Julius Margolin
Julius Margolin (Russian: Юлий (Юлиус) Борисович Марголин, Hebrew: יוליוס מרגולין, October 14, 1900 – January 21, 1971) was an Israeli writer and political activist.Together with numerous other "socially dangerous elements", he was rounded up by the NKVD and sent to a labor camp on the northern bank of the Lake Onega.[1] It was impossible to publish such a book about the Soviet Union in the West at that time, immediately after World War II.[2] The book was printed in the United States in 1952 by Chekhov Publishing House [ru] (also abridged), and was reprinted in 1975.In 1951, Margolin testified at the trial of David Rousset, who was accused of revealing information about the gulag to the French public.