Everything about Svetlana Alliluyeva totally explained
Svetlana Iosifovna Alliluyeva (Stalina) (Lana Peters in the USA emigration) (born
February 28,
1926,
Moscow,
Soviet Union) is the youngest child and only daughter of Soviet Premier
Joseph Stalin. A writer and
naturalized United States citizen, Alliluyeva caused an international furor by defecting to the
United States in 1967.
Early life
Like most children of high-ranking
Soviet officials, Svetlana was raised by a nanny and only occasionally saw her parents. Her mother,
Nadezhda Alliluyeva (Stalin's second wife), died on
9 November in 1932, when Svetlana was six. Nadezhda's death was officially ruled as
peritonitis resulting from a burst
appendix. While there were various other theories as to the cause of her death (murder on the orders of Stalin, or that she was killed by Stalin himself), it now appears the real cause of death was
suicide. According to
Nikita Khrushchev, Stalin was very abusive toward Svetlana later in life, recalling an event in his memoirs in which, Stalin, during a drunken rage at a party, dragged a crying Svetlana onto a dance floor by her hair.
Svetlana fell in love at the age of 16 with a
Jewish filmmaker,
Alexei Kapler (who was 40 years old). Her father vehemently disapproved of the romance. Later Kapler was sentenced to ten years in exile in an industrial city of
Vorkuta near the Arctic Circle, and it's speculated that the real reason was this romance.
Marriages
At 17, she fell in love with a fellow student at
Moscow University,
Grigori Morozov, also Jewish. Her father grudgingly allowed the couple to marry, although he made a point of never meeting the bridegroom. After the birth of a son (Joseph) in 1945, the couple divorced in 1947.
Svetlana's second husband was a close associate of Stalin's,
Yuri Zhdanov (son of his right-hand-man,
Andrei Zhdanov). They were married in 1949, and had a daughter, Ekaterina, in 1950, but this marriage also dissolved soon afterward.
Though press reports (such as
TIME Magazine) sometimes claimed that Svetlana was married a third time, in 1951, to Mikhail Kaganovich, the son of
Lazar Kaganovich, another primary Stalin associate, Svetlana denies this. In "Only One Year" (p. 382) she says Kaganovich had only one daughter, her friend, and an adopted son who was ten years younger than she. Svetlana reports: "he, when he grew up, married a girl student of his own age."
Death of Stalin
After her father's death in 1953, Svetlana adopted her mother's maiden name and worked as a teacher and translator in
Moscow. Her education was in
United States history and she'd studied English, however she'd little opportunity to speak it at this point. Svetlana was a Party member and, based on her parentage, remained in contact with the highest levels of the Soviet government and enjoyed the privileges of the
nomenklatura. She had been granted a pension with which she supported herself after she quit working to care for her children.
In 1963, while in hospital for the removal of her tonsils, she met an
Indian communist visiting Moscow,
Brajesh Singh. Singh was mild-mannered and idealistic but gravely ill with
bronchiectasis and
emphysema. They continued and cemented their relationship while recuperating in
Sochi, on the Black Sea. Singh returned to Moscow in 1965, to work as a translator, but they were not allowed to marry. Singh died in 1966 and Svetlana was allowed to travel to India to take his ashes back, for his family to pour them into the
Ganges. She stayed in the family home in
Kalakankar on the banks of the Ganges for two months and became immersed in local customs. At an interview on April 26, 1967 she referred to Singh as her husband, though stating that they were never allowed to marry officially.
Political asylum
On
March 6,
1967, after first having visited the Soviet embassy in
New Delhi, Alliluyeva went to the U.S. embassy and formally petitioned Ambassador
Chester Bowles for political asylum. This was granted; however, owing to concerns that the Indian government might suffer from possible ill feeling from the Soviet Union, it was arranged for her to leave
India immediately for
Switzerland, via
Rome. She stayed in Switzerland for 6 weeks before proceeding to the United States.
Upon her arrival in April 1967, Alliluyeva gave a press conference denouncing her father's regime and the Soviet government. Her intention to publish her autobiographical
Twenty Letters To A Friend on the fiftieth anniversary of the Soviet revolution caused an uproar in the USSR, and the government there threatened to release an unauthorized version; publication in the West was therefore moved to an earlier date, and that particular diplomatic problem defused.
In 1970, Alliluyeva answered an invitation from
Frank Lloyd Wright's widow,
Olgivanna Lloyd Wright, to visit
Taliesin West in
Scottsdale, Arizona. As she described in her autobiographical
Distant Music, Olgivanna believed in mysticism and had become convinced that Svetlana was a spiritual replacement for her own daughter Svetlana, who had married Wright's chief apprentice
William Wesley Peters, and who had died in a car crash years before. Amazingly, Alliluyeva came to Arizona, agreed to marry Peters within a matter of weeks, migrated with the Taliesin Fellowship back and forth between Scottsdale and
Spring Green, Wisconsin, and adopted the name
Lana Peters. The couple had a daughter, Olga, in Marin General Hospital, Mill Valley, California. By her own account Alliluyeva retained respect and affection for Wes Peters, but their marriage dissolved under the pressure of Mrs. Wright's influence.
In 1982, she moved with her daughter to
Cambridge,
England, and, in
1984, returned to the Soviet Union, where she and her daughter were granted citizenship, and settled in
Tbilisi,
Georgia. In
1986, Alliluyeva returned to the
United States, and later returned to
Bristol, England in the
1990s.
Recent development
In 2007, an up and coming Russian
film director based in
New York City,
Lana Parshina influenced by Alliluyeva's book "Twenty Letters to a Friend" made an attempt to find her. She succeeded where large international media
conglomerates, including German
ZDF, failed according to a story in the influential Russian magazine "Itogi". Alliluyeva broke her silence for Ms. Parshina's directorial debut, a 44-min. documentary "
Svetlana about Svetlana", currently making the film festival circuit. This brought fame to Ms. Parshina in
Russia when parts of her film were featured in the evening news segments on major Russian network
NTV (Russia) on March 24, 2008. Allilueva decided to give her last interview and clear many misconceptions in the media about her life. After the interview, she lost contact with the director as Alliluyeva disappeared again.
Bibliography
- Twenty Letters To A Friend - (Autobiography) First published 1967, by Hutchinson (London) and translated from Russian into English by Priscilla Johnson.
- Translated by Paul Chavchavadze, Only One Year, Harper & Row (1969), hardcover, 444 pages, ISBN 0-06-010102-4
- Faraway Music (1984, India, 1992, Moscow)
- Autumn of the Patriarch's Daughter - (article) - Itogi Magazine (No. 11 issue 613) - by Oleg Sulkin
- March 24, 2008 - NTV Segodnya Evening News - 7PM/10PM - 4 minutes TV news segment - Alliluyeva found by a Russian American Director, Ms. Parshina - www.ntv.ru (video number 128925)
- Svetlana about Svetlana - (film) - Library of Congress - copyright 2007
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