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  1. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s Two Hundred Years Together, a two-volume history of Russian-Jewish relations, initially grew out of The Red Wheel, his monumental opus on the Russian Revolution. In The Red Wheel Solzhenitsyn had shown the Revolution in full complexity; and indeed—to avoid boiling down that complexity or skewing it via the narrow ...

  2. 2101 likes. Like. “The belly is an ungrateful wretch, it never remembers past favors, it always wants more tomorrow.”. ― Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. tags: hunger. 1366 likes. Like. “It's an universal law-- intolerance is the first sign of an inadequate education. An ill-educated person behaves with ...

  3. December 11, 2018, marked the one hundredth birthday of Alexander Isayevich Solzhenitsyn. Born in southern Russia thirteen months after the Bolshevik Revolution, the only son of a mother whose husband had died in a hunting accident while she was pregnant, Solzhenitsyn would achieve worldwide fame as an author and a dissident, be imprisoned, pardoned, exiled, forgiven, embraced, and forgotten ...

  4. アレクサンドル・イサーエヴィチ・ソルジェニーツィン ( ロシア語 : Александр Исаевич Солженицынアリクサーンドル・イサーイェヴィチュ・サルジニーツィン ; ラテン文字 転写の例: Alexandr Isaevich Solzhenitsyn 、 1918年 12月11日 - 2008年 8月3日 [2 ...

  5. The abridged English version of The Gulag Archipelago was first published in 1985, and most recently reprinted in 2018 by Vintage Classics. There is also a new (2019) audiobook recording of the abridged version, read by one of the author’s sons, Ignat Solzhenitsyn. Solzhenitsyn’s indictment of the Soviet prison and labor camp system, his ...

  6. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, (born Dec. 11, 1918, Kislovodsk, Russia—died Aug. 3, 2008, Troitse-Lykovo, near Moscow), Russian novelist and historian. He fought in World War II but was arrested in 1945 for criticizing Joseph Stalin. He spent eight years in prisons and labour camps and three more in enforced exile.

  7. May 10, 1983 · It was a war (the memory of which seems to be fading) when Europe, bursting with health and abundance, fell into a rage of self-mutilation which could not but sap its strength for a century or more, and perhaps forever. The only possible explanation for this war is a mental eclipse among the leaders of Europe due to their lost awareness of a ...

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