In the dark
Access to key Russian archives is being restricted as the state seeks to tighten its control of historical memory
Archive files detailing the fate of millions of Soviet citizens who were executed or imprisoned during the Stalin era have suddenly been made harder for historians to access. The Russian federal archive authority’s decision to limit access to such documents to the relatives of individual victims is both a violation of Russian law and will further hamper the work of historians researching the period. As it is, to date just a quarter of Stalin’s victims are known to historians by name.
“The country that spawned this repression is afraid to talk about it out loud, so you have to knock on doors yourself to get answers if you want your relative to be anything more than just another anonymous victim.”
“Maybe word got out that the memorial people were still working in some archive or other and sending copies of case files to other academics in Europe.”










