[c 11][21] She was released, but again arrested in 1970 and put on trial.[c 4] Diagnosed as suffering from schizophrenia, Gorbanevskaya was held in a Soviet psychiatric prison until February 1972. Eventually she was allowed to return to Moscow and in 1975 she emigrated to France.

Following Gorbanevskaya's arrest, her work was taken over by literary critic Anatoly Yakobson. He collated the material for issues 11–27 of the Chronicle until the end of 1972, after which he emigrated from the USSR.[22]:31

"Case No. 24" (1972–73)

By 1972, the Chronicle was being run by biologist Sergei Kovalev, mathematician Tatyana Velikanova and linguist Tatyana Khodorovich. Kovalev acted as chief editor, while Velikanova was responsible for collating material and organizing apartments for meetings, with Khodorovich serving as a major conduit for information.

In June 1972, the KGB arrested Pyotr Yakir, followed by Victor Krasin in September. Numerous witnesses were summoned and cross-examined over the following months (Bukovsky, for example, was brought from Vladimir Prison) as part of Case No. 24.[c 12] Under pressure from KGB General Yaroslav Karpov, Yakir and Krasin agreed to appear on Soviet television, recant their past activities, and urge their fellow activists to stop the publication of the Chronicle. They also passed on the KGB threat that, for every issue published after the broadcast, there would be an arrest.[22]:31–32

The editors of the Chronicle suspended publication after Issue 27 (15 October 1972). This did not prevent the arrest in January 1973 of Irina Belogorodskaya,[c 13] who occasionally assisted in typing up manuscripts for the journal. As a reaction to the new situation, the Chronicle's editors prefaced Issue 28 (31 December 1972) with a declaration stating that they had decided to resume publication because they found the KGB ultimatum to be "incompatible" with "justice, morality and human dignity".[22]:32[c 14] This declaration would not be made public for another 16 months, however.

After some discussion those closely involved in the production of the journal decided to change the periodical's established policy of anonymity, to the extent of naming themselves as distributors: they did not then or subsequently admit to being authors and editors of the Chronicle.

To undermine the blackmailing tactics of the KGB they agreed to circulate a declaration acknowledging their personal responsibility for the periodical's circulation when they issued the delayed issues of the Chronicle: No 28 (31 December 1972), No 29 (31 July 1973), and No 30 (31 December 1973). Unlike other groups, for example, the dissident Action Group on Human Rights in the USSR, previous editors of the Chronicle had never openly linked their names to the samizdat text. In taking this step, Kovalyov, Velikanova and Khodorovich hoped to make it more difficult for the authorities to implicate others.

On 7 May 1974, they invited foreign correspondents to a press conference at which issue Nos 28, 29 and 30 were openly distributed. At the same event Kovalyov, Velikanova and Khodorovich issued a press release. It was signed by all three of them and consisted of a few short sentences:

Since we do not consider, despite the repeated assertions of the KGB and the USSR court instances, that A Chronicle of Current Events is an illegal or libelous publication, we regard it as our duty to facilitate as wide a circulation for it as possible. We believe it is essential that truthful information about violations of basic human rights in the Soviet Union should be available to all who are interested in it.[c 15][23]

Publication resumes: issues 28–65 (1974–82)

After the arrests and prosecutions of "Case No 24", the Chronicle of Current Events continued to appear several times a year, though less frequently than before.

The three "distributors" who gave up their anonymity to hold the 7 May 1974 press conference and announce the resumption of the Chronicle's publication were all punished for their audacity. Sergei Kovalev was arrested in December that year. In 1975 he was put on trial and sentenced to seven years of labor camps and three years of internal exile for "anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda".[c 16] Tatyana Khodorovich was forced into emigration.[c 17] In 1979 Tatyana Velikanova was finally arrested and in 1980 she was prosecuted and sentenced to five years in the camps and five years internal exile.[c 18]

In February 1981, issue No 59 was confiscated in the last stages of preparation during a KGB search of the apartment of Leonid Vul, one of the Chronicle's contributing editors.[c 19] The final issue of the Chronicle was dated 31 December 1982, but it was never circulated in the USSR or translated abroad.[c 20][24] All attempt at continuing publication ceased after the arrest of Yury Shikhanovich on 17 November 1983. As compiling editor he had played an essential role in preparing six of the last issues of the Chronicle.[25]

Disruption and continuity

A contemporary samizdat publication similarly concerned with protest and dissent, Collection V ("Сборник В") began to appear in the later 1970s.[26] It was issued for four years (1979–1983) and placed greater emphasis on speed of publication, attempting to appear once a fortnight, if not once every week.

