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Black in the USSR
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14971 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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9 / 1988 |
4,249 Words |
| Author
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J.A. Parker J.A. Parker is president of the Lincoln Institute for Research
and Education in Washington D.C., and editor of the Lincoln
Review. He was director of President Reagan's transition team
of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission |
BLACK ON RED
My 44 Years Inside the Soviet Union
Robert Robinson with Jonathan Slevin
Acropolis books, 1988
448 pp., $19.95
The twentieth century has produced an often brutal history and an abundance of innocent victims. Armenians in Turkey, Jews in Germany, Ibos in Nigeria, Muslims in India, Hindus in Pakistan--the list of those who have suffered only because of their religion, their race, or their ethnic background is a long one. If we add to this the "class enemies" who have been slaughtered by Stalin in the Ukraine, the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, Mao in China--indeed by communist regimes wherever they have taken hold--we have an army of the dead, maimed, and persecuted.
Yet, in the end, history may be understood best through the lives of individuals rather than through the grand sweep of events. One man who found himself swept up in tides over which he had no control and who has lived to tell his story is Robert Robinson.
Born in 1906 in Jamaica, Robinson, who is black, grew up in Cuba, where he was trained to operate machine tools. He moved to the United States, became an American citizen, and in the 1920s was one of the few black machinists working for the Ford Motor Company in Detroit.
While he was working at Ford, a visiting Russian delegation "spotted his black face" and recruited Robinson to go to Stalingrad to work and teach his skills at a
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