“It was a tragedy for our family,” she says. “Our (great-)grandmother, when her husband was shot, was left alone with four children. She was expelled to Uglich (about 740km from St Petersburg).
“He was shot in Moscow, but as we all live in St. Petersburg, we have made this memorial plaque here. So that we could come here, to honour his memory and remember him forever.” It is not an attitude shared by the Russian president, who has sought to suppress attempts to evaluate Stalin critically.for saving the Soviet Union from Nazi invaders, and tried to channel that heroic spirit as his own forces seize parts of Ukraine in a war that he casts as a struggle against alleged Western attempts to destroy Russia.
Yet for many Russians, Stalin’s name still evokes the savage repression that culminated in the Great Terror of 1936-1938. The purge is estimated by historians to have killed between 700,000 and 1.2 million real or imagined enemies or rivals – from fellow Communists to military officers, intellectuals, professionals and peasants. headtopics.com
Zinaida Gerchikova said the day was sacred to her because she knew nothing about her father. “In fact, I only saw him once, when he picked me up from the maternity hospital,” she said. “They don’t know where he was shot. Somewhere in Sverdlovsk region. I’ve been given some tips at the Big House,” Gerchikova said. The Big House is the nickname of the St Petersburg headquarters of Stalin’s NKVD secret police, which later became that of the Soviet KGB and now the Russian FSB.
But the group was banned in Russia in 2021 and officially dissolved under a decades-long campaign to silence political dissent.
Russians Remember Stalin’s Victims Amid Crackdown on DissentRussians commemorated the victims of Stalinist terror on Sunday, more than 20 months into Moscow’s Ukraine offensive that has been accompanied at home by a major crackdown on dissent.The Kremlin has doubled down on its version of history as troops fight in Ukraine, which… Read more ⮕