Lev Kogan-Bernstein


Lev Matveyevich Kogan-Bernstein, also known as Leo Kogan-Bernstein, was a Russian revolutionary and a member of Narodnaya Volya.

Biography

Lev Kogan-Bernstein was born in 1862 in Kishinev into a Jewish merchant family. His father, Matvey Volkovich Bernstein-Kogan, was a third-guild merchant in Kishinev and later a second-guild merchant in Odessa; his mother was Dvoira Bernstein-Kogan. The family lived in their own house on Boyukanskaya Street.
From 1871 to 1874 he studied at the Kishinev progymnasium, then transferred to the fourth class of the Kishinev Governorate Gymnasium. In 1878, due to his participation in the “Kishinev Liberal Society,” he was forced to leave the gymnasium and transferred to the Berdyansk Gymnasium, which he graduated from in 1880. That same year he became a student in the mathematics division of the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics at Saint Petersburg University, where in the early 1880s he was part of the central university circle of Narodnaya Volya.
On 8 February 1881, he interrupted a speech by the Minister of National Education, Saburov, at Saint Petersburg University with a protest speech against the ministry’s policy toward students. Kogan-Bernstein demanded the restoration of the 1864 university statute; another student, Pappy Podbelsky, slapped the minister.
He carried out propaganda work among workers in Saratov and Moscow. He was arrested in April 1881 and exiled to Siberia, settling in Yakutsk. In Yakutsk, he married another political exile, Natalya Osipovna Baranova.
He took part in an armed uprising of political exiles in Yakutsk, which ended in a firefight between the exiles and soldiers. Kogan-Bernstein, together with other exiles, was brought before a military court on charges of armed resistance and sentenced to death. Seriously wounded during the clash with soldiers, Lev Matveyevich Kogan-Bernstein was unable to stand; both to the court and later to the gallows he was carried on a bed. He was executed by hanging.

Family