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.
RussianHebrewAleksandr SolzhenitsynRussian EmpireHumboldt University of BerlinŁódźPalestineSoviet invasion of Polandlabor campLake OnegaemigratedTel AvivWorld War IIIsraelDavid RoussetLuba JurgensonIn the Claws of the GPUHaaretzKOI8-R