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- <text id=90TT1616>
- <link 90TT2600>
- <title>
- June 18, 1990: Khrushchev On Khrushchev
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 18, 1990 Child Warriors
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EXCERPT, Page 78
- Khrushchev on Khrushchev
- By Sergei Khrushchev
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>How, and why, the deposed Soviet leader defied the Kremlin and
- outfoxed the KGB by allowing his memoirs to be smuggled to the
- West
- </p>
- <p>[(c) 1990 by Sergei Khrushchev. Translation copyright by William
- Taubman.]
- </p>
- <p> [Twenty years ago, Nikita Khrushchev, a nonperson living
- under virtual house arrest in a dacha outside Moscow, created
- an international sensation when the first volume of his memoirs
- was published by Little, Brown & Co. The Soviet authorities
- denounced Khrushchev Remembers as a CIA hoax. A number of
- Western experts suspected the KGB. In 1974, after Khrushchev's
- death, a second volume was published. By then the controversy
- had died down, but curiosity lingered about the author's
- motivation and method.
- </p>
- <p> This month Little, Brown will publish Khrushchev on
- Khrushchev, by Nikita's son Sergei, 55, an engineer in Moscow.
- This intimate portrait shows the deposed leader in his last
- years watching with dismay as his reforms are overturned. Now
- his son offers the most detailed and authoritative account to
- date of how the "special pensioner" was able to conduct his own
- defiant experiment in glasnost--and why he had decided to
- brave the anger of his former comrades.]
- </p>
- <p> Father was used to being needed by everyone, to being
- constantly involved. Suddenly, the Great Cause had disappeared,
- and everything came crashing down. A man in this situation is
- like an ant when some malicious hand suddenly puts an
- insurmountable twig in its path. Suddenly, this businesslike,
- industrious creature begins to rush aimlessly in all
- directions. It's hard enough to start a new life when you're
- young and the years stretch endlessly before you. It's a
- hundred times harder when the sun is setting on your old age.
- Just yesterday Father had been making decisions as to what
- proposals to put before the United Nations, whether to reduce
- the armed forces, whether to build hydroelectric stations. And
- today? Whether to go for a walk or watch television.
- </p>
- <p> All the telephones fell silent. In the midst of a
- conversation, Father's energy subsided, and the light in his
- eyes went out. "No one needs me now. What am I going to do
- without work?" he said to no one in particular. "I've got to
- learn how to kill time," he would often say. He would
- mechanically leaf through books from his extensive library, lay
- them aside and set off on interminable walks.
- </p>
- <p> As always, Mama saw to it that everyone was fed, made sure
- that Father wore a clean white shirt, put everything in its
- proper place--all with a warm, ready smile on her round face.
- She acted as if no catastrophe had occurred: the Central
- Committee had simply made another decision, in this case
- involving the dismissal of her husband, and she accepted it as
- she had accepted so many others. After all, she wasn't just his
- wife but a party member, and democratic centralism's dictates
- about subordination from top to bottom had become second
- nature to her. Once decisions were made, they had to be carried
- out unconditionally. Even to discuss them was fractious
- activity, sedition, just a step away from a political
- "deviation."
- </p>
- <p> At the end of December, Mama and Father went out to
- Petrovo-Dalneye to see the new dacha where they were to live.
- The house seemed spacious and yet cozy. Naturally, we
- anticipated microphones in the dacha. It turned out that the
- receivers and tape recorders had been installed in the little
- gatehouse. The equipment was mediocre, and the eavesdropping
- was quite careless. The guards sometimes substituted music tapes
- for the blank recording tapes to while away the long evenings.
- When they did, we could make out the faint melodies through the
- walls of Father's room; the microphones had become speakers.
- A couple of times, on hearing the music, I pretended to be
- surprised and proposed searching for the source. A moment
- later, the music would stop.
- </p>
- <p> Yet the silence oppressed us all the more. We tried to
- distract Father by attempting to strike up a conversation about
- some more or less neutral news from Moscow, but he didn't
- react. Sometimes he broke the silence himself by saying
- bitterly that his life was over, that life made sense as long
- as people needed him, but now, when nobody needed him, life was
- meaningless. Sometimes tears welled up in his eyes.
