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Title: Russia
Author: Freedom Press, Anonymous
Date: April, 1890
Language: en
Topics: Freedom Press, Freedom: A Journal of Anarchist Socialism
Source: Freedom: A Journal of Anarchist Socialism, Vol. 4, No. 41, online source http://www.revoltlib.com/?id=3020, retrieved on May 1, 2020.
Notes: Freedom Press, London

Freedom Press, Anonymous

Russia

Our Russian correspondent writes:

The details of the events which took place last November in the convict

Prison of Kara in Eastern Siberia, are now too generally known to need

-petition. No further news has yet arrived. The Russian Government, so

far has taken no steps in the matter; neither Commander Mossionkov,

whose behavior to the female prisoners was the cause of the "starvation

strikes I, nor Baron, Korff who ordered the flogging Of Nadyezhda

Sigida, have 'been dismissed. It is well known that Ostashkine, the

Governor of Yakutsk, received a decoration after the slaughter of exiles

last year. The letters from Siberia speak of a report that all the

female political prisoners in Kara are to be transferred to the Criminal

Department.

An accounts of the letter sent to the Czar by Madame Tzebrikov has

appeared in the Times with some quotations from the letter. The Times,

however, omits to mention that together with the letter to the Czar

Madame Tzebrikov printed and circulated another pamphlet, entitled

"Penal Servitude and Exile;" an attempt to prove that the Government is

actuated in its dealings with political offenders, by the desire of

revenge, not by a wish to preserve peace and order in the land.

The Times states Madame Tzebrikov's age as "about 50." This is a

mistake; she is over 60. She is the daughter of Admiral Tzebrikov, a

favorite officer of Nicholas 1. She is not, and never has been a

conspirator. For many years she has been a well-known and highly

respected figure in St. Petersburg society. Herself an able writer, her

drawing-room has been the meeting-place for all that is most brilliant

in the literary and scientific world of the Russian capital.

On receiving the heroic old lady's letter, the Czar's first impulse is

reported to have been to take refuge in his strong fortress of Gatchina,

whether he fled after his father's execution. On calmer reflection he

inclined to put her in a lunatic asylum. Now he has regained sufficient

presence of mind to leave the police to send her into administrative

exile. There must be something in the old idea of divine qualities in

the Lord's Anointed; their stupidity is really quite supernatural.

The Daily News has fallen a prey to an ingenious atrocity manufacturer.

On March 20 it published an exciting little Siberian romance, duly

copied with sensational comments by the evening papers, to the effect

that after the accidental explosion of a bomb at Zurich, in March, 1889

(note the date) which put the police on the track of some Terrorist

Russian students in Switzerland-a plot implicating many students in

Russia itself was discovered; that these were exiled to Irkutsk in

Siberia; that they set up a secret printing press and succeeded in

smuggling many thousand secret seditious proclamations into Russia; that

therefore some of them were sent to hard labor in the mines anti the

rest ordered by the Governor of Irkutsk to wild, outlying districts;

finally that it was in consequence of this order that they barricaded

themselves in a house in the town and were shot down by the soldiers

after a smart resistance, on 3rd April 1889, as we have all heard

before.

This cock and bull story professes to arrive from Siberia; it probably

arrives from the London lodgings of the Russian Secret Police.

First, it confuses Yakutsk-, the town where the exiles were really

massacred in April 1889, with Irkutsk, a place 1,500 miles off. Second,

it supposes the events above recorded to have taken place between March

and April 1889, when the journey to Yakutsk takes between two and three

months, traveling day and night!

The Daily News has been enlightened as to the absurd impossibility of

this story, by a Russian comrade who has a thorough knowledge of

Siberia, but has taken no notice of the communication. It has, however,

since published a correct and detailed account of the Yatutsk massacre.

If, as there is every reason to believe, Russian officialdom has been

intensely exasperated by the indignation shown in England and America

about their cruelties to the political exiles, it is not difficult to

understand this attempt at the falsification of news. The Russian

Government will try on its side to get bold of the European and American

press, circulate wild stories, mingling fable and fact, utterly

confusing those ignorant of the country and the details of the liberal

and revolutionary movement, connecting, if possible, the sufferers with

"explosions" or acts of unprovoked violence. It will try to show the

Friends of Russian Freedom that two can play at the game of influencing

public opinion abroad and that the honors fall to the least scrupulous.

The idea would be a smart one, smartly carried out; but the devil has a

mean trick of leaving his servants in the lurch-and this Irkutsk Yakutsk

bungle looks as if he were at his old game.

Meanwhile an influential committee has been formed at the National

Liberal Club to arrange for further demonstrations to supplement that

held in Hyde Park on March 9th. And Mr. Kennan is coming over from

America to tell Englishmen by word of mouth what he himself saw in his

Siberian travels.

We have still a few pamphlets giving an exact account of the Yakutsk

massacre and the flogging of political exiles on Saghalien Island, which

with the circulars of the Society of the Friends of Russian Freedom, we

shall be pleased to send gratis to any one who writes for them to

Freedom, Labor Press, 57 Chancery Lane, W.C.