Five years after the demise of A Chronicle of Current Events the tradition of underground human-rights periodicals was revived in the second year of Gorbachev's "glasnost" and perestroika. On return in 1987 from exile in the Soviet Far East Alexander Podrabinek started the weekly Express-Chronicle newspaper; at the same time Sergei Grigoryants founded the Glasnost' periodical and became its chief editor.[25] Neither of these publications sought or received official permission for their activities.

The editors of the Chronicle

The circumstances of the Chronicle's existence meant there could be no editorial board performing the usual functions of an officially constituted magazine. It was "a system devoid of directives and commands, as well editorial assignments".[27]:121 A list of those who compiled the successive issues has been put together and made public by Memorial. It attempts to include both the editors responsible for the final version of each issue (the chief editors for want of a better term), as well as the contributing editors who oversaw particular sections and verified the information they contained.

These are provided below, but do not contain all those directly involved. For instance, before Alexander Podrabinek became the subject of the Chronicle's reports in the late 1970s he was for two years a contributing editor, with responsibility for gathering and sifting reports about those imprisoned in psychiatric hospitals [28] The identity of some editors remains unknown.

  • The names of the chief editors in the list below, i.e. those who compiled and finalised the contents of each issue, are followed by the numbers of the issues under their supervision. (Issues 59 and 65 of the Chronicle were confiscated during searches and were not put into wider circulation.)
  • The information on the terms of imprisonment in labour camps and succeeding period of internal exile imposed on the chief editors includes only those sentences specifically relating to charges concerning the Chronicle.[29]
  • The list of contributing editors (by surname in Russian alphabetical order – ABVGD etc.) includes those who edited sub-sections and typed the zero-generation editions of the Chronicle.
  • Not included in either list are the many people who contributed information and reports to the Chronicle, or were sentenced for distributing samizdat including the Chronicle.
Chief editors
  • Natalya Gorbanevskaya (issues 1–10) — 3 years incarceration in a psychiatric institution (1970–72); emigrated to France in 1975.
  • Galina Gabay (issue 11)
  • Yelena Smorgunova (issue 12)
  • Yuly Kim (issue 12)
  • Anatoly Yakobson (11–27) — emigrated to Israel in 1973.
  • Tatyana Khodorovich (28–30) — emigrated to France in 1977.
  • Sergei Kovalev (28–30 and 32–34) — 7 years labor camps, 3 years internal exile (1975–85).
  • Tatyana Velikanova (28–30 and 32–53) — 4 years labor camps, 5 years internal exile (1980–89).
  • Alexander Lavut (31 and 54–55) — 3 years labor camps, 3 years internal exile (1980–86).
  • Yury Shikhanovich (56–58 and 60–64) — 5 years labor camps, 5 years internal exile (1983–1987).

