









Obscenity on the fence
Posted 28-08-2009 at 16:12 by Кирилл Сызранский
obscenity on the fence
SERGEI IVANOV
August 28, 2009
August 25 was inaugurated after a year of reconstruction station Kurskaya - the ring of the Moscow Metro. If repairs to its lobby is decorated with two rows of the Soviet national anthem (in its original version), namely "Through storms the sun of freedom shone to us, and Lenin was a great way for us lit up, but now passengers will be welcomed at other lines of the same verse:" We Stalin grew allegiance to the people to work and exploits inspired us. "
Punctuation in the inscriptions there, and I still do not know what he had in mind Mikhalkov. And, alas, the day before did not get to ask him about it: whether he believed that Stalin was just brought up our commitment to the people or, alternatively, that he was our inspiration for this loyalty, just like a little further - inspired to work and on feats? Depending on interpretation, in a place it needs a comma, but it does not exist anywhere else, like as in the famous riddle of "Eats, have mercy." However, it is to me such strange associations into my head. I train about another.
This text was inscribed on the marble lobby initially, when the station opened in 1950, but after the Twentieth Party Congress, in connection with Khrushchev's de-Stalinization, one piece of the Stalinist anthem was replaced by another. In a sense, this change was of a completely magical character. Then, in the 50's, people still remembered what lines to follow on, and the passenger, mechanically scanned the label about Lenin, just as mechanically continued her own head, and thus inevitably remembering and Stalin - the return of the offender mental Leninist norms as it happened even more creative way than if the responsibility for the line in only a soulless marble. However, just as the mention of the name taboo, say, a bear, from the perspective of ancient man, awakened the beast, pulled him out of the wild thickets of our huts, we unfortunately, the same way and the very name of Stalin, Khrushchev Feels like le cadavre be animated, made him terrified to move - our allegiance, or to work, or exploits.
Over the past half-century hymn, first in general lost his words, then found a friend, then a third, and at the close of the lobby "of the Kursk-ring" is hardly a lot of people remember that there is a line inscribed above his head, well, something regular about Lenin. And in this sense, produced by the operation - not just a restoration of what was, in fact tried to convince the public head of the press service of the Moscow subway Paul Suharnikov. This appearance of the text about Stalin on a new, from scratch, that is marble.
But in the end, restore the same old drawings on the estate, which in their original form are not caught for several generations. So, in terms of consistent protection of monuments, restorers were right. But something is wrong. First, why everyone is afraid to take responsibility for this decision? "When asked whose idea it was - to reconstruct the inscription, Paul Suharnikov did not give comments", - informs "the Echo of Moscow". According to the newspaper. Ru »,« The general director "Mosstroymetroproekta" (namely, the organization undertook the reconstruction) Ernest Sementovsky at the opening said that the decision was taken at the city level. But, as head of the commission told the Moscow City Duma on City Planning and New Development Mikhail Moskvin-Tarkhanov, nothing like the city authorities had not been discussed. That is, write the word on the fence - it is please and how to confess, so there are not any. If all matter in the protection of monuments, then why is it cowardice?
However, the main thing is not even in this: originally the station was decorated with a statue and even Stalin. If you really take everything to recover, he would have to return her. "We have studied the issue of another installation of the monument, but decided on the spot where he stood Stalin, leaving a light niche", - said the head of the Moscow Metro Dmitry Gayev. The point, they say, is that the original statues vanished from the store underground. Well this is really quite ludicrous explanation - could make an exact copy, in fact, and a marble slab in the lobby is not the original. Yes, and the inscription "Stalingrad" instead of "Volgograd" in the decoration of the station are also made from scratch, although very sloppy, but then suddenly ... light niche.
The above circumstances are forced to seek another explanation of this step, the Moscow authorities. What did you mean the Soviet drivers, when slapped a portrait of Stalin on the windshield, but still face out? For Nicholas, the saint is none today so not for turning. Ugodnik now - it for yourself, but Stalin was then - outside, for the outrageous. But what was shocking that stagnant? It was not nostalgia for terror or nostalgia for collectivization. It was an instinctive act of provocation against the evasive position of the authorities. The driver seems to have declared a conditional Suslov: no need to pretend that you are all sure that you know the answers to all questions. Yes, and we do know one little question, on which you yulite, ducking and look pitiful - so do we have with Stalin? So I hung it: this I have done well or badly?
Waves of Gorbachev and Yeltsin's de-Stalinization decommunization, alas, receded, but still lost to return, however, is impossible. Authorities still can not clearly explain what they got with Stalin. Then suddenly Putin said Natalya Solzhenitsyn, the dictator was a monster, then just as suddenly reproached Glazunov, why he generalissimo with Trotsky in one sleigh planted. It would seem that it would be much easier to deal with the interpretation of the Ukrainian Holodomor, if at all Russia instruct the monuments to the victims of the great famine - but it is impossible to force yourself, does not allow the insides. Butovskii Komunarsk and executions on the polygons to give a better church than on behalf of the state where to put anything other than a tiny plate. Because then you will have some words to write on the pedestal of the monument, and what to write - we can not solve.
