Day of Remembrance of the
Victims of Political Repressions
Day of Remembrance of the Victims
of Political Repressions (Russian: День памяти жертв политических репрессий),
is an annual day of remembrance for victims of political repression in the
Soviet Union. Day of Remembrance of the
Victims of Political Repressions has been commemorated on October 30, since
1991, when the Supreme Soviet of Russia officially established 30 October as
the Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Political Repressions. This day is
also officially a public holiday in the Russian Federation.
Traditional meeting places
since 1991
Moscow
Lubyanka Square by the Solovetsky
Stone in front of the Polytechnial Museum on October 29 (not October 30!).
Russian human rights activists offered to commemorate the victims of communist
terror in the City of Moscow near the Solovetsky Stone not on the officially
settled by Russian government October 30 but on the unofficial October 29 to be
independent from the state ceremonies. The annual meeting on the October 29
near the Solovetsky Stone is called "Return of the names" (Russian:
Возвращение имён) because participants read lists of the victims of communist
terror.
Saint Petersburg : Levashovo Memorial Cemetery
Petrozavodsk (Karelia) : Gratsky Churchyard
Pskov: Krasny Bor Forest
Perm: Perm-36 Kuchino village, Chusovoy district, Memorial of the Victims of Political
Repression in Yagoshikha memorial cemetery, Perm
Samara: Gagarin Park
North Caucasus:
The nine republics of the North
Caucasus suffered under Stalin, most notably during the deportation of entire
nations: the Balkar and Karachay in 1937; the Chechen and Ingush in 1944,
during the Great Patriotic War. The
wartime deportation of the Chechen nation to Central Asia was marked every year
since the 1991 Decree of Rehabilitation of Repressed Nations until 2016 when
the Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov prohibited such ceremonies.
Yekaterinburg: Memorial of the Victims of Political
Repression
Tyumen: Courtyard of the former NKVD building
Magadan: The Mask of Grief (sculptor, Ernst
Neizvestny)
Origins among 1970s political
prisoners:
The commemoration is held on the
date of the Day of the Political Prisoner in the USSR, an initiative in 1974 by
imprisoned Soviet dissidents, led by Kronid Lyubarsky for the recognition of
inmates' status as political prisoners. This official date, introduced in April
1991, has gradually been adopted all over Russia as a Day of Remembrance for
those "repressed" (i.e. arrested, exiled, sent to the camps or shot)
during the collectivisation of agriculture (1927-1933), in the forced-labour
camps of the Gulag, and shot in their tens of thousands during the Great Terror
of 1937-1938. This year, for instance, such a ceremony was held by the
Solovetsky Stone in St Petersburg and at the memorial cemeteries created at the
killing fields of the late 1930s, e.g. Krasny Bor near Petrozavodsk and Butovo
in southern Moscow. As new political
prisoners appear in Putin's Russia, there have been objections to the
appropriation by the State of an unofficial day of protest, that started among
dissidents in camps for "political" offenders. Even a separation
between the two, with the emergence of the unofficial "Restoring the
Names" ceremony, has not satisfied all critics.
"Return of the
names", 2007 to present:
Since 2007 Memorial has organised
a day-long ceremony "Restoring the Names" every 29 October on the eve
of the official Day of Remembrance in Moscow.. In 2017, the contrast between
the official and unofficial days of commemoration in the Russian capital, and
the style in which they were held was particularly striking. On Sunday 29
October 2017, 5,286 people attended the Restoring the Names ceremony at the
Solovki Stone a short distance from FSB (NKVD) headquarters on Lubyanka Square,
where over one thousand read aloud names of those killed by the regime in
Moscow during Stalin's era. The next
day, Monday 30 October 2017, the Wall of Grief (designer Georgy Frangulyan), a
massive new monument to the Victims of Political Repression, was opened on
Sakharov Avenue by President Vladimir Putin and Patriarch Kirill of the Russian
Orthodox Church. The low-key ceremony was attended by one hundred people. Among
them were: elderly relatives of those repressed in the Stalin period; members
of the committee that judged several hundred entries in a competition to design
the new memorial (Ludmila Alexeyeva, Natalya Solzhenitsyn, Roman Romanov); and
human rights officials from the presidential administration -- Mikhail Fedotov,
Tatiana Moskalkova and Vladimir Lukin.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Day_of_Remembrance_of_the_Victims_of_Political_Repressions
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