Hava Volovich

Hava Volovich
Born 1916
Ukraine
Died 2000
Mena, Ukraine, USSR
Occupation Writer, actress, director
Subject Gulag witness
Notable works Vospominaniia (memoirs)
Website
sites.google.com/site/havavolovich/

Hava Vladimirovna Volovich (Russian: Хава Владимировна Волович;1916–2000), was a Russian writer, actress, puppet theater director and Gulag survivor.[1] In literary value and historical witness, her notes from the Soviet forced labour camps have been compared with Shalamov's stories and Anne Frank's Diary.[2][3] Anne Applebaum wrote that Volovich stands out in the anthology "Gulag Voices", as she, like Elena Glinka, was not afraid to touch upon taboo subjects[4] Volovich's story about her own child in the camp contrasts to some stereotypes about the selfishness and venality of gulag prisoners who bore children there.[5][6]

Biography

Hava Vladimirovna (Vilkovna) Volovich was born in 1916 into a Jewish family in Mena, a small town in the Chernihiv region of northern Ukraine.[7] In 1934 she finished a seven-year school and began work first as a typesetter and then as sub-editor with a local newspaper.

Volovich was arrested on August 14, 1937 on the charge of anti-Soviet agitation and sentenced to fifteen years in the Soviet forced ("correctional") labor camps or "ITL"[8] She served her time in "Sevzheldorlag" (lumbering) at the "Mariinsky Mine" (Мариинский прииск) (farm work), in "Ozerlag" and in "Dzhezkasgan". In 1942, she had a daughter who died in the gulag in 1944. For many years she participated in the camp amateur productions, acting in the camp theater and organizing a marionette theater. She was released on April 20, 1953.

After the camp, Volovich lived in exile until 1956. In 1957, she returned to her hometown. Starting in 1958, she directed the local club puppet theater. She was exonerated on December 28, 1963. She died in Mena on February 14, 2000.

See also

References

  1. ru:Волович, Хава Владимировна
  2. Gorodetskaya, Alain (February 14, 2016). "Дневники "советской Анны Франк" [Diaries of a Soviet Anne Frank]". Jewish.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 22 August 2016.
  3. Volovich, Hava (1999). Vilensky, Simeon, ed. My Past. In: Till my Tale is Told: Women's Memoirs of the Gulag. Bloomington, IN: Indiana Univ. Press. pp. 241–278. ISBN 0-253-33464-0.
  4. Applebaum, Anne (2011). Gulag Voices: An Anthology (Anne Applebaum ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 96. ISBN 978-0-300-15320-0.
  5. Coak, Katryna. "'A Day in the Life Of…': Women of the Soviet Gulag". The View East - Dr Kelly Hignett. Retrieved 22 August 2016.
  6. Shapovalov, Veronica, ed. (2001). Remembering the Darkness: Women in Soviet Prisons. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7425-1146-0.
  7. "History of Jewish Communities in Ukraine - Mena". Retrieved 22 August 2016.
  8. "ITL" stands for Ispravitelno-Trudovoi Lager which means Correctional Labor Camp

Publications

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