"They came to Russia full of enthusiasm, bringing with them baseball and jazz, and eager to acclimatize. Russians found it difficult to believe the Americans' tales of woe when they saw their clothes, luxurious by Russian standards. And the migrants were themselves quite unprepared for the poverty and lawlessness which characterized life under Stalin, and in many if not most cases decided to leave. They soon learned, however, that when they surrendered their American passports upon stepping on Soviet soil (passports which were then used by Soviet agents in America), they had become, automatically, Soviet citizens."
Richard Pipes reviews Tim Tzouliadis's The Forsaken in The New York Sun.
Friday, August 01, 2008
"The Least Heralded Migration in American History"
Labels:
1930s,
1940s,
books,
Great Depression,
immigration,
political history,
Russia,
Stalin
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