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Contributing editors
  • Lyudmila Alekseeva
  • Svetlana Feliksovna Artsimovich
  • Vyacheslav Ivanovich Bakhmin – 10 months detention[c 21]
  • Irina Mikhaylovna Belogorodskaya – 10 months detention[c 22]
  • Leonid Iosifovich Blekher
  • Larisa Bogoraz
  • Anna Ivanovna Bryksina (née Kaleda)
  • Leonid Davidovich Vul'
  • Ilya Gabay – 3 years labor camps[c 23]
  • Yuriy Alekseevich Gastev
  • Mark Gdal'evich Gel'shteyn
  • Yuriy Yakovlevich Gerchuk
  • Aleksandr Borisovich Gribanov
  • Aleksandr Yul'evich Daniel'
  • Nadezhda Pavlovna Emel'kina (Yemelkina) – 5 years internal exile[c 24]
  • Georgiy Isaakovich Efremov (Yuriy Zbarskiy)
  • Vera Khasanovna Zelendinova
  • Vyacheslav Vladimirovich Igrunov – 2 years detention and psychiatric imprisonment[c 25]
  • Sergey Glebovich Kaleda
  • Lyudmila Vladimirovna Kardasevich
  • Ivan Sergeevich Kovalev – 5 years labor camps, 5 years internal exile[c 26]
  • Elena Alekseevna Kostyorina (Kosterina)
  • Natal'ya Andreevna Kravchenko
  • Viktor Krasin – 1 year of labor camps, 3 years of internal exile[c 27]
  • Mal'va Noevna Landa – 5 years internal exile[c 28]
  • Vera Iosifovna Lashkova
  • Nina Petrovna Lisovskaya
  • Pavel Litvinov
  • Kronid Lyubarsky – 5 years labor camps[c 29]
  • Irina Rodionovna Maksimova
  • Margarita Borisovna Nabokova
  • Tat'yana Semenovna Osipova – 5 years labor camps, 5 years internal exile[c 30]
  • Lyudmila Vladimirovna Polikovskaya
  • Arkadiy Abramovich Polishchuk
  • Ivan Vladimirovich Rudakov
  • Elena Sergeevna Semeka
  • Aleksey Olegovich Smirnov – 6 years labor camps, 4 years internal exile[c 31]
  • Boris Isaevich Smushkevich
  • Gabriel' Gavrilovich Superfin – 5 years labor camps, 2 years internal exile[c 32]
  • Lev Isaevich Tanengol'ts
  • Tserina L'vovna Tanengol'ts
  • Yulius Zinov'evich Telesin
  • Vladimir Solomonovich Tol'ts
  • Andrey Kimovich Tsaturyan
  • Valeriy Chalidze
  • Efim Maksimovich Epshteyn (Yefim Epstein)[30]
  • Irina Petrovna Yakir
  • Petr Ionovich Yakir – 1 year labor camps, 3 years internal exile[c 27]
  • Efrem Vladimirovich Yankelevich

Content, structure and style

The Chronicle strove for maximum precision and completeness of information, and was marked by an objective and restrained style. Issue 5 expressed this concern:[31]:55[c 33]

The Chronicle makes every effort to achieve a calm, restrained tone. Unfortunately, the materials with which the Chronicle is dealing evoke emotional reactions, and these automatically affect the tone of the text. The Chronicle does, and will do, its utmost to ensure that its strictly factual style is maintained to the greatest degree possible, but it cannot guarantee complete success. The Chronicle tries to refrain from making value judgments — either by not making them at all, or by referring to judgments made in samizdat documents.

Each issue of the Chronicle was broadly divided in two.

The first part contained a detailed presentation of what, in the compiler's opinion, were the most important events since the previous issue. The second part consisted of a number of regular headings: "Arrests, Searches, Interrogations", "Extra-Judicial Persecution", "In Prisons and camps", "Samizdat update", "News in brief", "Corrections and additions".

Over time, the number of headings was expanded as new issues came to the attention of the authors. The heading "Persecution of believers" soon appeared, as did "Persecution of Crimean Tatars" and "Repressive measures in Ukraine". In early 1972, the category "Persecution of believers in Lithuania" was added, being modified and expanded in the middle of the same year into a new, and more general title "Events in Lithuania". These all became a regular feature, appearing whenever there was news or an update to report.[25]

In later issues, the Chronicle also included summaries of other samizdat bulletins, such as the Information Bulletins of the dissident civic group Working Commission to Investigate the Use of Psychiatry for Political Purposes, and the documents of the Moscow Helsinki Group.[32]:148

Western editions

A Chronicle of Current Events (Issues 1–58, 60–64; London)

All but two of the 65 issues of the Chronicle were translated into English and published at the time.

Nos 1–11, covering 1968 and 1969, formed The Annotated Text of the Unofficial Moscow Journal, "A Chronicle of Current Events", in a book titled Uncensored Russia. This 1972 volume was produced by British academic Peter Reddaway who edited and translated the texts, apportioning the items to thematic sections in his book (e.g. Chapter 12, "The Crimean Tatars") rather than preserving the sequence and structure of the original issues. The book was provided with extensive annotations.[33][c 34] Reddaway subsequently translated and circulated issues 12 to 15 but they were never published.[c 35]

From 1971 onwards Amnesty International periodically released booklets containing English translations of the Chronicle. The series began in 1971 with No 16 (31 October 1970, Moscow) and ended in 1984 with No 64 (30 June 1982, Moscow). The erratic and uncertain transfer of the texts to the West, and the time needed for translation into English, meant there was always a lag of months between the appearance of the latest issue in the USSR and its publication in English. The printed volumes might comprise one[34] or more of the successive numbers. For reasons described above (see Section 3.2 "Case No 24") translations of Nos 28–30, dated 1972 and 1973, appeared in a single volume much later than their nominal dates in Russian.

The production of these translations was organised by Zbyněk Zeman, a British historian of Czech origin, and over a period of almost ten years covered the issues from No 17 (Moscow, 31 December 1970) to No 58 (Moscow, 31 October 1980).[35] Amnesty also published the last four issues of the Chronicle, Nos 60–64, translation of No 64 (30 June 1982) appearing on the eve of perestroika in 1984.[36]

The very last issue of A Chronicle of Current Events, No 65 (31 December 1982), has never been translated into English. No 59 (15 November 1980) was confiscated on 20 February 1981 by the KGB in the final stages of preparation. The text has recently been recovered from the KGB files on Yury Shikhanovich.[37]

A dedicated website[38] that brings all these translations together for the first time was launched in the autumn of 2015.[39]

A Chronicle of Human Rights in the USSR (New York, 1973-1982)

During the break forced on the Moscow editors during 1972 and 1973 by "Case No 24", an offshoot of the Chronicle of Current Events began publication in New York.

The editor was Valery Chalidze, and the editorial board members were Edward Kline and Pavel Litvinov, with Peter Reddaway as the London correspondent. Although the contents of The Chronicle of Human Rights in the USSR were analogous to those of the Chronicle of Current Events, and adopted its style and tone, they were never a straight reprint or translation. The New York periodical contained numerous thematic articles that never appeared in the Moscow Chronicle of Current Events. These were contributed by Chalidze, founder and chief editor in Moscow of the Social Issues periodical, and by others.

Valery Chalidze was a physicist and prominent Soviet dissident. In 1972 the USSR authorities deprived him of his Soviet citizenship when he was on a government-approved lecture tour in the USA. In spring 1973 Chalidze, with the financial backing of Ed Kline, an American businessman with an interest in Soviet human rights, began publishing A Chronicle of Human Rights in the USSR.[40]

USSR News Brief: Human Rights (Issues 1978–88; Munich)

A similar model was followed by the USSR News Brief: Human Rights ("Вести из СССР – права человека")[41] issued in Munich between 1978 and 1988, in Russian and English.

It was founded, compiled and edited by Kronid Lyubarsky. A former contributing editor of the Chronicle,[c 36] he was later behind the introduction of the annual Day of the Political Prisoner in the USSR (30 October)[c 37] when he himself was in the camps. In the early 1990s Kronid Lyubarsky (1934–1996) returned to live and work in Russia.[42]

Continuing relevance

In 2015, a Russian website entitled A (New) Chronicle of Current Events appeared on the Internet.[43] One of its founders, former Soviet dissident Victor Davydoff,[c 38] identified Russia's problems as those of a totalitarian system which, typically, has no mechanisms that could change the behavior of the ruling group from within.

In an interview with the "Voice of America" radio station Davydoff offered the following argument, based on the past experience of Soviet dissidents.[44] Any attempts at change within the system were immediately suppressed. When dissidents appealed to international human rights organizations and foreign governments, however, there was a result. The same approach should be used now. When mass manipulation through the media meant that people in Russia did not understand what was happening in their own country or in the world outside, concluded Davydoff, one could only rely on those in Russia who did know and understand being able to find common language with people abroad and thus to change the situation.[44]

The continuing relevance of the Chronicle of Current Events (1968-1982) and the formidable example and standards it set cannot be doubted. Further confirmation is provided by the OVD-Info website.[45] A human rights media-project "monitoring State violence" it is associated with the Memorial NGO [46] and came into existence as a response to the "mass arrests of protestors in December 2011". [47] Today it gathers and distributes information about violations of human rights and freedom of expression in Russia using the same basic concepts and categories (political prisoners, extra-judicial harassment, police violence, freedom of assembly and protest) as were developed by the original samizdat journal to classify and analyse reports it received from all over the country.

