Live: The Diaries of a Young Girl
in Stalin's Russia, are to be published in English on Thursday
after lying in a KGB file for over half a century. They
offer an unusually perceptive view of the Soviet Union in
the 1930s, combined with intimate soul-searching about the
kind of everyday difficulties faced by teenage girls everywhere:
boys, parties and parents.
Like Anne Frank, Nina was 13 when she began keeping her
diary; like the Amsterdam schoolgirl, she was writing in
the shadow of one of the 20th century's most repressive
regimes.
In 1937, at the height of Stalin's purges, her family's
Moscow flat was raided and her diaries, which covered the
years 1932-37, were confiscated by the secret police.
Nina's father, a left-wing socialist revolutionary from
whom she drew much of her contempt for the regime, had already
incurred the Kremlin's wrath and spent time in prison and
in exile. But her negative feelings about Stalin and the
repressive nature of his government, feelings that she expressed
in the diaries, were to be the undoing of the rest of the
family.
Along with her mother and two sisters, Nina was found guilty
of treason and branded a counter-revolutionary. Their sentence
was harsh; five years of hard labour in the Siberian gulag,
followed by seven years of internal exile.
It was an ordeal that the young diarist's mother did not
survive. But Nina did: after Stalin's death she was politically
rehabilitated. She married and became an artist, and lived
long enough to see the fall of Communism. She died in 1993
at the age of 74.
The diaries were unearthed in 2001 by Irina Osipova, a researcher
for Memorial, an organisation that tries to keep alive the
memory of Stalin's victims. They had lain forgotten, scrawled
in childish handwriting on the pages of three school exercise
books, in a KGB archive in Moscow.
Ms Osipova, whose own father was branded "an enemy
of the people" and died during interrogation, believes
Nina's diaries offer the most sharp-eyed insight into the
Soviet Union of the 1930s yet. "She was very talented
and bright," she said. "She read newspapers and
was interested in what was going on in the country around
her. It offers a more vividly observed and faithful account
of the 1930s than anything else, better even that anything
written by former gulag inmates."
Marianne Velmans, a senior executive at Doubleday, which
is printing the diaries, hopes that they will capture the
imagination of teenagers and help them understand the 1930s
in the same way as Anne Frank's diaries have helped students
to understand the Holocaust. "If you read a book like
this you're touching the past," she said. "It
brings the period to life in a way that nothing else does."
In Russia, where the diaries have already been published,
they made little impact. Ms Osipova, the woman who found
them, thinks she knows why. "It's shameful but people
are sick of this period of our history," she said.
"It was always said that we didn't know what was going
on at the time, but these diaries show that even children
knew."