Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
5 Facts about Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
5 Facts about Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Dec 27, 2025 9:30 AM

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
First Things Interviews Samuel Gregg about his new book
In a newly released interview, senior editor at First Things, Mark Baulerein, sits down with Samuel Gregg to discuss his new book, Faith, Reason, and the Struggle for Western Civilization. Gregg discusses the relationship between reason and faith among other topics that he addresses in his book. Gregg states: One of the things I try to argue in this book is that if you want to understand a civilization that has taken things like liberty, rule of law, creativity, justice,...
Brazil needs a right-wing intellectual movement
That Brazil experienced a surprising political movement and elected a right-wing government after decades of a democratic socialist regime, many people already know. However, a political movement is not enough to change the future of a nation. The reality is that Brazil is missing the most important element needed to root out an ideology of tyranny: an intellectual movement. The lack of a right-wing intellectual movement can cause dangerous consequences in Brazil. In the book The Intellectuals and Socialism, Friedrich...
Explainer: What you should know about the federal government’s two-year budget deal
What just happened? Yesterday the House of Representatives passed a passed a two-year budget and an agreement to once again raise the debt limit. The bill, known as the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019, is expected to be passed by the Senate next week. What does the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 do? The legislation amends the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 to establish a congressional budget for fiscal years 2020 and 2021. The main actions...
Innovation in Nepal: Lessons on economic freedom from a farmer-entrepreneur
Agriculture is a way of life for the people of Sugauli Birta, a small village in Nepal. But while farmers invest much of their time and energy in their crops, they often spendlong hours traveling across the region to have their grain and rice ground by regional mills. Such journeys are a drain on productivity and opportunity, diverting attention and resources away from their land, families, munity. Fortunately, a local entrepreneur, Lorik Prasad Yadav, had an innovative idea that would...
Boris Johnson: Where there is a vision, the people flourish?
Newly elected UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson eliminated half of Theresa May’s Cabinet members during his first day on the job. That es as Johnson presents a unique vision of economic liberty at home and independence from the European Union, writes Rev. Richard Turnbull in a new essay posted at the Acton Institute’sReligion & Liberty Transatlanticwebsite. Rev. Turnbull notes Johnson’s mitment to economic liberty, a view that has not been so strongly embraced since the time of Margaret Thatcher. After...
Viktor Frankl on the error of the pleasure principle
Aristotle asked what made the good life? Was it pleasure, material wealth, honor, or virtue? He argued that while pleasure, wealth, and honor were a part of a good life and human happiness, they could not constitute it. Pleasure is fleeting, wealth is always always acquired for the sake of something else–a big house, a nice car, influence –and es from other people and can be taken away from you. Real human happiness and a good life could only obtained...
Why do we hate whistleblowers?
Americans claim to hate fraud and corruption. Yet we also tend to despise and discourage those who “snitch” and expose such crimes. How do we reconcile these contradictory positions? Today is “National Whistleblower Appreciation Day,” an observance to celebrate people e forward to raise the alarm about a problem within government or a public organization. In honor of the day I mend watching this video by Kelly Richmond Pope, an accounting professor turned documentary filmmaker, who considers why we hate...
Inadequate: Catholic magazine explains why it published Communist propaganda
If Dean Dettloff’s “The Catholic Case for Communism” were intended to be thought-provoking, it raises only one question: Why did America magazine facilitate this mendacious PR exercise? Editor Fr. Matt Malone, S.J.. felt a need to explain “Why we published an essay sympathetic munism.” (Read our analysis of the original article here.) Fr. Malone likened the article to the magazine bashing Senator Joe McCarthy, which he said took place after America “spent much of the previous 50 years loudly munism.”...
No, millions of Americans are not living on less than $2 per day
Over the past five years some welfare advocates have been promoting an eye-opening claim: more than 3 million U.S. households—including 1.65 million households with children—are living on less than $2 per person, per day. That sounds horrific, and it is: horrifically misleading. New research published by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) finds that more than 90 percent of the 3.6 million non-homeless that had previously been classified as living in extreme poverty were misclassified. Shockingly, more than half...
French-language readers of transatlantic learn of free-market environmentalism
The Acton Institute continues our outreach to the Francophone world with a new translation of one of our articles on the pivotal issue of environmental stewardship. The latest offering illustrates how the free market cares for creation better than government intervention. Our friend Benoît H. Perringraciously translated Joseph Sunde’s article “Free market environmentalism: Conserving and collaborating with nature”; the resultant “Une écologie de marché pour collaborer avec la nature” may be read at Acton’s Religion & Liberty Transatlantic website. Sunde...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved