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Majja Ulanovskaja

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Geburt:
20.10.1932
Tot:
25.06.2020
Patronym:
Aleksandrovna
Mädchenname:
Майя Александровна Улановская
Kategorien:
Dissidenten, Historiker, Opfer der Repression (Völkermord) des sowjetischen Regimes, Publizist, Schriftsteller, Übersetzer
Nationalitäten:
 jude
Friedhof:
Geben Sie den Friedhof

Born 1932, Нью-Йорк; еврейка; среднее;

студентка 1-го курса Института пищевой промышленности.

Lived: Москва.

Arrested: 7 February 1951.

Sentenced: Военная Коллегия Верховного Суда СССР 13 February 1952.

Charged: 58-1а, 58-8, 58-10, 58-11.

Verdict: 25 лет ИТЛ, 5 лет поражения в правах, осв. по амнистии в 1956

Source: Архив НИПЦ "Мемориал", Москва

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Maya Ulanovskaya, also known as Maiia Ulanovskie and Maria Ulanovsky (born in October 20, 1932 - died 2020), was an American-born Russian-Israeli who, with spouse Anatoly Yakobson, participated in the dissident movement in the USSR and became a professor, writer, and translator in Israel.

Background

Soviet GRU spy Alexander Petrovich Ulanovsky was Ulanovskaya's father

Maya Aleksandrovna Ulanovskaya was born in New York City while her parents were stationed there as Soviet resident spies and Soviet intelligence officer illegals for the GRU. Her father was Alexander Ulanovsky (1891-1971). Her mother was Nadezhda Ulanovskaya (1903-1986). In a 1952 memoir, Whittaker Chambers, who reported to the Ulanovskys in the early 1930s, noted Nadezhda's pregnancy and also noted that Ulanovskaya had an older brother, "kept hostage at school in Russia (the boy was killed fighting against the Germans during the Nazi invasion)."

Career

USSR

In 1948–1949, Ulanovskaya's parents were arrested on political charges. (Her parents were among those cited in The Gulag Archipelago by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.)

In 1949, Ulanovskaya graduated from school and entered the Moscow Institute of Food Industry. At the institute, she met members of and joined an underground anti-Stalinist organization, organized by students Boris Slutsky, Yevgeny Gurevich and Vladilen Furman in 1950.

On February 7, 1951, the MGB arrested Ulanovskaya among 15 others. Just over a year later, on February 13, 1952, the Military Collegium of the USSR Supreme Court arrested and sentenced her to 25 years in the Ozerlag (Озерлаг) MVD special camp, part of the Soviet GULAG labor camp system for political prisoners. Slutsky, Gurevich, and Furman received death sentences, ten received 25-year sentences, and three 10-year sentences. In February 1956, the case was revised, the term of imprisonment was reduced to five years, and she, along with other accomplices, was released under an amnesty.

In the 1960s - 1970s, Ulanovskaya worked at the Institute of Scientific Information on Social Sciences of the Russian Academy of Sciences (INION RAN) library in Moscow and participated in the human rights movement by reprinting samizdat, passing information abroad, etc.

Israel

In 1973, Ulanovskaya emigrated with her husband and son to Israel. In 1974, she divorced her husband.

Ulanovskaya worked at the National Library in Jerusalem. She translated into Russian books from English (including some by Arthur Koestler), Hebrew, and Yiddish.

In 1989, Ulanovskaya received rehabilitation from the Plenum of the Supreme Court of the USSR Rehabilitation, based on lack of an evidence and corpus delicti.

Hiss Case

Regarding the Hiss Case, Ulavoskaya's mother wrote (quoted from the new English edition of their memoir):

My story has many parallels with that of Whittaker Chambers. We met the same people, and I can thus confirm his testimony.

Personal life

In 1956, Ulanovskaya married Anatoly Yakobson; in 1959, they had a son, Alexander Yakobson.

In 1973, Ulanovskaya immigrated with her husband, son, and mother to Israel.

Works

Ulanovskaya wrote a memoir with her mother that recounts the lives of two generations of their family.

The memoir provides details about:

  • The early espionage career of Whittaker Chambers, first documented in English by Allen Weinstein in his book Perjury: The Hiss-Chambers Case.[
  • Stalinism and Soviet post-war youth
  • Women's history
  • Russian women writers

Writings:

  • История одной семьи (translated History of One Family) (New York: Chalidze, 1982) (Russian)
    • История одной семьи (Moscow: Vest-VIMO, 1994)
    • История одной семьи (St. Petersburg: INAPRESS, 2003)
    • История одной семьи (St. Petersburg: INAPRESS, 2005)
    • The Family Story (2016) (Hannover, NH: Seven Arts/Lulu, 2016)
  • Jews in the culture of the Russian emigre (1995)
  • Internal Plan of Life (on Vladimir Gershuni) (1996)
  • Freedom and dogma: the life and work of Arthur Koestler (1996)
  • "Why Koestler?" (1997)
  • The Jewish National Library and its Russian Roots (1999)
  • On Anatoly Yacobson (2010)
  • The Serene Breathing of Sadness (2017) by Anatoly Yakobson (compiler)

Translations Hebrew to Russian:

  • The Book of Testimony (1989) by Abba Kovner = יום זה: מגילת עדות
  • Letters Yoni: portrait of a hero (1984) by Yonatan Netanyahu = מכתבי יוני
  • The Last Fight Yoni (2001) by Yonatan Netanyahu = הקרב האחרון של יוני

Translations English to Russian:

  • Thieves in the Night (1981) by Arthur Koestler
  • The Thirteenth Tribe (1998) by Arthur Koestler
  • Arrival and Departure (2017) by Arthur Koestler

Translations Yiddish to Russian:

  • My memories (2009, 2012) by Yechezkel Kotik = מיינע זכרונות

Ursache: timenote.info, memo.ru

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        NameBeziehungGeburtTotBeschreibung
        1Aleksandr UlanovskijAleksandr UlanovskijVater24.12.189100.00.1971
        2Nadezhda UlanovskajaNadezhda UlanovskajaMutter00.00.190300.00.1986
        3Kronid LjubarskiKronid LjubarskiGleichgesinnte04.04.193423.05.1996
        4Jelena BonnerJelena BonnerGleichgesinnte15.02.192318.06.2011
        5Andrei SacharowAndrei SacharowGleichgesinnte21.05.192114.12.1989
        6Aleksandr  SolzhenitsynAleksandr SolzhenitsynGleichgesinnte11.12.191803.08.2008
        Schlagwörter