Pasternak was lucky to escape Stalin’s purges of the artists with his life. In 1934 his friend the poet Mandelstam was arrested and Stalin phoned Pasternak demanding to know why he hadn’t told him about Mandelstam’s counter-revolutionary writings. Pasternak said “It would be good if we could meet for a talk.” Stalin replied “What about?” Pasternak answered “About life and death.” Stalin slammed the receiver down, Mandlestam was convicted, and later Stalin said ‘he couldn’t manage to defend his friend’ (Pasternak). In 1936 Pasternak was advised to “ask himself where his present path of parochial arrogance and conceited preciosity is leading him”, and that his days of freedom were numbered.
In 1937 the writer Chukovsky described Pasternak’s apparent reaction to Stalin at the Komosol Congress: “…Pasternak kept whispering rapturous words in my ear. Pasternak and I went home together reveling in our own happiness.” But Pasternak alone refused to add his signature to a demand for execution of Soviet writers described as “vermin, wreckers, and spies.” His wife pleaded with him to sign but he refused and strangely Stalin permitted him to live. In 1938 a list of 3,167 persons to be shot including Pasternak was signed by Stalin but he crossed Pasternak’s name off the list.
Stalin died in 1953 and ‘Doctor Zhivago’ was first published in Italy in 1958. If Stalin had known what the novel would describe Pasternak would never have lived to write it, and we would never have experienced this marvelous film.
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