See also

References

A Chronicle of Current Events

  1. A Chronicle of Current Events No 3, 30 August 1968
  2. A Chronicle of Current Events No 6, 28 February 1969 — 6.8 "Samizdat update"
  3. A Chronicle of Current Events No 4, 31 October 1968 — 4.1 "The trial of the Red Square demonstrators"
  4. 4.0 4.1 A Chronicle of Current Events: No 15, 31 August 1970 — 15.1 "The trial of Natalya Gorbanevskaya".
  5. A Chronicle of Current Events No 24, 5 March 1972 — 24.10 "News in brief". Uncensored Russia – The Human Rights Movement in the Soviet Union. Peter Reddaway (ed). London: Andre Deutsch, 1972. pp 159–160
  6. A Chronicle of Current Events, No 1, 30 April 1968
  7. A Chronicle of Current Events, No 1, 30 April 1968 — 1.1 "The Trial", 1.2 "Protests about the Trial", and 1.3 "Repressive Measures in Response to the Protests"
  8. See A Chronicle of Currents Events No 41, 3 August 1976, for typical headings.
  9. 9.0 9.1 A Chronicle of Currents Events No 5, 31 December 1968 — 5.6 "Human Rights Year continues!"
  10. A Chronicle of Current Events, No 1, 30 April 1968 — 1.6 "The Leningrad Trial".
  11. A Chronicle of Current Events, No 11, 31 December 1969 — 11.9 "The arrest of Natalya Gorbanevskaya"
  12. A Chronicle of Current Events :(1) No 28, 31 December 1972 — 28.3 "A Chronicle of Case No. 24"; (2) No 29, 30 June 1973 — 29.8 "A Chronicle of Case No 24 (II)"; (3) No 30, 31 December 1973 — 30.1 "The Trial of P. Yakir and V. Krasin. (Statement by the Action Group on Human Rights)."
  13. A Chronicle of Current Events No 29, 31 July 1973 — 29.8 "A Chronicle of Case No 24 (part 2)".
  14. A Chronicle of Current Events No 30, 31 December 1973 — 30.1 "The Trial of P. Yakir and V. Krasin. (Statement by the Action Group on Human Rights)."
  15. A Chronicle of Current Events No 28, 31 December 1972 — 28.1 "To readers of the Chronicle".
  16. A Chronicle of Current Events No 38, 31 December 1975 — 38.3 "The trial of Sergei Kovalyov".
  17. A Chronicle of Current Events No 40, 20 May 1976 — 40.1 "Statement by Tatyana Khodorovich".
  18. A Chronicle of Current Events No 56, 30 April 1980 — 56.7 "The case of Tatyana Velikanova", and No 58, October 1980 — 58.1 "The trial of Tatyana Velikanova".
  19. A Chronicle of Current Events No 61, 16 March 1981 — 61.5 "Searches".
  20. A Chronicle of Current Events No 65, 31 December 1982, Contents.
  21. A Chronicle of Current Events No 58, November 1980 — 58.2 "Trial of Vyacheslav Bakhmin".
  22. A Chronicle of Current Events No 29, 31 July 1973 — 29.8 "A Chronicle of Case No 24 (part 2)".
  23. A Chronicle of Current Events No 12, 28 February 1970 — 12.3 "The Trial of Ilya Gabai and Mustafa Dzhemilev".
  24. A Chronicle of Current Events No 23, 5 January 1972 — 23.2 "The Trial of Nadezhda Yemelkina".
  25. A Chronicle of Current Events No 40, 20 May 1976 — 40.4 "The Trial of Vyacheslav Igrunov".
  26. A Chronicle of Current Events No 64, 31 July 1982 — 64.1 "The Trial of Ivan Kovalev".
  27. 27.0 27.1 A Chronicle of Current Events No 30, 31 December 1973 — 30.1 "The Trial of Yakir and Krasin".
  28. A Chronicle of Current Events No 56, 30 April 1980 — 56.3 "Persecution of the Moscow Helsinki Group: The Trial of Malva Landa".
  29. A Chronicle of Current Events No 28, 31 December 1972 — 28.4 "The Trial of Lyubarsky and Popov".
  30. A Chronicle of Current Events No 62, 14 July 1981 — 62.3 "The Trial of Osipova".
  31. A Chronicle of Current Events No 65, 31 December 1982 — 65.2 "The Arrest of Alexei Smirnov".
  32. A Chronicle of Current Events No 32, 17 July 1974 — 32.2 "The Trial of Gabriel Superfin".
  33. A Chronicle of Current Events No 8, 30 June 1969 — 8.16 "Reply to a Reader".
  34. Uncensored Russia (1972) Contents
  35. A Chronicle of Current Events 1970–1971, Nos 12–22.
  36. A Chronicle of Current Events No 28, 31 December 1972 — 28.4 "The case of Lyubarsky and Popov".
  37. A Chronicle of Current Events No 33, 10 December 1974 — 33.1 "Political Prisoners' Day in the USSR".
  38. A Chronicle of Current Events No 58, November 1980 - 58.22 "The Arrest of Victor Davydov (Kuibyshev)".

