Svetlana Alliluyeva

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Template:Short description Template:Family name hatnote Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox person Svetlana Iosifovna AlliluyevaTemplate:Efn (née Stalina;Template:Efn 28 February 1926 – 22 November 2011), later known as Lana Peters, was the youngest child and only daughter of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and his second wife Nadezhda Alliluyeva. In 1967, she became an international sensation when she defected to the United States and, in 1978, became a naturalized citizen. From 1984 to 1986, she briefly returned to the Soviet Union and had her Soviet citizenship reinstated.<ref name="obitNYT">Template:Harvnb</ref> She was Stalin's last surviving child.<ref name="time002">Template:Cite magazine</ref>

Early life

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Svetlana Stalina was born on 28 February 1926.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name="obit2" /> As her mother was interested in pursuing a professional career, Alexandra Bychokova was hired as a nanny to look after Alliluyeva and her older brother Vasily (born 1921). Alliluyeva and Bychokova became quite close, and remained friends for 30 years, until Bychokova died in 1956.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

On 9 November 1932, Alliluyeva's mother shot herself.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> To conceal the suicide, the children were told that she had died of peritonitis, a complication from appendicitis. It would be 10 years before they learned the truth of their mother's death.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

In 1933, Alliluyeva and Vasily began attending Template:Ill; while Vasily was transferred to a new school in 1937, Alliluyeva would stay until 1943 when she graduated the 10th grade. At the school, Alliluyeva was given no special treatment, and was regarded simply as another student.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

Several other relatives of Alliluyeva were killed in the aftermath of the Great Purge, including her aunt Anna, and Anna's husband, Stanislav Redens, who was shot in January 1940.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

On 15 August 1942, Winston Churchill saw Alliluyeva in Stalin's private apartments at the Kremlin, describing her as "a handsome red-haired girl, who kissed her father dutifully". Churchill says Stalin "looked at me with a twinkle in his eye as if, so I thought, to convey 'You see, even we Bolsheviks have a family life.' "<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

At the age of 16, Alliluyeva fell in love with Aleksei Kapler, a Jewish Soviet filmmaker who was 22 years her senior. Her father vehemently disapproved of the relationship and Kapler was sentenced to five years of exile in 1943 to Vorkuta and was then sentenced again in 1948 to five years in labor camps in Inta.<ref name="Telegraph">Template:Cite newsTemplate:Cbignore</ref>

Marriages

Alliluyeva was first married in 1944 to Template:Ill, a student at Moscow University's Institute of International Affairs.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> Her father did not like Morozov, who was Jewish, though he never met him. They had one child, a son Iosif, who was born in 1945.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> The couple divorced in 1947, but remained close friends for decades afterwards.<ref name="obitNYT"/><ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

Alliluyeva's second marriage was arranged for her to Yuri Zhdanov, the son of Stalin's right-hand man Andrei Zhdanov and himself one of Stalin's close associates. The couple married early in 1949. Alliluyeva lived with Zhdanov's family at this time, though felt herself dominated by his mother, Zinaida, which was something Stalin had warned her of.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> Yuri was devoted to Zinaida, and busied himself with Party work, so did not spend a lot of time with Alliluyeva.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> In 1950, Alliluyeva gave birth to a daughter, Yekaterina. The marriage was dissolved soon afterwards.<ref name="obitNYT"/>

In 1962, she married Ivan Svanidze, the nephew of Stalin's first wife, Kato Svanidze, soon after meeting him for the first time since his parents' arrest in 1937.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> They went against Soviet policy by marrying in a church. Svanidze was not healthy, owing to difficulties of his internal exile in Kazakhstan, and the marriage ended within a year.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

From 1970 to 1973, she was married to American architect William Wesley Peters (a son-in-law of Frank Lloyd Wright), with whom she had a daughter, Olga Peters (later known also as Chrese Evans).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

After the death of Stalin

After her father's death in 1953, Alliluyeva worked as a lecturer and translator in Moscow. Her training was in History and Political Thought, a subject she was forced to study by her father, although her true passion was literature and writing.<ref name="obitNYT"/> In a 2010 interview, she stated that his refusal to let her study arts and his treatment of Kapler were the two times that Stalin "broke my life", and that Stalin loved her but was "a very simple man. Very rude. Very cruel."<ref name=":0" /> When asked at a New York conference about whether she agreed with her father's rule, she said that she was disapproving of a lot of his decisions but also noted that the responsibility for them also lay with the Communist regime in general.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Relationship with Brajesh Singh

