Letters from Russian Prisons
Letters from Russian Prisons: Consisting of Reprints of Documents by Political Prisoners in Soviet Prisons, Prison Camps and Exile, and Reprints of Affidavits Concerning Political Persecution in Soviet Russia, Official Statements by Soviet Authorities, Excerpts from Soviet Laws Pertaining to Civil Liberties, and Other Documents is a 1925 book by The International Committee for Political Prisoners. It was published in London by the C. W. Daniel Company and in New York by Albert and Charles Boni.
Contents
Introduction
The book opens with an introduction written by Roger N. Baldwin on behalf of The International Committee for Political Prisoners. In it, he writes "This book attempts to tell the story of these revolutionary political prisoners, chiefly in their own words.... So far as we can get the facts, the prisoners with whom this book deals are intellectuals and working-class revolutionists imprisoned for the expression of their views and for their political activities in holding meetings, speaking, printing, selling their party literature and communicating with their party members and sympathizers abroad."Baldwin added that "This committee as such approaches the issue of Russian political prisoners without partisan interest, in the belief that the holding of political prisoners by any government blocks progress by stifling ideas and forces necessary for growth."
The International Committee for Political Prisoners reportedly included:
- Roger N. Baldwin, Chairman
- Jane Addams
- Henry G. Alsberg
- Carleton Beals
- Louis B. Boudin
- Max Danish
- Clarence Darrow
- Anna N. Davis
- Eugene V. Debs
- W. E. B. Du Bois
- John Lovejoy Elliott
- Nathalie B. Ells
- Charles W. Ervin
- Elizabeth Gurley Flynn
- John G. Forbath
- Felix Frankfurter
- Lewis Gannett
- Elizabeth Gilman
- Arthur Garfield Hays
- Norman Hapgood
- John Haynes Holmes
- Paul Jones
- David Starr Jordan
- Paul U. Kellogg
- Harry Kelly
- Emil Lengyel
- Robert Morss Lovett
- Julian W. Mack
- James H. Maurer
- David Mitrany
- S. E. Morison
- Fremont Older
- John A. Ryan
- Nevin Sayre
- Alexander S. Tardos
- Graham R. Taylor
- Norman Thomas
- Girolamo Valenti
- Ernesto Valentini
- Oswald Garrison Villard
- B, Charney Vladeck
Letters from Celebrated Intellectuals
The introduction is followed by a series of letters from "celebrated intellectuals". The content of these varied from Brandes', "Not a day passes that I do not receive fifty letters insisting on answers. Try to understand. My day is filled with necessary work. Sixty or seventy are asking all day long by letter or in personally an hour of my time. It is enough to drive me mad" to Einstein's "All serious people should be under obligation to the editor of these documents" to Russell's "The holders of power in Russia, as elsewhere, are practical men, prepared to inflict torture upon idealists in order to retain their power."The "celebrated intellectuals" were:
- Arnold Bennett
- H. N. Brailsford
- Georg Brandes
- Karel Čapek
- Albert Einstein
- Knut Hamsun
- Gerhardt Hauptmann
- Sven Hedin
- Bernard Kellerman
- Selma Lagerlöf
- Harold Laski
- Sinclair Lewis
- Maurice Maeterlinck
- Thomas Mann
- Karin Michaëlis
- Romain Rolland
- Bertrand Russell
- Arthur Schnitzler
- Upton Sinclair
- H. G. Wells
- Rebecca West
- Izrael Zangwill