American visitors to USSR, 1930s, 40s and 50s
Alina Israeli
aisrael at AMERICAN.EDU
Fri Mar 12 21:24:46 UTC 2004
>If you just peruse Worldcat (or your own library catalog) for the subject
>heading
>
>Soviet Union Description and Travel
>
But that's not what Susan's student wants (see below). She wants to know
how the Soviets reacted to Americans who came to visit during Stalin's time
(of all times!). I doubt such info exists, unless someone wrote a memoir
after the fact acknowledging clandestine meetings with Americans when such
meetings were deadly.
There were two groups of Americans that came to the S.U. during those
years: left-leaning immigrants, mostly Jews, occasionally by-racial couples
who had a hard time of it in the US (and boy did they get stuck in the SU,
I knew at least three such families), and the second group were American
communists who were coming to get instructions from the HQ. I forget the
name of the head Communist and his common law wife, who came on one such
visit with their son, jovially put him up in the "detskij dom" (orphanage)
- communists' paradise in their estimation - and went about their communist
business. When the time came to leave SU to go back home they were told
that they could not take their son since he spoke Russian, so they left him
there for good. I believe his new Russian name was Tixomirov, and he became
a scientist. Then of course there were some performers, Paul Robeson, for
ex., a frequent visitor to the" land of freedom".
Considering that Soviet citizens interested in self-preservation should
have done their utmost not to meet foreigners, it's not very likely that
they committed to paper information that could cause their destruction.
>>Hello,
>>A student of mind would like to write about Soviet citizens' impressions of
>>American visitors to the Soviet Union in the 30s, 40s and 50s. Could any
>>of you recommend some memoirs or other texts that she could use?
>>Thank you very much.
>>Susan Kresin
__________________________
Alina Israeli
LFS, American University
4400 Mass. Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20016
phone: (202) 885-2387
fax: (202) 885-1076
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