In 1963, while in hospital for a tonsillectomy, Alliluyeva met Kunwar Brajesh Singh, an Indian Communist visiting Moscow. The two fell in love. Singh was mild-mannered and well-educated but gravely ill with bronchiectasis and emphysema. The romance grew deeper and stronger still while the couple were recuperating in Sochi near the Black Sea. Singh returned to Moscow in 1965 to work as a translator, but he and Alliluyeva were not allowed to marry. He died the following year, in 1966. For her first trip outside the Soviet Union, she was allowed to travel to India to take his ashes to his family to pour into the Ganges river.<ref name=SnobOctober2016>Template:Cite news</ref> In an interview on 26 April 1967, she referred to Singh as her husband but also stated that they were never allowed to marry officially.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

Political asylum and later life

Alliluyeva in 1967

Alliluyeva asked to have an official permission to stay in India through the Soviet ambassador, Ivan Benediktov.<ref name=pmmc>Template:Cite journal</ref> However, her request was not accepted, and instead, she was ordered to return to the Soviet Union.<ref name=pmmc/> Then, on 9 March 1967, Alliluyeva approached the United States Embassy in New Delhi. After she stated her desire to defect in writing, the United States ambassador Chester Bowles offered her political asylum and a new life in the United States.

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At about nine o’clock p.m. in India, eleven in the morning Washington time, I said, "I have a person here who states she's Stalin's daughter, and we believe she's genuine; unless you instruct me to the contrary, I’m putting her on the one a.m. plane for Rome where we can stop and think the thing through. I’m not giving her any commitment that she can come to the States. I’m only enabling her to leave India, and we will see her to some part of the world—the U.S. or somewhere else—where she can settle in peace. If you disagree with this, let me know before midnight." No comment ever came from Washington. This is one advantage that non-career Ambassadors have; they can go ahead and do unorthodox things without anybody objecting, where a Foreign Service officer might not dare do it.

We talked to her and said, "Point number one—are you really sure that you want to leave home? You’ve got a daughter and a son there, and this is a big step to take. Have you really thought it through? You could go back to the Russian embassy right now (she was staying there in their dormitory) and simply go to sleep and forget it, and get up Wednesday morning and on to Moscow, as your schedule calls for." She immediately said, "If this is your decision, I shall go to the press tonight; and announce that (a) democratic India will not take me (they had turned her down prior to her coming) and (b), now democratic America refuses to take me." Well, she didn't need to do it; I was just trying it on for size to be sure she had thought it through. But she was very quick on this.{{#if:|

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Alliluyeva accepted. The Indian government feared condemnation by the Soviet Union, so she was immediately sent from India to Rome.<ref>CIA Station Chief David Blee facilitated her exit.</ref> When the Qantas flight arrived in Rome,<ref name="adst"/> Alliluyeva immediately traveled farther to Geneva, Switzerland, where the government arranged her a tourist visa and accommodation for six weeks. She traveled to the United States, leaving her adult children in the USSR. Upon her arrival in New York City in April 1967, she gave a press conference denouncing her father's legacy and the Soviet government.<ref name="obitNYT"/>

After living for several months in Mill Neck, Long Island under Secret Service protection, Alliluyeva moved to Princeton, New Jersey, where she lectured and wrote, later moving to Pennington,<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and then to Wisconsin.<ref name="obit2" />

In a 2010 interview, she described herself as "quite happy here [in Wisconsin]."<ref name=":0" /> Her children who were left behind in the Soviet Union did not maintain contact with her.Template:When While Western sources saw a KGB hand behind this,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Page needed her children claimed that this is because of her complex character.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 1983, after the Soviet government had stopped blocking Alliluyeva's attempts to communicate with her USSR-based children, her son Iosif began to call her regularly and planned to visit her in England, but was refused permission to travel by the Soviet authorities.<ref name="obitNYT"/>

She experimented with various religions.<ref name="Telegraph" /> Her first book, Twenty Letters to a Friend, caused a worldwide sensation and brought her, some estimate, about $2,500,000.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Alliluyeva herself stated that she gave away much of her book proceeds to charity and by around 1986 had become impoverished, facing debt and failed investments.<ref name="obitNYT"/>

In 1970, Alliluyeva answered an invitation from Frank Lloyd Wright's widow, Olgivanna Lloyd Wright, to visit Wright's winter studio, Taliesin West, in Scottsdale, Arizona.<ref name="newyorker.com">Template:Harvnb</ref> In 1978, Alliluyeva became a US citizen as Lana Peters,<ref name="obitNYT"/> and in 1982, she moved with her daughter to Cambridge in England, where they shared an apartment near the Cambridge University Botanic Garden.<ref name=SnobOctober2016/><ref name="newyorker.com"/><ref name=ParisMatchjanuary2012>Template:Cite news</ref>

In October 1984, during a time when Stalin's legacy saw partial rehabilitation in the Soviet Union, she moved back together with her daughter Olga, and both were given Soviet citizenship.<ref name="obitNYT"/><ref name=APapril2016>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=WPapril1986>Template:Cite news</ref>

