95
1. Priest Pavel Florensky. Collected works. At the watersheds of thought. Articles on the art. Paris. YMCA Press. 1985. Photocopy. Not stitched. 399 p. A4.
2. The words of St. Simeon the New Theologian. Moscow. 1890. Photocopy. Not stitched. 591 p. A4.
Names (2)
Orlovsky Ernst Semenovich
Since the mid-1950s. one of the first in the USSR to begin to defend a position that much later formed the basis of “dissident behavior” - by legal means to defend constitutional rights and freedoms violated by the authorities. He was actively involved in legal education.
In the spring of 1956, Orlovsky, together with his friend Revolt Pimenov, prepared a commentary on the text of N.S.’s report. Khrushchev at a closed meeting of the 20th Congress of the CPSU, then distributed in Samizdat. In 1956–1957 At weekly meetings of the Pimenov circle, he read reports on the history of the Cheka–OGPU–NKVD, abstracts of materials from the Polish and Yugoslav press (primarily materials about Hungarian events). At Pimenov's request, he was brought in as a witness in both of his trials (September 1957 and February 1958). In 1958, he collected funds to help those convicted in this case. “Since then, for almost 30 years, I have felt the KGB’s “care” for me: searches, interrogations, “conversations”, recommendations to my superiors in the service to reduce my salary (almost by half!), prohibit me from giving consultations and other work in the public sector. organizations, not allowed on business trips <...> and even in Leningrad libraries" (from the article "How did I become a dissident?", 1996).
In 1959, Orlovsky, in a letter addressed to Khrushchev, protested against his statement about the absence of political prisoners in the USSR. In May 1960 and August 1961, he spoke at factory rallies criticizing the foreign policy actions of the Soviet government (in particular, Khrushchev’s ultimatum on the Berlin issue), for which he was expelled from the trade union and fired from his job.
In November 1973, he took an active part in the founding of the Soviet section of Amnesty International and became its member.
In January–March 1977 KGB officers had five conversations with Orlovsky. Instead of the “statement” required by the KGB officers, Orlovsky wrote the essay “My Position.”
Since 1952, Orlovsky sent hundreds of letters to the editors of various newspapers and magazines and to government and public figures outlining his opinion on many phenomena and events in the country's socio-political life. The most important letters were distributed in Samizdat. His critical analysis of the draft new Constitution of the USSR was published in 1977 in the samizdat bulletin “Around the Draft Constitution of the USSR.” The article “Why I didn’t sign the Second Stockholm Appeal” was published in periodicals of the Russian diaspora; its detailed presentation in English was published in the London newspaper “The Times” (12/21/1976).
In 1979–1982, under the pseudonym Kukushkin, he collaborated in the samizdat abstract journal “Summa”.
During the years of perestroika, he worked on the study of legal conflicts generated by the transition period. Translated from Polish, commented on and distributed the Solidarity agreements with the authorities of August 1981 and the Round Table Agreements of the spring of 1989. Researched the legal aspects of the problem of the trial of criminal organizations, analyzing the protocols of the Nuremberg trials. He made commented translations of the Czechoslovak law on “lustration” and the Czech law on the criminal nature of the communist regime. For the Glasnost Foundation he carried out an analysis of the legal aspects of the Chechen war. In 1997–1998 The Institute of Human Rights published in Moscow in two volumes his commentary translation of the book of the first Polish Ombudsman E. Lentowska “How the work of the Commissioner for Civil Rights began.”
In 1990 - expert of the Constitutional Commission of the RSFSR. In 1990–1993 – expert of the Supreme Council of the Russian Federation Committee on Human Rights. In 1993–1996 – Expert of the Human Rights Commission under the President of the Russian Federation.
Died on February 10, 2003 in St. Petersburg.
Florensky Pavel Alexandrovich
Orthodox priest, religious thinker, scientist
Genus. 01/22/1882 in locality. Yevlakh, Elizavetpol province. (modern Azerbaijan). He graduated from the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics of Moscow State University (1904) and the Moscow Theological Academy (MDA, 1908). From 1904 he lived in Sergiev Posad, Moscow province. Ordained a priest in 1911, in 1911–1921 he served as a priest at the Marfo-Mariinsky Convent (Sergiev Posad). At the same time, from 1908 to 1919, he was a professor at the Moscow Academy of Sciences in the Department of History of Philosophy and, from 1912 to 1917, he was editor of the Theological Bulletin. In 1918–1920, member of the Commission for the Protection of Monuments of Art and Antiquity of the Trinity-Sergius Lavra. Since 1921, he was a professor at the printing and graphic department of VKHUTEMAS, and took part in the work of the Carbolite Commission of the Supreme Economic Council (until 1924). Since 1920, consultant, then employee of the State. Experimental Electrotechnical Institute (GEI). Since 1927 editor of the Technical Encyclopedia. Arrested on May 21, 1928 under the so-called “Sergiev Posad case”, sentenced by a resolution of the Special Meeting of the OGPU Collegium dated 06/08/1928 to exile to Nizhny Novgorod (“minus six”). Released from exile at the request of the Political Red Cross, on September 16, 1928 he returned to Moscow and was reinstated in his post. Author of religious and philosophical works, scientific works on mathematics and physics, as well as in the field of technology and materials science, and many others. etc. Arrested on February 26, 1933, sentenced by a resolution of the Troika at the OGPU PP of the Moscow Region. dated July 26, 1933 under Art. 58-11 of the Criminal Code of the RSFSR to 10 years in labor camp. In July 1933 he was transferred to Bamlag. From 12/01/1933 assigned to the research department of the Bamlag Administration. On 02/10/1934 he was transferred to the Skovorodino Experimental Permafrost Station (the village of Skovorodino, modern Amur Region), and was engaged in scientific research. In September 1934 he was transferred to the Solovetsky camp (arrived on October 23, 1934). He worked as an analytical chemist in the Yodprom laboratory until its closure in May 1937. In August 1937 he was transferred to prison regime. At the request of the 5th Department of the GUGB of the NKVD of the USSR, on October 10, 1937, he was transported to the mainland to be sent to Butyrka prison. By resolution of the Special Troika of the UNKVD LO dated November 25, 1937, he was sentenced to VMN. Shot on December 8, 1937 in Leningrad. Rehabilitated in the 1933 case by a resolution of the Moscow City Court dated 05/05/1958, in the 1927 case by a resolution of the Arkhangelsk Regional Court dated 03/05/1959.