Other

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  17. See Andropov report to Politburo, 11 July 1968.
  18. See also Reddaway, Uncensored Russia (1972), Chapter 3, "The Galanskov-Ginzburg Trial", pp. 72–94.
  19. Reddaway, Uncensored Russia (1972), p. 54.
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  21. See also Reddaway, Uncensored Russia, pp. 159–160.
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  28. Comments at the September 2015 launch of the Chronicle website. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ku4JvCssrm0 and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LXI834kkMU4.
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  30. It was here, it seems ("И будто здесь же"), Moscow, 2001.
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  33. Peter Reddaway, Uncensored Russia. The Human Rights Movement in the Soviet Union, Jonathan Cape: London, 1972, 499 pages, incl. index.
  34. See, for example, issue No 27, https://www.amnesty.org/download/Documents/.../eur460041972eng.pdf
  35. A Chronicle of Current Events. Zbynek Zeman, Amnesty International, London. Nos. 17–58.
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  37. 12 February 2015, Memorial conference (in Russian) "Round Table on the Latest Finds and Losses".
  38. A Chronicle of Current Events
  39. "Back to the Future" — A Chronicle of Current Events, discussion, 16 September 2015, Pushkin House, London.
  40. A Chronicle of Human Rights in the USSR. Valery Chaldize, Edward Kline, and Peter Reddaway. New York: Khronika Press, 1973–82.
  41. Vesti iz SSSR – prava cheloveka (1978–1988).
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  43. A New Chronicle of Current Events.
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  45. OVD Info - Monitoring State violence.
  46. OVD Info "Our partners".
  47. OVD Info "Background".

Bibliography

In English

A Chronicle of Current Events

  • A Chronicle of Current Events website providing access to all the 63 issues translated into English. As of December 2015 nos 1-19 and some reports in subsequent issues have been scanned and digitized; the remaining issues are in pdf format.
  • Uncensored Russia – The Human Rights Movement in the Soviet Union. Peter Reddaway (ed). London: Andre Deutsch, 1972. Nos. 111.
  • "A Chronicle of Current Events". Peter Reddaway (tr.), London. Nos. 1215 (unpublished; now available on Chronicle website).
  • A Chronicle of Current Events. Zbynek Zeman (ed), Amnesty International, London. Nos. 1658. ISSN 0254-6175 OCLC 474527391
  • A Chronicle of Current Events. Amnesty International, London. Nos. 6064.


Khronika Press edition

  • A Chronicle of Human Rights in the USSR. Valery Chaldize, Edward Kline, and Peter Reddaway (ed). New York: Khronika Press, 1973–82.

Literature about the Chronicle of Current Events

  • Peter Reddaway (ed), Uncensored Russia – The Human Rights Movement in the Soviet Union: The Annotated Text of the Unofficial Moscow Journal 'A Chronice of Current Events', London: Andre Deutsch, 1972. Nos. 1-11. (UK edition)
  • Peter Reddaway (ed), Uncensored Russia – Protest and Dissent in the Soviet Union. The Unofficial Moscow Journal, A Chronicle of Current Events. New York: American Heritage Press. 1972. Nos. 1-11. (US edition, ISBN 0070513546)
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In Russian

Re-published abroad, 1969–82

  • Posev quarterly (Munich), issues 1–27 reprinted.
  • Khronika tekushchikh sobytii. Amsterdam: Alexander Herzen Foundation, 1979. Nos. 115.
  • Khronika tekushchikh sobytii. New York: Khronika Press, 1981–82. Nos. 60, 61, 62.

Online archive

  • Khronika tekushchikh sobytii ("Хроника текущих событий"), Moscow: Memorial, 2008. Nos 1–58, 60–65. Issue Nos 1–27 were posted online in 1998, Nos 28–65 in 2002. (Tatyana Kudryavtseva and Alexander Cherkasov)

External links

In English

In Russian