From the Archives: A Message of Hope from Siberian Exile
By Andrey Filimonov, Archival Services Manager at the Center for Jewish History
“Zions Captives”: documentary on Ida Nudel (watch online: http://digital.cjh.org/4585693)
Original archival material found Houston Action for Soviet Jewry Records I-500; box 35; VHS tape 022; American Jewish Historical Society, New York, NY; PID http://digital.cjh.org/798129
Screenshot from “Zions Captives, documentary on Ida Nudel”
Original archival material found Houston Action for Soviet Jewry Records I-500; box 32; VHS tape 022; American Jewish Historical Society, New York, NY PID http://digital.cjh.org/4585693
Thanks to a generous grant from the Blavatnik Family Foundation, American Jewish Historical Society (AJHS) and Center for Jewish History (CJH) were able to preserve and make accessible online 272 hours of historic video recordings from AJHS' Archive of the American Soviet Jewry Movement (AASJM) [ajhs.org/aasjm]. Included in this project are over 430 VHS tapes found in 12 different collections, with recordings dating from 1970s to 1990s, featuring interviews with Soviet Jewish Refuseniks, dissidents, and Prisoners of Conscience, Western human rights activists and elected officials, television programs and news reports on Soviet Jewry, footage of Jewish communities in various parts of the USSR and the FSU, rallies and demonstrations in the United States and in Europe, examples of the Soviet state-sanctioned Anti-Semitic and Anti-Zionist propaganda films, documentaries produced by the Soviet Jewry movement organizations, and other related materials. Prior to this digitization project, the recordings were completely inaccessible and in urgent need of preservation.
Many video recordings in this collection provide powerful visual documentation of the systemic human rights abuses in the Soviet Union, as well as remarkable examples of individual resistance to oppression and resilience in the face of injustice. One of the digitized VHS tapes, from the Houston Action for Soviet Jewry Records I-500, contains footage of a prominent Soviet Jewish political activist Ida Nudel that was made during her exile in Siberia where she was subjected to severe mental and physical torment as punishment for her dissent against the totalitarian suppression of basic human rights in the Soviet state.
Ida Nudel became an activist in the Soviet Jewry movement after she was refused permission to leave the USSR in 1970. In 1972 she organized an unprecedentedly daring hunger strike at the Moscow headquarters of the Communist Party, protesting an unlawful arrest of a fellow Refusenik. For many years she served as the lifeline between the West and the unjustly imprisoned Soviet Jewish activists and Hebrew teachers, ensuring that their stories are not forgotten and that they are supplied with food, medicine, and clothing, necessary in the brutal conditions of the Soviet prison camps. Ida directed a continuous flow of correspondence to the Prisoners of Conscience with messages of hope and support from all over the world.
Her courageous and fervent activism earned her the nickname "the guardian angel" in the Soviet Jewish community, and four years of internal exile in Siberia for “malicious hooliganism” from the Soviet authorities.












