Memoirs

by Andrei D. Sakharov

Hardcover, 1990

Call number

BIO SAKHAROV

Collection

Publication

Knopf (1990), 773 pages

Description

"Destined to take its place as one of the great testaments to human freedom in this or any age...a complex and brilliant blend of personal history, scientific insight, and a lesson in uncommon moral development."--The San Francisco Chronicle

User reviews

LibraryThing member k6gst
He was the father of the Soviet hydrogen bomb, who used his preeminence to become the leading Soviet dissident (though he objected to the term “dissident” on grounds that I’m not quite sure I grasp). This memoir covers his life up through the end of his internal exile in Gorky (since reverted
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to the original name, Nizhny Novgorod) in 1986. He died in December 1989.

There was a fair amount of rather dense science and physics in parts, which I passed over quickly.

Sakharov was very brave, but his wife and partner in human rights activism Elena Bonner was crazy-brave. For instance, a big part of dissident work in the Soviet Union was attending show trials to support the unjustly accused and be a witness to the injustice, so Sakharov and Bonner were constantly traveling around the Soviet Union to sit in courtroom galleries packed with KGB thugs. The KGB men were there to take up space, to intimidate people, and to cheer and applaud as harsh and pre-determined verdicts were announced, including in one instance recounted in the book a death sentence handed down on December 25, 1970, to Mark Dymshits and Eduard Kuznetsov, Refuseniks who plotted to steal a civilian airplane and fly it to Israel:

"As the death sentences were announced, the KGB agents and other “spectators” broke into loud applause. [Bonner] began shouting furiously: 'Fascists! Only fascists would applaud a death sentence!' The clapping stopped at once."

P. 323. (International pressure resulted in the commutation of those sentences. Both eventually made it to Israel, where Dymshits recently died and Kuznetsov still lives.)

Read Elena Bonner’s obituary from 2011.

The passages about Solzhenitsyn were particularly interesting. The two disagreed about several major issues, and were not afraid to criticize each other. But each respected the place of the other.

“Academician” is a great title, and sadly not in general use in the West. If any of my correspondents from the academic world wish to be referred to as “Academician” let me know and I will do so.
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Pages

773

ISBN

0394537408 / 9780394537405
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