116. "The Tomsk Affair" in the Fate of Alexander Kovalevsky / V. A. Khanevich // "Stone Bridge": literary and artistic almanac. - 2005. - P. 410-415.
On the fabricated 1982 trial of A. Kovalevsky and a group of Tomsk residents who read banned literature
Names (1)
Khanevich Vasily Antonovich, автор
Historian, teacher, public figure, member of the staff of the Tomsk Regional Museum of Local History. Member of the board of the Memorial Society. One of the initiators and founder of the Memorial Museum "Investigative Prison of the NKVD".
One of the initiators and founder of the Memorial Museum "NKVD Investigative Prison" (1989).
Head of the Museum (2002–2019).
Senior Researcher at the Center for the Study of Historical Memory at the M. B. Shatilov TOCM (2019–present).
Laureate of the Academician D.S. Likhachev Prize (2014).
Documents (1)
001. "Tomsk case" in the fate of Alexander Kovalevsky / V. A. Khanevich // "Stone Bridge": literary and artistic almanac. - 2005. - P. 410-415
The text is a detailed testimony of Tomsk scientist Alexander Frantsevich Kovalevsky, convicted in 1982 for reading and distributing banned literature. The document describes the course of the investigation, the fabrication of charges, the conditions of detention, the trial, the reaction of colleagues and relatives, as well as the subsequent professional and personal persecution. Particular attention is paid to the role of KGB and prosecutorial officers, as well as the atmosphere of fear and denunciation that permeated the scientific community. This story is an important testimony to the repressive policies of the late Soviet era and an attempt to preserve the memory of its victims.
List of names :
- Alexander Avtorkhanov is a historian and publicist, author of the book “Technology of Power”, banned in the USSR.
- Joseph Alexandrovich Brodsky is a poet convicted in the USSR of parasitism, later a Nobel laureate.
- Mikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov is a writer, author of the story “Heart of a Dog”, which was considered banned literature.
- Vaivod Anton Norbertovich is the judge who presided over the trial of Kovalevsky.
- Zinoviev Alexander Alexandrovich - philosopher and sociologist, author of the book "Communism as Reality".
- Kovalevsky Alexander Frantsevich - candidate of physical and mathematical sciences, associate professor, Tomsk scientist, convicted in 1982 for reading and distributing samizdat.
- Kopelev Lev Zinovievich - writer, author of the memoirs "To Keep Forever", included in the banned literature.
- Kendel Valery Mikhailovich is a defendant in the same case as Kovalevsky, sentenced to 1.5 years.
- Marchenko Anatoly Tikhonovich is a dissident and the author of the book “My Testimony”.
- Popyrin (name not given) was the prosecutor at Kovalevsky's trial, who brought charges based on the content of banned books.
- Sergeev Alexander Dmitrievich - captain of the City Clinical Hospital, investigator in the Kovalevsky case.
- Fast, Wilhelm Genrikhovich - an employee of TSU, an acquaintance of Kovalevsky, with whom he discussed what he had read.
- Chernyshov Anatoly Alekseevich - forensic expert, defendant in the case, sentenced to 3.5 years, disabled; his cooperative apartment was confiscated.
Source of images: website of the Tomsk Regional Library named after Pushkin ( https://elib.tomsk.ru/ ):
Stone Bridge: literary and artistic almanac. - Tomsk, 2005