- </p>
- <p> Father spent 1965 getting used to his new status as a
- pensioner. When he took a walk, he always brought along a small
- Falcon radio. In the morning he read newspapers, as he always
- had, frequently grumbling, "This is just garbage! What kind of
- propaganda is this? Who will believe it?" He found a Zenith
- shortwave radio that had been given to him in the 1950s by an
- American businessman and started to listen to Western
- Russian-language broadcasts. What he heard didn't exactly make
- him rejoice. Step by step, all his reforms were abolished.
- </p>
- <p> I brought Father some "forbidden" books. Once I got a
- typewritten copy of Doctor Zhivago. Later, during a walk, he
- said, "We shouldn't have banned it. I should have read it
- myself. There's nothing anti-Soviet in it."
- </p>
- <p> Sometimes, when he went for a walk, Father would meet
- vacationers and regale them with stories about the past. Or
- he'd comment on current international affairs. They all
- listened attentively and asked a lot of questions. Father
- answered them expansively. But if the questions were about
- Brezhnev and his policies, he responded jokingly, "I'm retired
- now. My job is to take walks and not criticize. Let them figure
- things out on their own."
- </p>
- <p> When I once asked Father if he weren't bored by telling the
- same stories over and over, he slyly narrowed his eyes and
- said, "I'm an old man. When I die, all this will die with me.
- This way, maybe someone will remember. What I'm recounting is
- the very history they'd like to bury as deep in the ground as
- they can. But you can't hide the truth, it will find its way
- out."
- </p>
- <p> Father's memoirs started because of General Pavel Batov,
- with whom he had fought during much of the war. After Father
- was forced out, Batov was asked whether Khrushchev had been at
- Stalingrad. The general hesitated and answered vaguely that he
- didn't know whether Khrushchev had been at Stalingrad or what
- Khrushchev had been doing during the war, for that matter!
- </p>
- <p> That sort of "forgetfulness" was to be expected; after all,
- Khrushchev's name was being erased everywhere. Father pretended
- he didn't care, but he really did. Once he noticed a guard
- wearing an unfamiliar pin. The guard explained that it was to
- commemorate the 25th anniversary of victory and had been given
- out to everyone who was in the army on that day. Father didn't
- say a word, but the fact that he had been "forgotten" wounded
- him deeply. He kept coming back to it. Father's detractors had
- plenty of opportunities to wound and slander him. After all,
- he couldn't respond in public.
- </p>
- <p> Father's only window on the world was a combination
- television-radio console, a gift from President Nasser of
- Egypt. The console also included a tape recorder that Father
- used when he first began to dictate his memoirs. Always keen
- on technical improvements, he made a wooden pedal he could
- press with his foot to stop the tape while he gathered his
- thoughts. At first no one, including Father, had any idea of
- the content or length of the memoirs, or of the role they would
- play in our lives. All we wanted to do was get him involved in
- some kind of project. To goad him on, I brought him Churchill's
- and De Gaulle's memoirs.
- </p>
- <p> Later, the husband of Yulia [Khrushchev's granddaughter and
- Sergei's niece], the journalist Lyova Petrov, brought a new
- tape recorder, and in August 1966 Father started dictating more
- systematically. We had no plan or schedule for the memoirs
- since we couldn't imagine the immensity of the work that lay
- ahead. However, the project quickly changed from amateur
- storytelling to a professional endeavor.
- </p>
- <p> In the beginning, Father didn't want to dictate in the house
- because of the KGB listening devices there. As a result, his
- words on the early tapes are sometimes drowned out by the noise
- of planes flying overhead. Later he said, "The hell with the
- bugs," and dictated inside the house. He hadn't been trying to
- hide the fact that he was dictating--he just didn't want to
- broadcast the contents to the KGB.
- </p>
- <p> It took the authorities a long time to react. In the absence
- of any explicit prohibition against what he was doing, reports
- had to be passed up the line; decisions had to be considered
- at the highest level, then passed back down. All that took
- several years. Meanwhile, the work of transcribing and editing
- 1,500 typescript pages fell on me. That, too, took years.
- </p>
- <p> Father dictated several hours a day, entirely from memory,
- without any reference material. Father was used to working on
- concrete issues in discussions with real people. As Pushkin
- said of Eugene Onegin, "He had not the least desire to dig in
- history's dusty chronicles." Father relied on his own memory,
- which was indeed phenomenal.
