The Leningrad Affair

Zhdanov was recalled to Moscow to become, by 1946, the leading figure in the party hierarchy after Stalin himself. His former deputy, AA Kuznetsov, was also brought to Moscow as a secretary of the Party Central Committee. Another Leningrader, NA Voznesensky, was now in charge of planning the Soviet economy and deputy chairman of the Council of Ministers.
'Stalin was well aware of the distinctive ethos that three years of relative autonomy from Moscow had fostered in Leningrad'
But Stalin was well aware of the distinctive ethos that three years of relative autonomy from Moscow had fostered in Leningrad; and his suspicions were fed by two of the main contenders for power, Lavrentii Beria and Georgii Malenkov.
In 1946 Stalin gave Zhdanov the task of denouncing two of Leningrad's leading writers, Anna Akhmatova and Mikhail Zoshchenko, as part of a vicious campaign against 'bourgeois formalism' in Soviet culture known, unfairly, to history as the Zhdanovshchina.
In spring 1948 his son, a Central Committee official, was severely criticised for ideological errors. There were signs that Zhdanov himself was falling from favour, when in August he suffered a massive heart attack and died.
This tipped the balance in the Kremlin power struggle. Deprived of Zhdanov's protection, Kuznetsov, Voznesensky, Leningrad's current leaders, PS Popkov and YF Lazutin, and former Leningrad officials including MI Rodionov, prime minister of the Russian Republic, were arrested on trumped-up charges in 1949.
After long interrogations and brief secret trials, they were shot in October 1950. The Leningrad party organisation was purged, and some 2,000 people imprisoned or exiled.
The siege museum was closed, to be reopened 40 years later. For many years Leningrad's tragic and heroic wartime history would be barely acknowledged, and important aspects of what happened remain unknown to this day.
Published: 2001-08-01

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