STALIN’S SCRIBE LITERATURE, AMBITION, AND SURVIVAL: THE LIFE OF MIKHAIL SHOLOKHOV BRIAN J. BOECK PEGASUS BOOKS NEW YORK LONDON Dedicated to the past and present librarians of Guadalupe County, Texas. A NOTE ON TRANSLATIONS, TERMINOLOGY, AND SOURCES A ll translations presented here are my own. Where possible I have strived to distinguish between informal and official registers and to convey a sense of the tone and tenor of Soviet discourse. Since the translation process always involves a number of interpretive decisions and judgement calls I have erred on the side of making the text accessible to the widest possible audience. In a small number of cases I have deployed more easily understood or informal terms rather than the more formal official versions and their variations. The title of party ‘secretary,’ which conveyed a great deal of power and prestige in the USSR, presents a particular problem due to the connotations of the term in English. The fact that Stalin was a secretary too, should leave no doubts about its high status connotations. For continuity I have used a single recognizable political term, Politburo, rather than the other names for entities which served the same or similar functions at different times. Though Sholokhov’s epic novel is known in some English translations as And Quiet Flows the Don, I have opted for Quiet Don because it is closer to the original, which refers to both a quietly flowing body of water and the poetic personification of the river, Don Ivanovich, in Cossack folklore. Publishers in England added specificity to the title in order to avoid any suggestion that the book was about the life of a taciturn fellow at Oxford, a different kind of don altogether. In a limited number of cases I have utilized oral or visual sources that do not easily lend themselves to citation. A number of aphorisms, turns of phrase, and anecdotes about Soviet history derive from my travels in Russia over the course of two decades. Visual descriptions of places rely partly on photographs and partly on my own experiences. For descriptions of people and historical interiors I have consulted photographic evidence that is close in time to either the person or event described. Illustrations 1–4 render historical photographs that were not available for publication. Only the first image would have been widely known to the Soviet public. the Soviet public. In order to reconstruct events as Sholokhov saw them, I have critically scrutinized the reminiscences of his friends, relatives, and assistants. Their accounts are often partial, protective, and chronologically imprecise. Nonetheless, they provide important insights into his mindset and key testimonies about how he narrated the story of his encounters with Stalin and other Soviet leaders. The dialogues presented here can be read both as vivid recollections of important meetings and as revealing reflections of Sholokhov’s ongoing personal dialogue with the process of de-Stalinization. His strategic recall of aspects of his relationship with the dictator frequently responded to current Soviet controversies and political trends. A systematic reading of Pravda, Izvestiia, and Literaturnaia Gazeta for the period of Sholokhov’s biography helped me to picture Sholokhov as a man of his time and avoid presentist biases of every imaginable variety. PREFACE T his meeting was his only hope. A young man in a drab military tunic maneuvered his way through throngs of pedestrians. He was rushing to the most important encounter of his life. On that summer day in 1931 few could have guessed that this blond, baby-faced youth with a bashful, yet cunning, smile was Mikhail Sholokhov, the rising star of Russian literature. The twenty-six-year-old approached a mansion in the heart of Moscow with a mix of trepidation and forced bravado. His heart pounded as he reached the ornate gate. This was the home of Russia’s most famous living writer. By pleading with Maxim Gorky, Sholokhov hoped to save Quiet Don, the Soviet Union’s epic equivalent of Gone with the Wind. The unfinished novel had already won him fame, controversy, acclaim, and envy. Bureaucrats had banned the latest installment as anti-Soviet. As he stepped inside the mansion, darkness confronted him. A rapid succession of footsteps brought him into a surreal space bathed in multicolored swatches of light emitted from stained-glass panels above. More darkness brought him to two tall, exceedingly imposing doors. As the doors opened, he could see a backlit silhouette at the end of a long, rectangular table. A lamp illuminated an astonishing profile and a bushy mustache. This was decidedly not the familiar silhouette of Gorky. The mustache belonged to a face made famous by newspaper engravings and grainy black-and-white photos of May Day