Refleksi:  The Royal Library di kota Stockholm menjadi tempat penyelidikan bagi 
Lenin sewaktu berada di exil di Swedia,  Dulu biasanya ada vaas dengan bunga 
mawar merah segar pada meja yang Lenin selalu duduk. Perpustakaan ini menjadi 
salah objek turis dari Soviet Uni. Ke Stockholm pun secara rahasia datang 
Stalin untuk bertemu dengan Lenin, mungkin untuk keperluan perjuangan mereka.

http://english.pravda.ru/russia/history/26-01-2010/111862-lenin-0

26.01.2010
Vladimir Lenin's Bookshelf Could Have Changed World History




The biography of Vladimir Ulyanov Lenin, the leader of the Great October 
Revolution, says that Lenin had to endure hardships and tyranny from the 
tsarist government during his exile in Siberia. 

The house, where Lenin spent the first year in exile, became a museum in 1940. 
Afterwards, the entire village where Lenin lived became a large memorial 
complex. Museums in Lenin's honor were opened in the local prison, the post 
office and other premises. As a result, the settlement of Shushenskoye became a 
legendary complex of museums. 

The settlement does not attract hundreds of thousands of tourists from all over 
the world. However, thousands of curious Russians visit the Siberian village 
regularly to take a look at the iconic place. 

Eastern Siberia, where Shushenskoye is located, differed from the rest of 
Russia in the 19th century: there was no serfdom there. The house, where 
Ulyanov Lenin lived for two years and two months, was a very good house made of 
larch wood. The climate in that part of Siberia is very mild, there are many 
sunny days during a year. Local residents still grow tomatoes and water melons 
there. In his works Lenin described Shushenskoye as the Siberian Switzerland. 

How did Lenin manage to serve his punishment in such a good location? 

When traveling to Siberia, Lenin made a stop in Moscow where he visited his 
family. His sister Anna arranged him a meeting with doctor Krutovsky. Lenin and 
Krutovsky met in a train, on the way to the city of Irkutsk. Krutovsky was 
traveling to the city of Krasnoyarsk and he advised Lenin should get off there 
too and send a letter to the governor general, who was staying at that moment 
in Krasnoyarsk too. 

In his petition, Lenin complained of his health and asked the governor general 
to send him to a different location - the south of the Yeniseisky Province. Dr. 
Krutovsky was a member of the committee for examining the health condition of 
the exiled: he paid special attention to Lenin. 

Apollon Zyryanov, the man, who owned the house where Lenin stopped, was a 
wealthy entrepreneur. The businessman and his guest developed very good 
friendship with each other afterwards. 

Lenin did not do any work about the house. He could not split logs, brings 
buckets of water from the well or light up the oven. He had a peasant girl in 
the house - Pasha Mezina - who was doing all the work for 2.5 rubles a month. 
The girl happened to be Lenin's servant, although Lenin was known for his 
adherence to equality and brotherhood of all people. 

Gendarmes searches Lenin's house in May of 1898. One of them started looking 
through books on the bookshelf. It took him several hours to examine the books 
on the upper shelves. There were two lower shelves left, but the officer was 
too tired to continue. He simply asked Lenin's wife, Nadezhda Krupskaya, what 
kind of books they were. Krupskaya responded that she was keeping her 
pedagogical notes there on the lower shelves. The gendarme believed her and 
left. 

Lenin was keeping illegal literature on those two lower shelves. He planned to 
escape to Alaska and America via Russia's Chukotka in case he was caught, but 
it did not happen. 

If the gendarme had been a hard-working man, he would have probably changed the 
history of the whole world. 

AIF.Ru


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