
Belief And Disbelief From The Great Terror To Stalin's Death Like Over A Million Of Her Fellow Soviet Subjects, The Muscovite Actress Vera Shults Was Arrested During The Great Terror Of 1937-38. The Secret Police Interrogated Her At Taganskaya Prison In Southeast Moscow And Ultimately Sentenced Her To Five Years Of Exile In Central Asia For Being A Socially Dangerous Element. During Her Time At Taganskaya, Shults Was Deeply Impressed By One Of Her Cellmates, An Older Religious Woman Named Tatyana Pavlovna, Whom She Described As Radiating Kindness While Patiently Accepting Her Unjust Imprisonment. While Pondering The Meaning Of Religion During This Time Of Great Trial, Shultz Remarked In Her Memoir, We All Grew Up As Atheists, And So I Have A Hard Time Judging What Role Her Faith Played, But I Think That Tatyana Pavlovna Found Solace In It. In The Gulag Of The Late 1930s To The Early 1950s, Solace Was In Short Supply As The Brutal System Of Incarceration And Compulsory Labor Was Rocked By The Successive Calamities Of The Great Terror And World War Ii. The Great Terror, A Horrific Crime Against Humanity Perpetrated By Stalin's Regime, Resulted In The Execution, Imprisonment, Or Exile Of Some 1.5 Million People, Many Of Them Falsely Convicted Of Conspiring Against The Soviet Union. This Was Followed By The Second World War, A Terrible War Of Attrition That Ultimately Caused Over Twenty Million Soviet Deaths. More Stalinist Repression Followed The War, And Long Sentences For Minor Infractions Such As Petty Theft Swelled The Ranks Of The Incarcerated. For Those Imprisoned In The Soviet Gulag, These Successive Waves Of Violence And Repression Brought Chaos, Overcrowding, Suffering, And Death To An Already Dangerous And Desultory System. Thousands Of Religious Leaders Were Among The Millions Of People Sent To The Camps From The Beginning Of The Great Terror In 1937 To Stalin's Death In 1953, Along With Untold Numbers Of Lay Believers. In The Crucible Of These Darkest Years
This book investigates the role of religious belief and the persistence of faith among prisoners within the Soviet Gulag system during the period of the Great Terror through the death of Stalin. Author Jeffrey S. Hardy utilizes archival records, personal memoirs, and historical documentation to analyze how individuals maintained spiritual identities under the extreme duress of state-sponsored atheism and systemic incarceration. The work argues that despite the brutal conditions of the camps, religious practice served as a critical mechanism for psychological survival and community formation among the imprisoned population.
What You Will Find
Scholars and historians recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of Soviet repression and the sociology of religion. Readers frequently note the meticulous use of primary source material to illuminate the often-overlooked spiritual lives of those trapped within the Stalinist penal system.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2024-01-01
Publisher:
New York, NY : Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
0197751709
ISBN-13:
9780197751701
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