Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
5 Facts about Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
5 Facts about Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Jan 16, 2026 5:22 PM

Yesterday marked the 100th anniversary of the birth of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. The celebrated novelist and dissident is considered by many to be a key figure in the demise munism and the collapse of the Soviet Union. As Daniel J. Mahoney says, “Solzhenitsyn embodied, in thought as well as deed, the two great moral wellsprings of European civilization: humility and magnanimity, humble deference to an ‘order of things’ and the spirited defense of human liberty and dignity.”

In honor of his centennial, here are five fact you should know aboutSolzhenitsyn.

1. During World War II, Solzhenitsyn became a mander in a Red Army artillery unit, and took part in the liberation of the Russian city of Orel and the German capital of Berlin. After witnessing war crimes against civilians by Soviet troops he began to be disillusioned by munist regime. In early 1945, after writing a private letter to a friend criticizing Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, Solzhenitsyn was arrested and imprisoned for “counter-revolutionary activities.” He was in a Moscow prison when the war ended in May 1945.

2. In July 1945 Solzhenitsyn was sentenced to eight-year term in a labor camp. He worked in several different camps, and performed both manual labor (i.e., mining, bricklaying) and helping with scientific research. After his prison sentence ended in 1953, he was sent into internal exile in Kazakhstan. During this period of his life he abandoned Marxism and embraced the Eastern Orthodox faith.

3. Solzhenitsyn’s experience in the labor camps formed the basis of One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, the only novel of his allowed to be published in the Soviet Union. Nikita Khrushchev, who mistook Solzhenitsyn for a Soviet loyalist, believed the novel would be useful to his own efforts at “de-Stalinization.” The book won the Lenin Prize and gained Solzhenitsyn a worldwide audience. Two of his other novels, The First Circle and Cancer Ward, were widely read in the West but had to be illegally published and distributed in the Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc countries. His masterpiece, The Gulag Archipelago, was written in secret over a period of twenty years and lead to his forced exile in 1974.

4. After being stripped of his Soviet citizenship, Solzhenitsyn briefly lived in West Germany and Switzerland before moving to the United States at the request of Stanford University. In 1978 he was awarded an honorary Literary Degree from Harvard University and gave his famous Commencement Address. The speech was a stinging indictment of Western materialism and our inordinate focus on individualism. (See also: 20 Key quotes from Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s Harvard address)

5. After 20 years in exile, Solzhenitsyn returned to live in his homeland and resumed his role critiquing the Russian government and society. As Jeffrey Hays notes, “Solzhenitsyn continued to make authoritative pronouncements. He blamed Gorbachev for setting in motion reforms that led to mercialism, crime, permissiveness and sexual freedom. He criticized Yeltsin for breaking up the Soviet Union without taking into consideration the 25 million Russians living in the former republics, He blamed Putin for heading down the same misguided path of his predecessor and criticized Chechens, Westerners and Russian reformers.” In 2008, at the age of 89, Solzhenitsyn died of heart failure.

Image source: Wikimedia Commons

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
U.S. Appeals Court Opinion Criticizes Supreme Court Precedents That Undermine Economic Freedom
Legal scholar Orin Kerr provides excerpts from the concurring opinion today in Hettinga v. United States, in which Judge Janice Rogers Brown (joined by Judge Sentelle) argues that the Supreme Court should overturn its rational basis caselaw in the economic area and return to a Lochner-era regime of judicial scrutiny for economic regulations: The practical effect of rational basis review of economic regulation is the absence of any check on the group interests that all too often control the democratic...
Finding the Proper Balance Between Subsidiarity and Solidarity
Subsidiarity has es shorthand for smaller government, while solidarity is now shorthand for expansive government. But as Msgr. Charles Pope explains, there is more nuance to the terms than the reductionist slogans suggest: Precise meanings have been lost – The problem that has emerged is that Catholics, and others, have taken these terms into the political arena and, as might be expected, these rather careful and nuanced Catholic terms have been reduced more to slogans, and are fast losing their...
For the tax-weary: a free e-book from Acton!
Since your wallets are probably a bit lighter due to Tax Day here in the United States, Acton wants to help out by giving you a free e-book: Globalization, Poverty and International Development. Just follow the link, Globalization, to get our monograph from Lord Brian Griffiths delivered free to your Kindle or e-reader. This offer is available beginning at 3 a.m. EST, 4/17/12 until 3 a.m. EST, 4/19/12. ...
Catholic Bishops Defend Religious Liberty
The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty released an Easter week statement titled “Our First, Most Cherished Liberty.” The document outlines recent threats to religious liberty in the States and abroad while endorsing an ing “Fortnight for Freedom” to defend what it calls “the most cherished of American freedoms.” We suggest that the fourteen days from June 21—the vigil of the Feasts of St. John Fisher and St. Thomas More—to July 4, Independence...
The Paradox of Public Education
Schools are controlled by the government, but they serve munities with niche needs, says Paul T. Hill, founder of the Center on Reinventing Public Education. Is there a way that education be publicly funded but privately managed? Public education struggles with two conflicting facts. First, public schools are small craft organizations that require close teamwork and constant adaptation to the unpredictable development of students. Second, they are government agencies always subject to constraints imposed through politics and legal processes. In...
Samuel Gregg — Benedict XVI: God’s Revolutionary
The pope turns 85 today. On the website of Crisis Magazine, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg looks at this most prominent of “status-quo challengers.” While regularly derided by his critics as “decrepit” and “out-of-touch,” Benedict XVI continues to do what he’s done since his election as pope seven years ago: which is to shake up not just the Catholic Church but also the world it’s called upon to evangelize. His means of doing so doesn’t involve “occupying” anything. Instead, it...
Continuing to Remember the Poor
All they asked was that we should continue to remember the poor, the very thing I had been eager to do all along. Galatians 2:10 NIV This video is part of an extended interview with Rev. Dr. John Dickson (Director, Centre for Public Christianity and Senior Research Fellow, Department of Ancient History, Macquarie University) for The Faith Effect, a project of World Vision Australia. (HT: Justin Taylor) Update: I should also add that a useful collection of primary texts on...
Can Anything Good Come from Hollywood?
How mon good and prosperity e from an unlikely place. An interview with Gary Stratton by Jon Hirst. Today we share an interview with Gary David Stratton, PhD, Chairman of the Christian Ministries Department at Bethel University, Teaching Pastor at Basileia Hollywood, Senior Editor at , and Director of the Hollywood Bezalel Initiative. You can follow Gary on Twitter @GaryDStratton. What happens when you mix Hollywood, the local church and academia? Few would imagine such a concoction, but that amazing...
What Sam Spade Can Teach Social Entrepreneurs
The noir heroes like Sam Spade in “The Maltese Falcon” served as models for a generation of Americans, says David Brooks. The new generation of apolitical social entrepreneurs could learn from them too: . . .[T]he prevailing service religion underestimates the problem of disorder. Many of the activists talk as if the world can be healed if we could only insert more passion and resources into it. History is not kind to this assumption. Most poverty and suffering — whether...
Slum Dwellers in India Save for Private Schooling
As Michelle Kaffenberger points out, parents in the poorest parts of India share a concern of many Americans: Their children don’t actually learn much in the public schools. A recentEconomistarticle states that between a quarter and a third of school children in India attend private schools. In India’s cities, experts estimate as many as 85 percent of children attend private schools. According toanother report, 73 percent of families in Hyderabad’s slum areas send their children to private schools. Additionally, private...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved