Babitsky Konstantin Iosifovich

Definition:

Linguist, human rights activist, participant in the “demonstration of the seven” - an act of protest on Red Square in Moscow against the invasion of Soviet troops into Czechoslovakia (08/25/1968).

Years of life: 1929-1993
Reproduction methods:

Genus. in 1929 in Moscow; Jew; higher education; junior researcher at the Russian Language Institute of the USSR Academy of Sciences. Lived in Moscow. Arrested on August 25, 1968. Sentenced by the Moscow City Court on October 11, 1968 under Art. 190-1, 190-3 to 3 years of exile. He served exile in the Komi Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. Honorary Citizen of Prague (1990)

Info:
Доп. инф. с сайта "Жертвы политического террора в СССР"

Cases (1)

Documents (9)

Fund 03 (Б-2) / Inventory 1 / Case Бабицкий Константин Иосифович
1. Biographical information on Babitsky K.I.
3 листа, 3 изображения, машинопись
Fund 03 (Б-2) / Inventory 1 / Case Бобровников Михаил Петрович
1. Fragment of an interview with memories of Pavel Bashkirov about the dissident Bobrovnikov M.P. in the newspaper “Barricade” No. 3 for 1994.
Fund 03 (Б-2) / Inventory 1 / Case Бабицкий Константин Иосифович
2. Photo of Babitsky
фотокопия
Fund 03 (Б-2) / Inventory 1 / Case Сокирко Виктор Владимирович
8. An article by O. Berestneva and S. Pashkov, employees of the “People's Archive,” “It’s still a shame. 25 years ago, the troops of the allied forces entered Czechoslovakia" in the newspaper "Moscow News" No. 34 dated 08/22/1993 with a transcript of the meeting of the trade union activists of the Moscow Pipe Plant dated 02/21/1969 on the condemnation of V.V. Sokirko, who signed a letter addressed to the deputies of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR and the RSFSR and in the editorial offices of newspapers about the incorrectness of the sentences passed on demonstrators against the entry of Soviet troops into Czechoslovakia.
Fund 03 (Б-2) / Inventory 1 / Case Скобов Александр Валерьевич
14. Material by Skobova A.V. dated 02/29/2000 with a handwritten note “The material was published with slight abbreviations in Novaya Gazeta before the 2000 presidential elections,” dedicated to the war in Chechnya.