Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
5 Facts about Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
5 Facts about Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Jul 14, 2026 8:39 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
‘We didn’t pick the time, nor did we pick the fight’
Most Rev. Joseph F. Naumann, D.D., Archbishop of Kansas City, Kansas On Catholic World Report, Carl E. Olson interviews Rev. Joseph F. Naumann, the Archbishop of Kansas City, Kansas, about the HHS mandate, the Ryan budget, and what the Supreme Court ruling means for the religious freedom fight. “There are always some people who feel that the Church is ing partisan and political in this,” Archbishop Naumann said, referring to a collective response to the HHS mandate covering provision of...
Obamacare and Civil Disobedience
Florida Governor Rick Scott recently declared that his state would ply with President Obama’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. In blatant defiance of the federal government, Florida will not expand its Medicare program or implement any of the other changes that “Obamacare” requires. While a flat-out refusal ply with federal law on the part of a lower authority is relatively mon, it is by no means unprecedented. The history of the United States is filled with individuals and groups...
The True Social Contract
Uncontrolled public debt threatens to rupture society, says Niall Ferguson, as the older generation thrives at the expense of the young. In his Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790), Edmund Burke wrote that the real social contract is not Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s contract between the sovereign and the people or “general will”, but the “partnership” between the generations. He writes: “SOCIETY is indeed a contract… The state … is … a partnership not only between those who are living, but...
The Debt-ridden American Dream
Fresh out of college and full of ideals, young Americans are finding that, in this economy, the American es at a steep cost. Just ask Michelle Holshue: At 30 years old, Holshue exemplifies a key tenet of the American dream: exceeding one’s parents’ education and e. “My dad never finished high school,” she says. “So in that sense, I am doing better than my parents did.” Holshue’s father is a school bus driver, and her mother, a teacher. At this...
Collective Action and the Declaration of Independence
“Modern Americans read the Declaration of Independence too individualistically,” says James R. Rogers. “We think of it as a revolt against high taxes and big government.” Take the Declaration’s plaint against the King, “for imposing taxes on us without our consent.” This is not about high taxes. Any tax, no matter how mild, that is imposed without a people’s “consent” would violate this principle. On the other hand, a very high tax, imposed with the consent of the people, would...
Growing Weary and Losing Heart
Galatians 6:9 (NKJV) And let us not grow weary while doing good, for in due season we shall reap if we do not lose heart. Is it possible to sow, toil and work only to lose heart and not reap any reward? Can all of our effort be lost simply by getting tired and giving up? If this is true, then it is imperative that we figure out how to not grow weary or lose heart while we are On...
Telling Pharaoh To Keep His Money
Ismael Hernandez, founder and executive director of the Freedom & Virtue Institute and Acton University lecturer, has written a piece in Crisis Magazine detailing why the Church should cut purse strings with the federal government. Noting that we cannot be both religious ministers to the poor and government-paid social workers, Hernandez bolsters his view by looking to the very foundation of America: James Madison, known as the father of our Constitution, supported religious liberty.[16] He is most surely quoted because...
Bastiat’s Vision
This Saturday, June 30, is the 211th birthday of Frédéric Bastiat, one of the greatest political philosophers of the modern era. Considered among the founding fathers of classical liberalism, Bastiat is known for his simple and direct explanations of political and economic realities, his arguments against oppressive economic regulations and his clear and concise vision of a government of limited, enumerated powers, operating under the rule of law and unencumbered by favoritism or distributionist policies. Bastiat drew on his Catholic...
Feeding the Poor, Bureaucracy Style
From es this tragic headline: As India’s kids starve, $1.5 billion worth of grain rots How does a country have starving people while it is producing so much food that it is literally rotting from being left outside in the open? The depressing answer is that it’s the result of government intervention in the agricultural market. The article from MSNBC goes on to detail how government policies produce too much grain relative to other agricultural products such as fresh fruits...
Samuel Gregg: The Prophet of Europe’s Crisis
Online today at The American Spectator is an article from Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg. The article highlights the forethought of German economist Wilhelm Röpke, who predicted Europe’s present economic downturn in the middle of the twentieth century. Röpke, Gregg says, was a “euroskeptic” before the term existed. Excerpt here: Where Röpke proved correct was in envisaging that efforts to impose European political integration from the top-down would go hand-in-hand with attempts to replicate large welfare systems and extensive regulation...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved