"Many people do not know Dmitriev’s story and what Sandarmokh is." A traveling exhibition about historian Yury Dmitriev opened in Petrozavodsk

2020-9-15 17:32

Yury Dmitriev, a historian and the head of the Karelian branch of the Memorial Society, has been researching the graves…

Yury Dmitriev, a historian and the head of the Karelian branch of the Memorial Society, has been researching the graves of those purged during the Great Terror in Karelia since the 1980s. In 1997, together with representatives of the St. Petersburg Memorial, he discovered Sandarmokh - a forest massif where about 7 thousand people were shot dead in the 30s.

For the first time, Dmitriev was detained and received into a pre-trial detention facility in December 2016 after he was reported to allegedly have pornographic pictures of his adopted daughter on his computer. The court acquitted him in April 2018. In June, Dmitriev was detained again and prosecuted for allegedly abusing his underage daughter. Experts did not find any sexual deviations in Dmitriev. In July 2020, he was sentenced to 3.5 years of high security. If the court upholds the verdict on appeal, the historian should be released by the end of the year.

— What is the message of the exhibition?

- Exhibitions are a photo essay, not just a story about what happened, but an attempt to say that life is beautiful and tragic. The exhibition shows that you can overcome this tragedy and remain yourself if you have a lifetime project, if you are surrounded by like-minded people, if you love this life and understand its meaning. I spent about six months looking for and selecting pictures from Dmitriev's scientific expeditions to Sandarmokh and Belomorkanal, from the photo report of criminal proceedings, and I retyped his letters from the pre-trial detention facility and the letters sent to him as a sign of support. Some texts deepen what we see, and some of them make it possible to understand what is happening in the world.

— Why did you bring the exhibition to Petrozavodsk after St. Petersburg?

— I wanted this to be a traveling exhibition from the very start. When I put all these pictures together, I realized that it was physically impossible for me. My friends helped me place it in the foyer of the Interior Theater on Nevsky Prospekt in St. Petersburg. Due to the fact that Yura has a trial on September 16, I made some adjustments to the exhibition and agreed with my friends to organize it in Petrozavodsk. We held the exhibition on the day before the appeal, so that everyone who came to see the trial could attend it in Agriculture_club after the hearing or during a break.

I am sure that the exhibition should have been held here, because the things it tells about happened in these places. I believe that Petrozavodsk is a very Soviet city, even the names of local streets tell me that life here has not stepped into another century ye. The city clearly reflects what is happening, it did not go through that perestroika and post-perestroika period, but remained as if everything would come back here. Many people do not know Dmitriev’s story and what Sandarmokh is. I saw it myself yesterday when I talked to someone at the exhibition. Therefore, I thought I had to hold it in Petrozavodsk.

 

 

 

— What is your assessment of the results?

— I was pleased that about 50 people had attended the exhibition the day before: this is a lot, considering that it was not advertised. I was glad to see young people attend the exhibition. I was talking to a young woman and a history student who promised to bring some friends. These were young people who did not just have a look at the exhibition and left. I talked to them for a very long time not only about the exhibition and its concept, but also about what was happening in the country and why this all [the criminal prosecution] happened to Yura.

— Where are you planning to hold the exhibition after Petrozavodsk?

— I am planning to hold the exhibition again in St. Petersburg which has some "freedom pockets": the same Interior Theater and another open space that I know. I am currently negotiating with the Sakharov Center in Moscow. It can also take place in the Yabloko Party’s quarters — its Chairman, Nikolai Rybakov, is my friend. If I am invited somewhere else and provided with at least a little financial assistance in the organization, I am coming, for sure.

The exhibition about Yury Dmitriev is open for only three days – up to September 16. You can see it in the Agriculture_club Art Space in Petrozavodsk at 20 Kommunalnaya Street.

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