Sharansky, Natan (Anatoly) (1948- )
Minister of Industry and Trade and Former Soviet Prisoner
of Zion
Natan (Anatoly) Sharansky was born in the Ukraine, and
graduated with a degree in mathematics from the Physical Technical Institute
in Moscow. His early association with the human rights movement was
an English interpreter for Andrei Sakharov, before emerging in his own
right as a foremost dissident and spokesman for the Soviet Jewry movement.
In 1973, Sharansky applied for an exit visa to Israel,
but was refused on "security" grounds. He remained prominently
involved in Jewish refusenik activities until his arrest in 1977. Convicted
in 1978 of treason and spying on behalf of the United States, Sharansky
was sentenced to thirteen years imprisonment. He spent 16 months in
Moscow's Lefortovo prison, frequently in solitary confinement and in
a special "torture cell," before being transferred to a notorious
prison camp in the Siberian gulag.
Years later, following his release, Sharansky stressed
his need throughout his imprisonment to remain emotionally independent.
He attributed his survival of the lengthy incarceration and the brutal
conditions to his resistance to any sort of emotional surrender. Hence
Sharansky's expression of the paradox that while an ordinary Russian,
he was in fact a slave to the system; but that once he discovered his
Jewish roots and was restricted for his allegiance to them, he was in
reality a free man. Sharansky's memoirs of his years as a prisoner of
Zion are described in his book Fear No Evil.
During the years of his imprisonment, Sharansky became
a symbol for human rights in general and Soviet Jewry in particular.
A campaign for his release was waged tirelessly by his wife, Avital,
who emigrated to Israel immediately following their wedding with the
hope that her husband would follow shortly. Intense diplomatic efforts
and public outcries for his release were unsuccessful until 1986, when
Sharansky was released as part of an East-West prisoner exchange. Freed
on the border of a still-divided Germany, he was met by the Israeli
ambassador who presented him immediately with his new Israeli passport
under the Hebrew name of Natan Sharansky. He arrived in Israel on February
11, 1986, and was greeted by leading government officials, including
then Prime Minister Shimon Peres, and was given a hero's welcome.
Once freed, Sharansky labored on behalf of other dissidents
and then turned his attention to issues confronting Soviet immigrants.
He became head of the Zionist Forum, an organization dedicated to lobbying
on behalf of Soviet immigrants. Increasingly disappointed with Israel's
absorption of the large influx of Soviet Jews, he wrote frequently on
the subject, and in 1995 created a new political party, Yisrael Ba'aliya,
dedicated to helping immigrants' professional, economic and social acculturation.
In the elections the following year, the party won seven Knesset seats,
and Sharansky was named Minister of Industry and Trade.