Zoya Krakhmalnikova

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Zoya Alexandrovna Krakhmalnikova (Russian: Зоя Александровна Крахмальникова; January 14, 1929 – April 17, 2008) was a Russian Christian writer, of Ukrainian origin[citation needed]. She was an activist and former Soviet dissident who was repeatedly arrested by the authorities of the former Soviet Union for her publications.[1] She was a recipient of the Andrei Sakharov Prize for Writer's Civic Courage.

Krakhmalnikova was born in the city of Kharkov, Ukraine on January 14, 1929.[1] Her father was arrested in 1936 during one of Joseph Stalin's many purges.[1] She graduated from the Gorky Literary Institute in 1954 in Moscow and completed her postgraduate work at the Gorky Institute of World Literature despite her family's background.[1] An avid scholarly writer, Krakhmalnikova was publishing articles in Soviet literary journals by the 1960s.[1] She became a member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences' Institute of Sociology in 1967.[1]

Her husband was fellow author Feliks Svetov.[1]

Dissident

References

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