- </p>
- <p> "It goes better when there's somebody around to listen to
- me, when I see a live human being in front of me and not a dumb
- box," he frequently complained. He was right. Whenever he had
- listeners, his dictation went faster and was livelier. Usually
- his visitors were old acquaintances, retired people far removed
- from politics who came for a week or more. When he was alone
- with the "dumb box," his speech became less vivid, with many
- stumbles and long pauses. During his walks he thought about
- what he would say and how he would say it. The most dramatic
- events of his life were engraved on his memory.
- </p>
- <p> As Father dictated one reel after another, he began to
- agonize about what would happen to his memoirs. "It's all in
- vain," he would say during our Sunday walks. "Our efforts are
- useless. Everything's going to be lost. As soon as I die,
- they'll take it away and destroy it, or bury it so deep that
- there'll be no trace of it." Deep down I agreed with him. The
- fact that everything was quiet now didn't mean that it would
- continue that way forever.
- </p>
- <p> In the summer of 1967, when Father seemed almost completely
- forgotten, his name suddenly cropped up again. An American news
- network decided to make a biographical film about him. But the
- Soviet side interpreted it as a provocation, a hostile move.
- Brezhnev couldn't bear any mention of Khrushchev's name. People
- like him, who are soft and weak on the one hand and vain on the
- other, have a peculiar way of perceiving and "processing" their
- bad deeds. Having done something wrong, they project their
- guilt onto their victim, trying in this way to justify their
- actions to themselves and to the world. Father's name stood in
- the way of Brezhnev's attempt to solidify his own role in
- history.
- </p>
- <p> Instead of abandoning his memoirs after the uproar over the
- TV film, Father redoubled his efforts. The authorities became
- aware of those efforts in the winter of 1967-1968. Brezhnev was
- greatly upset. How to make Father stop work on the project?
- Should they search his dacha and seize the tapes? That would
- trigger a scandal, leaving Brezhnev looking like a tyrant and
- Khrushchev a martyr. So what was to be done? The choice was to
- call Khrushchev in and persuade him to cease work on his
- memoirs and turn over what he had written to the Central
- Committee. If he refused, he should be compelled, even
- intimidated into cooperating. After all, what was more important
- to him, a comfortable life in a state dacha or a bunch of
- papers?
- </p>
- <p> Brezhnev had no desire to speak to his former boss. So he
- instructed his first deputy in the Central Committee, Andrei
- Kirilenko, a rude and high-handed man, to summon Khrushchev and
- get him to drop the memoirs. Arvid Pelshe, the chief of the
- party Control Commission, attended to add pressure; everyone
- knew the Control Commission wasn't to be trifled with.
- </p>
- <p> In April 1968, on the eve of Father's birthday, I arrived
- as usual to spend the weekend at the dacha. Father wasn't
- inside. Mama said that he had gone to the edge of the forest
- to sit in the sun.
- </p>
- <p> "Father is very upset," she said. "Yesterday he was summoned
- to the Central Committee. Kirilenko demanded that he cease work
- on the memoirs and hand over what's already been written.
- Father became infuriated and started to shout. He made a huge
- scene. He'll tell you everything but don't press him. He was
- very agitated yesterday, and he doesn't feel well."
- </p>
- <p> I went down the path. Father was sitting on the bench,
- watching the sun go down. His dog Arbat was lying beside him.
- Father looked tired, his face seemed grayer and older. He
- asked, "Do you know already? Did Mama tell you?" I nodded.
- "Scoundrels! I told them what I think of them. Perhaps I went
- too far, but it serves them right. They thought I would crawl
- on my belly in front of them."
- </p>
- <p> Father told me what he had said to Kirilenko and Pelshe: "As
- a citizen of the U.S.S.R., I have the right to write my
- memoirs, and you don't have the power to deny me that right.
- I want what I write about to be of use to the Soviet people,
- to our Soviet leaders and to our nation. The events I have
- witnessed should serve as a lesson for our future."
- </p>
- <p> I tried to reassure him but couldn't stop worrying myself.
- I had to find a way to store the material safely until better
- times came. But there was no absolutely safe place for the
- tapes and transcripts inside the country. As the conversation
- with Kirilenko had shown, Khrushchev's name provided only so
- much protection. Even before the confrontation at the Central
- Committee, it had occurred to us to look for a safe place
- abroad. At first Father had hesitated, out of fear that we'd
- lose control over the manuscript and that it might be distorted
- and used against our state. But after carefully weighing the
- pros and cons, he asked me to find a way to get the material
- out of the country.
