This year will go down in history as one in which great fighters for
freedom have been called home by the good Lord. And so we bid farewell
to the most important freedom fighter of the 20th Century, Alexander
Solzhenitsyn, who passed away Sunday at the age of 89.
Solzhenitsyn told the world the story of the Soviet gulags. He was in
the gulag for having "criticized" Josef Stalin in a letter to a friend
from the front in World War II. While in the gulag system as a
political prisoner he felt he had no hope. So he determined to make a
run for it, figuring that the Soviets would kill him. Just as he was
about to make a break someone came along and stopped him. That someone,
he said, had a warmth he had never experienced before. This man who
Solzhenitsyn said he had never seen at the gulag took a stick and drew a
cross in the dirt. And he left, never to be seen again. Solzhenitsyn
later came to believe that that kindly figure was Christ himself. He
had no idea that as he was thinking of escaping there was a worldwide
effort to set him free. Shortly after that kindly gentleman prevented
him from escaping, he was expelled by the Soviets, eventually to make
his way to the United States.
In what was one of the most disgraceful episodes in American history
President Gerald R. Ford refused to invite Solzhenitsyn to the White
House. It was one of the factors which led Ronald W. Reagan to challenge
Ford later that year.
One of the first people Solzhenitsyn asked to see in the United States
was Senator Jesse Helms (R-NC). He said he learned when he got to the
West that it was Helms and George Meany of the AFL-CIO who played the
most important role in the effort to free him. He and Helms visited many
times over the years. It is a remarkable coincidence that both died
within a month of each other.
Solzhenitsyn settled in Vermont because it reminded him of Russia. He
remained there until the Soviet Union fell, whereupon he returned to
Russia, where he remained an important symbol in the fight for freedom.
He had documented the repression of the Soviets based upon the
information available to him in Russia. When he gained access to the
records at the Hoover Institute at Stanford University, he was horrified
to find that he had based his writing upon false information. So he
spent all of his days in the United States feverishly rewriting his
work. He completed that task shortly before he returned to his native
land.
He stayed out of American politics except for one very important speech
at Harvard University in which he warned the West that it was in mortal
danger of disintegration if it did not maintain its principles. That
speech disappointed some conservatives who accused Solzhenitsyn of
defeatism. But a careful reading of that remarkable address demonstrates
that it is anything but defeatist. It was prophetic.
This Nobel Peace Prize winner was perhaps the most important symbol of
the struggle for freedom. In recent days he had a Russian TV show in
which he propounded strange economic theories. An economist he was not.
A fervent Orthodox Christian he was, and from that Church he will be
commended to the Lord this week. Memory Eternal!
|