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Around 1930, she married Pavel Aksyonov, the mayor (председатель горсовета) of Kazan and a member of the Central Executive Committee (ЦИК) of the USSR. Her son by this marriage, Vasily Aksyonov, born in 1932, became a well-known writer.
Eugenia Ginzburg and her husband were both Communist party officials living in Kazan with their two sons in 1937 when she was arrested for being a member of the party and for “participation in a Trotskyist terrorist counter-revolutionary group.” She never saw her husband or eldest son again.
Journey into the Whirlwind Eugenia Semyonovna Ginzburg. Eugenia Semyonovna Ginzburg, born in 1896, is not quite thirty when her narrative begins in December 1934. She is the wife of a high-ranking member of the Communist Party’s Tartar Province Committee, as well as a mother to two young sons.
Jun 7, 1981 · While she was in the camps, Eugenia Ginzburg received word of the death of her husband, Pavel Aksyonov, a Communist Party official, who had also been imprisoned during the Stalinist purges.
Nov 11, 1996 · The wrenching details of the prison lives of the women with whom Ginzburg was herded across Russia in a cattle car to the Gulag are examined with poignant intimacy.
Jul 12, 1981 · ON Feb. 15, 1937, Eugenia Ginzburg - a teacher, a writer for the newspaper Red Tartary, a loyal Communist and the wife of a Kazan Party Secretary - was arrested by the N.K.V.D., as Stalin's...
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She married Pavel Aksenov, a high-ranking party official in Kazan, and the couple had two sons. The eldest, Alyosha, would die during the Siege of Leningrad; the younger, Vasily, became a noted writer in his own right. In 1937 both Ginzburg and her husband were arrested.