Lev Navrozov (born 1928 in
Moscow) is a
Russian author, historian and polemicist and father of poet
Andrei Navrozov. A leading
translator of Russian texts into English under the
Soviet regime, Navrozov emigrated to the
United States in 1972, where he published a best-selling memoir,
The Education of Lev Navrozov, and became a prominent Russian dissident.
Biography
Early life
Navrozov was born to
playwright Andrei Navrozov (after whom his son was named), a founding member of the
Soviet Writers’ Union, who volunteered in
World War II and was killed in action in 1941. After completing the course at
Moscow Power Engineering Institute, did not take the degree, switching to the exclusive Referent Faculty of the Moscow Institute of Foreign Languages, a faculty created by
Joseph Stalin's personal order to produce a new generation of experts with a superior knowledge of Western languages and cultures. On graduation in 1953 was offered a "promising position" at the Soviet Embassy in London, with the attendant obligation to join the
Communist Party. Declined both offers, and thenceforth refused all government posts or academic affiliations as a matter of principle. Regarded as a unique expert on the English-speaking countries, but only ever worked as a freelance.
Position as translator
Navrozov was the first, and to date the last, inhabitant of Russia to translate for publication from his native tongue into a foreign language works of literature, including those by
Dostoevsky,
Hertzen and
Prishvin, as well as
philosophy and fundamental science in 72 fields. In 1965, still freelance but now exploiting what amounted to his virtual monopoly over English translations for publication, acquired a
country house in
Vnukovo, sixteen miles from Moscow, in a privileged settlement where such Soviet nabobs as
Andrei Gromyko, then Foreign Minister, and former
Politburo member
Panteleimon Ponomarenko had their country houses.
Dissident historian
In 1953 he began his clandestine documented study of the
history of the Soviet regime, working on a cycle of books in the hope of smuggling the manuscript abroad. During this period he published translations only, publishing no original work in view of the unacceptable limits imposed by censorship. In 1972 he emigrated to the
United States via
Israel with wife and son, after receiving a special invitation from the U.S. State Department arranged through the intercession of several politically influential American friends. In 1972-1980 contributed articles to
Commentary, including the scandalous 1978 publication of the articles "What the CIA Knows About Russia," which
Admiral Stansfield Turner publicly admitted he was unable to rebut, and "Notes on American Innocence," which resulted in an unsuccessful $3 million action for defamation brought against the author by the former Prime Minister of Israel
Golda Meir.
The Education of Lev Navrozov
In 1975,
Harper & Row published the first volume of his study of the Soviet regime from within,
The Education of Lev Navrozov. The book recounts the contemporary effects of
Josef Stalin's
public relations campaign in the aftermath of the assassination of rival
Sergei Kirov. "It bids fair to take its place beside the works of
Laurence Sterne and
Henry Adams," wrote the American philosopher
Sidney Hook, "… but it is far richer in scope and more gripping in content."
Eugene Lyons, author of the pioneering 1937 work
Assignment in Utopia, described the book as "uniquely revealing," while
Robert Massie, author of
Nicholas and Alexandra, wrote of the author’s "individual genius."
Saul Bellow, the Nobel-prize winning novelist, responded to
The Education by using Navrozov as the model for a modern Russian dissident thinker in two of his books, thereby beginning a lively correspondence that continued until the American novelist's death. In particular, the narrator of
More Die of Heartbreak describes Navrozov, along with
Sinyavsky,
Vladimir Maximov and
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, as one of his epoch's "commanding figures" and "men of genius.
Later life
After 1975, Navrozov published several thousand magazine articles and newspaper columns, which, however diverse the subjects drawing his attention and commentary, have a common theme, namely the incapacity of the West to survive in the present era of increasingly sophisticated
totalitarianism. He was the founder, in 1979, of the Center for the Survival of Western Democracies, a non-profit educational organisation whose original Advisory Board brought together
Saul Bellow,
Malcolm Muggeridge,
Dr. Edward Teller,
Lt. Gen. Daniel O. Graham, the
Hon. Clare Boothe Luce,
Mihajlo Mihajlov,
Sen. Jesse Helms, and
Eugene Ionesco.
Notes
External links