parades. That evening Joseph Stalin decided to discuss characters and scenes in Quiet Don rather than unravel conspiracies or analyze grain reports. Following introductions, Gorky receded into the background. Stalin beckoned Sholokhov to approach. In seconds it became clear that this was no social call. Stalin immediately accused Sholokhov of sympathizing with some of the revolution’s most vicious adversaries. Resorting to one of his favorite tactics, he advanced a series of damning allegations. These were calculated to knock his adversary off balance and unmask his true character. Would his target retreat? Would he submit and become subservient? Or would he push back? Sholokhov saw the dictator’s eyes burning like those of a tiger ready to pounce. The snap decision he made in that instant had the potential to either influence his life for decades or to end it. He stood his ground. With his career on the line, he confidently argued with Stalin and vigorously defended his audacious decision to write sympathetically about the Cossacks, the former tsarist military caste that rose in rebellion against the Soviet government. Stalin was impressed by Sholokhov’s tenacity. Concluding his barrage of questions, he started to reminisce about his first, albeit temporary, taste of dictatorship in 1918. In Tsaritsyn—the industrial city on the Volga River that had recently been renamed Stalingrad in his honor—Stalin had encountered several Cossacks who now reminded him of characters in Quiet Don. The dictator and the writer bonded over conversations about battles that had faded from public memory but would soon become central to the emerging Stalin cult. Elated, Sholokhov departed from the mansion with the most coveted prize in the USSR—Stalin’s personal telephone number. Though fate had smiled upon him that evening, he soon discovered that a dictator’s favor comes with daily dangers and crushing burdens. As Stalin’s prized protégé, he would have to become a new man. That fateful meeting in a mansion forever changed the calculus of young Sholokhov’s literary gambit. The instant Stalin revealed that he too was a fan of the novel, Sholokhov understood that he was in way too deep. The novel transformed him into a Soviet Scheherazade. His very fate now hinged on satisfying a dictator’s literary cravings. He would have to become a great writer and a cunning courtier to stay alive during the Great Terror. An opportunistic, literary caper became a lifelong con . . . with no possibility of escape. In this, the first political biography of Mikhail Sholokhov, I tell the story of the 1 brash young plagiarist who fabricated Stalin’s favorite novel and became one of the Soviet Union’s most prominent political figures. While rivals for Stalin’s attention resorted to flattery, Sholokhov chose candor and aloof availability. When I first encountered Sholokhov’s letters to Stalin shortly after their first publication in the 1990s, I was stunned by their revelations. The dictator we like to think we know is a bloodthirsty monster with absolutely no redeeming qualities. Sholokhov’s Stalin was a considerably more complex, though no less menacing, presence. How could anyone get away with speaking truth to a tyrant in such a manner? I puzzled. If the writer could pen such bold missives of protest and live to tell about it, then I didn’t truly know either of them. I needed to understand how Sholokhov earned Stalin’s respect and admiration. The combination of audacity and tenacity that Sholokhov brought to that unexpected meeting endeared him to a dictator who loved literature and craved the respect of writers. Sholokhov continued to mete out truths to Soviet leaders in deliberate, calibrated doses. An uncanny sixth sense always seemed to tell him which truths could be fatal. I struggled to reconcile the bold, uncompromising, and sympathetic Sholokhov who emerged in the letters with the vindictive, mean-spirited man described in so many accounts of late Soviet history. He became so reviled in the West that Salman Rushdie could summarily dismiss him as a “patsy of the 2 regime.” No patsy could have penned letters condemning party officials for setting villagers on fire, starving children, and force-feeding kerosene to recalcitrant farmers. No patsy would denounce the secret police at the height of the greatest wave of political terror of the 20th century. At the same time, there was indeed something deeply disturbing about the late Sholokhov and his vicious condemnation of political dissent. I craved to discover why an intellectual who was so deeply committed to speaking truth to power in the 1930s became a sterile mouthpiece of the regime in the Brezhnev era. As I delved into newly available archival documentation and the memoirs of Sholokhov’s friends and assistants, I