- </p>
- <p> I didn't have the foggiest idea of how to carry out this
- plan. But after Father's encounter with Kirilenko and Pelshe,
- we came back to the idea of finding a safe hiding place abroad.
- It was at this time that we first discussed publishing the
- memoirs as retaliation if they were seized, or in some other
- extraordinary situation. Publication would solve once and for
- all the problem of preserving the memoirs and might also reduce
- the Central Committee's incentive to seize and destroy them in
- the Soviet Union. Why should they try to search for them if the
- book was available? What were they going to do? Buy up all the
- copies?
- </p>
- <p> Aside from the physical problem of getting the memoirs out
- of the country, there was a moral consideration. It was no
- longer 1958, but it wasn't yet 1988 either. Only ten years
- before, Boris Pasternak had drawn thunder and lightning down
- upon himself by giving his manuscript to an Italian publisher.
- </p>
- <p> Father was bolder than I. His were the memoirs of the First
- Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of
- the Soviet Union, he insisted, the confessions of a man who had
- devoted his entire life to fighting for Soviet power, for a
- communist society. The memoirs contained truth, words of
- warning and facts; they should be read by the people. Let them
- come out first abroad and at home later. The reverse would have
- been better, but would we live long enough to see such a
- possibility?
- </p>
- <p> In deciding to take this step, we crossed the threshold from
- legal to illegal activity. I felt uneasy. Where would it end?
- Arrest? Internal exile? It was no time to ponder the
- consequences; it was important to act. Many of those who took
- part in the effort are still alive, and I can't reveal the
- details or the names of those who offered their assistance.
- Many of them asked me not to, and I'm not about to violate
- their confidence; not everyone wants to become a hero of this
- book. I would like only to express my sincere thanks to those
- who helped.
- </p>
- <p> Once the tapes and transcripts had crossed several borders
- and found a safe haven behind the steel doors of a vault, they
- were still a highly perishable item and not suitable for
- lengthy storage. What they had to say would be of use if people
- read them now, in today's circumstances.
- </p>
- <p> Father agreed. "Anything might happen," he said. "It would
- be a good idea to arrange with some respected publisher to
- publish the book at some unspecified future date, but only
- after we give them the signal from here." He fell silent, and
- we continued strolling along the path.
- </p>
- <p> By the end of the year we had reached a tentative agreement
- to publish the memoirs. Passages were removed that might
- constitute military secrets and incidental references to people
- then in power in the U.S.S.R. There weren't many such items,
- and Father agreed to delete them.
- </p>
- <p> The publishers were worried that someone might be palming
- off a fake. And why not? Everything certainly looked strange.
- They were afraid of provocateurs and wanted to verify the
- authenticity of the material they were getting. We weren't in
- a position to write to them ourselves; it would have been too
- dangerous. Our colleagues found a solution. Father received two
- wide-brimmed hats from Vienna, one bright scarlet and the other
- black. The publishers asked us to send photographs of Father
- wearing these two hats to verify that they were dealing with
- us and not some impostor. When I brought the hats to
- Petrovo-Dalneye, they attracted everyone's attention because
- they were so outlandish. I explained that they were souvenirs
- from one of Father's foreign admirers.
- </p>
- <p> Mama was amazed. "Can anyone really think that your father
- will wear them?"
- </p>
- <p> When Father and I were out for a walk, I explained the real
- reason for the hats. He got a big kick out of the situation.
- The plan appealed to him; he liked witty people. When we
- returned from our walk, he got into the spirit of the game
- himself. Sitting on the bench in front of the house, he asked
- me loudly, "Bring me those hats. I want to try them on and see
- if they fit."
- </p>
- <p> Mama was horrified. "You can't really be thinking of wearing
- them?"
- </p>
- <p> "And why not?" he said, egging her on.
- </p>
- <p> "Why, they're much too loud," she said, and shrugged.
- </p>
- <p> I brought him the hats, grabbing my camera on the way.
- Father put one on and said, "Take my picture, let's see how I
- look." So I photographed him wearing one hat and holding the
- other in his hand. The publishers received the picture and knew
- that they were not being led astray.
- </p>
- <p> Father's memoirs were later published in 16 languages.
- People around the world have been reading them for nearly two
- decades. But there is still no Soviet edition--another
- example of our long-standing, thoughtless, "who cares?"
- attitude to the history of our homeland.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-