Say their names
Why remembering the victims of Soviet-era repression is more about Russia’s future than its past

Despite the increasingly aggressive attempts by the Russian authorities to intimidate and hinder any attempts to publicly mourn the victims of the country’s 20th century past, on 29 October thousands of people in 19 Russian cities took part in an annual ritual known as Restoring the Names, in which they read aloud lists of those liquidated by the Soviet state.
Describing Soviet-era repression as state terror directed against its own citizens was always taboo, even though that’s exactly what it was.











