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Alexander Weissberg-Cybulski
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Alexander Weissberg-Cybulski : ウィキペディア英語版
Alexander Weissberg-Cybulski
Alexander Weissberg-Cybulski (born October 8, 1901 in Kraków – April 4, 1964 in Paris) was a Polish-Austrian physicist, book author and businessman of Jewish descent.
His testimony in the trial David Rousset vs. ''Les Lettres francaises'' and his book ''The accused'' contributed significantly to spreading knowledge about Stalinist terror and show trials in Western Europe.
His book the "Accused" is also published under the title "Conspiracy of Silence", Hamish Hamilton, London, 1952. The preface in Conspiracy of Silence is written by Weissberg's friend Arthur Koestler (awarded the Sonning Prize in 1968 for contribution to European culture).
"Conspiracy of Silence" is both a personal narrative and forensic analysis of the methods employed by Stalin and the G.P.U. during the Great Purge from the middle of 1936 to the end of 1938.
It is the exploration of the systematic imprisonment, interrogation and extraction of false confessions from millions of people that is extraordinary. Weissberg explains how victims of the state police were forced to make confessions incriminating not only themselves but also co-conspirators. This practice was aimed at destroying the relations of trust between those who were responsible for the Russian revolution. Those who were not killed in camps in the Soviet Arctic were divided and conquered.
Hence, the central thesis in the book is that the Russian revolution and communism in the Soviet Union were irrevocably destroyed and ended in the 1930s during the terror of the Stalinist purges.
Weissberg had emigrated to the Soviet Union in 1931 to work as a physicist. He founded the Soviet Journal of Physics. In doing so he came to know Bukharin. It was this relationship with Bukharin that was later to become central to the regime's attempt to frame Weissberg as part of a conspiracy to assassinate Stalin.
Weissberg was handed over to the Gestapo by Stalin as part of the prisoner exchange in the Nazi-Soviet pact (also known as the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact) in 1939. Koestler's preface explains how the advocacy of fellow physicist Albert Einstein was instrumental in securing the Nazi release of Weissberg.
Weissberg also wrote a book titled Advocate for the Dead, Andre Deutsch, 1959. This book tells the story of Joel Brand and examines the working of the Jewish underground movement in Hungary and other places during the Second World War.
Together these two books are a remarkable and little known contribution to our understanding of the events in the Soviet Union (Conspiracy of Silence) and the plight of the Jewish people in the Second World War (Advocate for the Dead).




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