Paul Goble
Staunton,
March 29 – The contemporary human rights movement emerged at a time when its
possibilities for action were generally increasing. Now that those
possibilities are continuously decreasing, it needs to reinvigorate itself by
recalling the efforts of its predecessors, those who fought for the same rights
as the Soviet system was institutionalizing itself.
That is
the message of Roman Popkov, a former Russian political prisoner who now heads
the Nation’s Freedom movement, in an article entitled “Legal Advocates as
Predecessors of Rights Defenders” in which he laments that the 50th
anniversary of one of those people, Yekaterina Peshkova, passed largely
unnoticed last Thursday (openrussia.org/post/view/3805/).
Russian
rights activists today, he writes, and for completely justifiable reasons
remember the dissidents of the late Soviet period, protest the closure of the
Perm-36 GULAG museum, and object to the erection of statues to Stalin. But they don’t remember as they should those
who laid the foundations for their activities a century ago.
To make
his case, he interviews, Yaroslav Leontyev, a Moscow historian, about Peshkova
and her work. Her predecessors, he says, include Fyodor Gaaz and Princess Maria
Dondukkova-Korsakova who began the fight for the rights of political prisoners
in the middle of the 19th century.
By the
early 20th century, mass political parties had formed in Russia, and
many of them created their own “Red Crosses” or “Black Crosses” to come to the aid of their own political prisoners.
Peshkova was involved in one of these as early as 1910 when she was living in
Nizhny Novgorod as the wife of Maksim Gorky.
During World War I, she was a leader
of the Help the Victims of War organization and devoted herself to rescuing children
from the front. After the Soviet-Polish
war in 1920, she was involved in the exchange of prisoners and the search for
Poles who had been exiled to Siberia. In Soviet Russia and then the Soviet
Union, she helped organize groups to help political prisoners.
In the 1920s, the Soviet authorities
openly acknowledged that they had political prisoners and allowed those who
wanted to help them access to the prisoners to provide them with legal and
other forms of assistance. Because of
that focus, Peshkova and others like her did not call themselves “human rights
defenders” but rather “legal advocates.”
The Soviet-era Political Red Cross operated quite openly
in Moscow between 1917 and 1922 and lasted in some places into the 1930s under
the same Pompolit (“Help for Political Prisoners”), an arrangement Peshkova,
because of her links to Gorky, was able to negotiate with the secret police.
Peshkova’s granddaughter told him,
Leontyev relates, that once Stalin’s secret police chief Yagoda asked Peshkova “when
will you finally close up shop?”
Peshkova responded, “That will be on the day after you do!” There is a certain “black humor” in this
recollection, he says. Her group was closed down just after Yagoda was arrested
and shot.
Leontyev suggests that Peshkova’s activities have three
important lessons for human rights activity in Putin’s Russia. First, it is absolutely necessary now as then
that the political prisoners themselves organize as best they can and with the
support of outsiders to defend their rights. Often, they are the only ones in a
position to do anything.
Second, human
rights groups must define themselves in the first instance as lobbyists for the
political prisoners because that will help create a Russian civil society. And third, given the rising number of
political prisoners, rights activists now need to be concerned with something
Peshkova was: the rehabilitation and reintegration of political prisoners after
their release.
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