Ilya Yankelevich Gabay (russian: Илья́ Янкеле́вич Габа́й, p=ɪˈlʲjæ jənkʲɪˈlʲevʲɪtɕ ɡɐˈbaj, a=Il'ya Yankyelyevich Gabay.ru.vorb.oga; 9 October 1935,
Baku
Baku (, ; az, Bakı ) is the capital and largest city of Azerbaijan, as well as the largest city on the Caspian Sea and of the Caucasus region. Baku is located below sea level, which makes it the lowest lying national capital in the world a ...
– 20 October 1973,
Moscow; buried in Baku) was a key figure in the civil rights movement in the
Soviet Union. Gabay, who was Jewish, was also a literature teacher, poet, and writer. During his lifetime, his works were published only in
samizdat.
During the
trial of writers Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli Daniel in 1965, Gabay took part in the "
glasnost meeting" calling for an open and fair trial for the writers. On January 22, 1967, he participated in a demonstration in defense of the arrested dissidents
Yuri Galanskov, Vera Lashkova,
Alexey Dobrovolsky, and Pavel Radzievsky, a case known as
the Trial of the Four. After the demonstration, he was arrested and spent five months in
Lefortovo prison. He was released in June 1967, and his case was closed.
After his release, he, together with
Yuli Kim and
Peter Yakir, co-authored an appeal warning against Re-Stalinization. He also assisted
Natalya Gorbanevskaya in editing the ''
Chronicle of Current Events'', most notably for issue No. 3 dedicated to the
1968 Red Square demonstration
The 1968 Red Square demonstration (russian: Демонстра́ция 25 а́вгуста 1968 го́да) took place in Moscow on 25 August 1968. It was a protest by eight demonstrators against the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia (1968), ...
against the
Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. Through fellow dissident
Pyotr Grigorenko, Gabay also became involved in the struggle for the
Crimean Tatar autonomy and helped edit its samizdat publications.
In March 1968, Gabay was dismissed as an editor at the Institute of the Peoples of Asia of the
Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union and in May 1969, arrested and imprisoned. In January 1970, he was tried on the charge of preparing and circulating samizdat materials and sentenced to three years in a general-regime
camp. Shortly before the end of the sentence, he was also questioned in Moscow in connection with the case against the ''Chronicle of Current Events'' ("
Case No. 24").
After Gabay's release in May 1972, he remained unemployed and was subjected to
KGB harassment. He committed suicide on October 20, 1973.
He was the husband of Galina Viktorovna Gabay (née Samohena), and the father of two children, Alexei Ilyich Gabay (2/13/69) and Maria Ilyinichna Gabay (6/21/73).
Bibliography
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References
External links
Ilya Gabay: biography
1935 births
1973 suicides
Moscow State Pedagogical University alumni
Russian male poets
Russian Jews
Jewish poets
Russian-language poets
Soviet dissidents
Suicides by jumping in Russia
Suicides in the Soviet Union
20th-century Russian poets
Writers from Baku
20th-century Russian male writers
1973 deaths
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