encountered a savvy survivor who drank his conscience into submission. He was saved by Stalin but crushed by the burden of the Kremlin’s favor. It is my hopes that this book captures that story and gives us a better understanding and appreciation for this complicated man and his contradictory epoch. Sholokhov’s remarkable path both illuminates and clashes with our understanding of the Soviet system. His experiences provide a new and compelling perspective on the Great Terror. A single alleged utterance in a garage in the early 1930s was sufficient to set in motion a series of events that would endanger Sholokhov, derail writing of his epic novel, and ultimately change the course of Soviet history. The very notion that an individual could outwit the secret police and turn the tables on them seems impossible according to our understanding of the regime, but Sholokhov did just that. New evidence suggests that he intentionally delayed completion of the novel to save his own life and to help his friends who had been falsely condemned as enemies of the people during the purges of 1936–38. At the height of the terror, which claimed over a million lives, Sholokhov became a member of the most minuscule subset of the Soviet population, the handful of individuals whom Stalin personally of the Soviet population, the handful of individuals whom Stalin personally intervened to save rather than mechanically dispatch towards death with the stroke of a pen. This fact alone makes him worthy of attention. Though Sholokhov always remained committed to candor as he understood it, his life provides a stunning case study of the elusiveness of truth in the Soviet era. Even an individual who stood very close to the levers of power got lost in a labyrinth of untruths and half-truths. Privy to more of the regime’s secrets than any average citizen, he still struggled to make sense of key events. Did Maxim Gorky die of natural causes as reported in 1936? Or was he poisoned by enemies, as new reports ominously revealed during the Great Terror? When the authors of those revised reports were subsequently unmasked as subversive agents of imperialism in 1953, did this invalidate their testimony? If so, did they kill Gorky? Sholokhov’s persistent struggle to extract truth from the regime’s official deceptions, aka fake news, forms an important aspect of my narrative. In rankings of the most controversial recipients of the Nobel Prize in Literature, Sholokhov’s name always appears at the top. The unsealing of the Swedish Academy’s archive related to his nominations, which took place in 2015, makes it possible to tell the full story of this controversial Cold War event for the first time. An English knight, a French philosopher, and a Soviet hypnotist are among the odd cast of characters who contributed to his cause. Reflecting increasing Soviet openness to the Western world, in less than a decade the Nobel Prize went from being perceived as a “reactionary instrument of warmongering” to a coveted symbol of Soviet achievement. But Sholokhov’s award was tainted by a dubious distinction. He became the only laureate to ever be accused of plagiarism by another recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature. I reveal that there is a Cold War logic to this as well, by uncovering an alliance between two of Sholokhov’s old foes: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and Harrison Salisbury of the New York Times. Why tell this story now? The resurgence of Russia makes Sholokhov an important figure for our era. Under Gorbachev, alternative, unofficial aspects of Sholokhov’s biography surfaced for the first time. After the USSR collapsed, Sholokhov’s reputation took a precarious dive. It seemed as if the dissidents had triumphed and the Western, capitalist values he reviled would take hold in Russia. But in Putin’s Russia, Sholokhov is a hero once again. The statist, illiberal ideology of Russian resilience that he advocated is more pervasive now than ever. The fact that he was one of the first major intellectuals to call for a Russian revival in the late Soviet era makes him a harbinger of today’s Russian nationalism. In 2005 Vladimir Putin made a personal pilgrimage to the writer’s 3 home to mark the one hundredth anniversary of his birth. In Russian official circles and academic institutions, Sholokhov the classic writer is continuously honored. The fears and flaws of the mortal man have been all but erased from official history. In order to better comprehend contemporary Russia’s contradictory perceptions of a 20th century in which triumph and terror, disturbing fears, and improbable feats of achievement are inextricably interwoven, there is no better place to start than with the life of Sholokhov.
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