The Kremlin is shifting to eradicate the theme of Soviet repression below Joseph Stalin from the nation’s museums as a part of its newest crackdown on the remnants of free speech.
Verstka, an unbiased investigative publication, reported on 13 April that the exhibitions of the Gulag Museum in Moscow had been being packed up and moved away.
In the meantime, on 9 April, Russia’s supreme courtroom dominated that Memorial, a human rights motion based to doc Stalin-era crimes, is an extremist organisation and banned it—the end result of a decade of unrelenting stress because it was designated as a “international agent” in 2016.
‘Anti-Russian’
In its determination, the courtroom characterised Memorial as “anti-Russian,” dedicated to destroying “historic, cultural, religious and ethical values”. Inside days, the Yeltsin Presidential Middle in Yekaterinburg, an exhibition and convention centre recognized for its liberal interpretation of Russian historical past, eliminated point out of Memorial from its partitions. Memorial’s central workplace in Moscow was at one time recognized for its rigorously curated reveals.
The ruling got here on the heels of the rebranding of Moscow’s Gulag Museum, which exhibited and archived proof of Stalin-era crimes, to spotlight Nazi crimes in opposition to the Soviet Union.
Deal with Nazi battle crimes
The museum’s complete web site content material was eliminated in February and changed with three sentences: “A Museum of Reminiscence is ready to open in Moscow. It will likely be devoted to the reminiscence of the victims of the genocide in opposition to the Soviet folks. The exhibition will cowl all levels of Nazi battle crimes in the course of the Nice Patriotic Warfare.” A report on the web site of Moscow’s metropolis authorities, which oversaw the Gulag Museum, stated the brand new establishment would inform guests about “manifestations of Nazism, the organic experiments carried out by the Japanese on Soviet residents, and the liberation mission of the Purple Military”. When Russian President Vladimir Putin launched Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, he claimed the necessity to “de-Nazify” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s authorities as one of many major causes.
Though the Gulag Museum’s shutdown in 2024 as a consequence of purported fire-safety violations was introduced as short-term, adjustments that yr in official Russian coverage about memorialisation of victims of political repression indicated the transfer could be everlasting.
The Gulag Museum opened in 2001
Yuri Palmin
The museum, which opened in 2001 simply blocks from the Kremlin, moved into an expensively redesigned pre-revolutionary area in 2015. Roman Romanov, who was eliminated as its director in 2024, served till final December on Putin’s presidential Human Rights Council. A Moscow metropolis museum director served as a placeholder till the appointment on 20 February of Natalia Kalashnikova, who beforehand ran the Smolensk Fortress Museum and, based on the Moscow metropolis authorities web site, acquired a medal for taking part within the “Particular Navy Operation”, the official time period for the battle in opposition to Ukraine.
Romanov helped fundraise for a government-sponsored memorial to victims of political oppression known as “Wall of Sorrow”, unveiled not removed from the museum in October 2017, with Putin in attendance. On the ceremony, Putin stated: “We and our descendants should keep in mind the tragedy of repression and what prompted it.” Formally, the Gulag Museum had Putin’s backing on the time.
Authorities had already taken over the Perm-36 gulag museum within the Urals in 2015 and in 2018 pressured the closure of a museum of Gulag historical past in Yoshkar-Ola. And final month an organisation led by Vladimir Medinsky, a former tradition minister, opened an exhibition on the memorial complicated on the website of the Katyn bloodbath in Smolensk known as 10 centuries of Polish Russophobia.
Nationalist vandalism
The Sakharov Middle in Moscow, based by Elena Bonner, the guy dissident and widow of Andrei Sakharov, the Soviet physicist who was banished for talking out in opposition to human rights abuses, was disbanded and kicked out of its services by a Moscow courtroom ruling in 2023. Up to date artwork exhibitions held on the centre within the 2000s had been vandalised by nationalists and led to landmark trials that codified non secular intolerance in Russia.

Pictures of the Gulag have been taken down
Sergey Lukashevsky, the centre’s director, who’s now based mostly in Berlin, instructed The Artwork Newspaper by electronic mail: “The current rebranding—successfully equal to shutting down of the Gulag Museum—sends a transparent sign that the Russian authorities are ready to do something to take away the historical past of political repression from public view. The parallels with right now’s state of affairs in Russia are just too apparent.”
In 2024, Lukashevsky was sentenced in absentia to eight years in jail for “spreading fakes” concerning the Russian navy through Fb posts in opposition to Russian atrocities in Ukraine.
On 13 March, Nina Khrushcheva, the great-granddaughter of Nikita Khrushchev, the Soviet chief whose revelation in 1956 of Stalin’s crimes led to a interval of cultural and social flourishing referred to as The Thaw, was labelled a “international agent” by Russia’s justice ministry. Khrushcheva is a New York-based tutorial who travels usually to Russia.