The British journalist Miriam Gross with whom Alliluyeva conducted her final interview before moving back from England to the Soviet Union in 1984, described Svetlana's increasingly fragile state of mind in a series of letters she wrote to Gross following the interview:

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In all of them she is very anxious to explain how, having arrived in the West “blind with admiration for the FREE WORLD”, she had come to believe that the US and the USSR were morally equivalent. She had been convinced that “in the FREE WORLD people are superhuman, wise, enlightened…What a terrible blow it is to find out that…there are just the same idiots, incompetent fools, frightened bureaucrats, confused bosses, paranoid fears of deception and surveillance…this loss of idealism is what happens to defectors only too often. BECAUSE we all relied too much on propaganda.”<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>{{#if:|

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In April 1986, she again moved back from the Soviet Union to the U.S. with Olga, and after her return denied anti-Western comments she had made while back in the USSR (including that she had not enjoyed "one single day" of freedom in the West and had been a pet of the CIA).<ref name="obitNYT"/><ref name=APapril2016/><ref name=WPapril1986/>

Alliluyeva, for the most part, lived the last two years of her life in southern Wisconsin, either in Richland Center or in Spring Green, the location of Wright's summer studio Taliesin.<ref name=ParisMatchjanuary2012/> She died on 22 November 2011 from complications arising from colon cancer in Richland Center,<ref name="obitNYT"/><ref name="obit2">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> where she had spent time while visiting from Cambridge.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Olga Margedant Peters (b. 21 May 1971), Alliluyeva's daughter with Peters, now goes by the name Chrese Evans and lives in Portland, Oregon.<ref name=SnobOctober2016/><ref name=WPapril1986/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Her older daughter, Yekaterina, is a volcanologist in Siberia's Kamchatka Peninsula. Alliluyeva's son Iosif, a cardiologist, died in Russia in 2008.<ref name="obitNYT"/><ref name="newyorker.com" /><ref name="chrese">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Iosif's son Ilya Voznesensky was previously in a relationship with Boris Berezovsky's daughter Elizaveta, with whom he has a son, Savva.<ref>Berezovsky, Boris, and Felshtinsky, Yuri, The Art of Impossible (Falmouth, MA: Terra-USA, 2006), 3 vols.</ref>

Religion

Alliluyeva was baptized into the Russian Orthodox Church on 20 March 1963. During her years of exile, she experimented with various religions. She then turned to the Orthodox Church and is also reported to have thought of becoming a nun.<ref name="Telegraph"/>

In 1967, Alliluyeva found herself spending time with Roman Catholics in Switzerland and encountered many denominations during her time in the United States. She received a letter from Father Garbolino, an Italian Catholic priest from Pennsylvania, inviting her to make a pilgrimage to Fátima, Portugal, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the famous apparitions there. In 1969, Garbolino was in New Jersey and went to visit Alliluyeva at Princeton. In California, she lived with a Catholic couple, Michael and Rose Ginciracusa, for two years (1976–78). She read books by authors such as Raissa Maritain. While living in Cambridge, on 13 December 1982, the feast of Saint Lucy of Syracuse, Alliluyeva converted to Catholicism.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Works

While in the Soviet Union, Alliluyeva had written a memoir in Russian in 1963. After meeting the journalist, who was the first laureate of the International Lenin Peace Prize, Emmanuel d'Astier de La Vigerie for the first time in Moscow in July 1962, she asked him if anyone would read her memoir and d'Astier replied yes. The manuscript was carried safely out of the country by Indian Ambassador T. N. Kaul, who returned it to her in New Delhi. Alliluyeva handed her memoir over to the CIA agent Robert Rayle at the time of her own defection. Rayle made a copy of it. The book was titled Twenty Letters to a Friend ("Dvadtsat' pisem k drugu"). It was the only thing other than a few items of clothing taken by Alliluyeva on a secret passenger flight out of India.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> Raymond Pearson, in Russia and Eastern Europe, described Alliluyeva's book as a naïve attempt to shift the blame for Stalinist crimes onto Lavrentiy Beria, and whitewash her own father.<ref name="RP">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Bibliography

Alliluyeva was portrayed by Joanna Roth in the HBO's 1992 television film Stalin<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Andrea Riseborough in the 2017 satirical film The Death of Stalin.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Alliluyeva is the subject of the 2015 biography Stalin's Daughter: The Extraordinary and Tumultuous Life of Svetlana Alliluyeva by Canadian writer Rosemary Sullivan.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Alliluyeva is the subject of the 2019 novel The Red Daughter by American writer John Burnham Schwartz.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

See also

Notes

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References

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Works cited

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