The word "Stalin", the Moscow authorities shouting like a child cries out obscenity: he's aware that he know everything, but at the same time pretend that there is no such word. The astonishing thing: was thirty years - and all the same. Only because of the freedom of speech now rebelliousness is not concerned citizens, and the individual layers of bureaucracy, and under the earth. In this way, a middle manager protesting against the ideological mezheumochnosti. But doing so - mezheumochnymi means. Erected in the old place a statue of Stalin at the Kursk station, it would be a bold, unequivocal ideological act, our answer to Chamberlain, NATO, EU and OSCE. But instead of answering continues - "light niche.
http://www.ej.ru/?a=note&id=9399
SERGEI IVANOV
August 28, 2009
August 25 was inaugurated after a year of reconstruction station Kurskaya - the ring of the Moscow Metro. If repairs to its lobby is decorated with two rows of the Soviet national anthem (in its original version), namely "Through storms the sun of freedom shone to us, and Lenin was a great way for us lit up, but now passengers will be welcomed at other lines of the same verse:" We Stalin grew allegiance to the people to work and exploits inspired us. "
Punctuation in the inscriptions there, and I still do not know what he had in mind Mikhalkov. And, alas, the day before did not get to ask him about it: whether he believed that Stalin was just brought up our commitment to the people or, alternatively, that he was our inspiration for this loyalty, just like a little further - inspired to work and on feats? Depending on interpretation, in a place it needs a comma, but it does not exist anywhere else, like as in the famous riddle of "Eats, have mercy." However, it is to me such strange associations into my head. I train about another.
This text was inscribed on the marble lobby initially, when the station opened in 1950, but after the Twentieth Party Congress, in connection with Khrushchev's de-Stalinization, one piece of the Stalinist anthem was replaced by another. In a sense, this change was of a completely magical character. Then, in the 50's, people still remembered what lines to follow on, and the passenger, mechanically scanned the label about Lenin, just as mechanically continued her own head, and thus inevitably remembering and Stalin - the return of the offender mental Leninist norms as it happened even more creative way than if the responsibility for the line in only a soulless marble. However, just as the mention of the name taboo, say, a bear, from the perspective of ancient man, awakened the beast, pulled him out of the wild thickets of our huts, we unfortunately, the same way and the very name of Stalin, Khrushchev Feels like le cadavre be animated, made him terrified to move - our allegiance, or to work, or exploits.
Over the past half-century hymn, first in general lost his words, then found a friend, then a third, and at the close of the lobby "of the Kursk-ring" is hardly a lot of people remember that there is a line inscribed above his head, well, something regular about Lenin. And in this sense, produced by the operation - not just a restoration of what was, in fact tried to convince the public head of the press service of the Moscow subway Paul Suharnikov. This appearance of the text about Stalin on a new, from scratch, that is marble.
But in the end, restore the same old drawings on the estate, which in their original form are not caught for several generations. So, in terms of consistent protection of monuments, restorers were right. But something is wrong. First, why everyone is afraid to take responsibility for this decision? "When asked whose idea it was - to reconstruct the inscription, Paul Suharnikov did not give comments", - informs "the Echo of Moscow". According to the newspaper. Ru »,« The general director "Mosstroymetroproekta" (namely, the organization undertook the reconstruction) Ernest Sementovsky at the opening said that the decision was taken at the city level. But, as head of the commission told the Moscow City Duma on City Planning and New Development Mikhail Moskvin-Tarkhanov, nothing like the city authorities had not been discussed. That is, write the word on the fence - it is please and how to confess, so there are not any. If all matter in the protection of monuments, then why is it cowardice?
However, the main thing is not even in this: originally the station was decorated with a statue and even Stalin. If you really take everything to recover, he would have to return her. "We have studied the issue of another installation of the monument, but decided on the spot where he stood Stalin, leaving a light niche", - said the head of the Moscow Metro Dmitry Gayev. The point, they say, is that the original statues vanished from the store underground. Well this is really quite ludicrous explanation - could make an exact copy, in fact, and a marble slab in the lobby is not the original. Yes, and the inscription "Stalingrad" instead of "Volgograd" in the decoration of the station are also made from scratch, although very sloppy, but then suddenly ... light niche.
The above circumstances are forced to seek another explanation of this step, the Moscow authorities. What did you mean the Soviet drivers, when slapped a portrait of Stalin on the windshield, but still face out? For Nicholas, the saint is none today so not for turning. Ugodnik now - it for yourself, but Stalin was then - outside, for the outrageous. But what was shocking that stagnant? It was not nostalgia for terror or nostalgia for collectivization. It was an instinctive act of provocation against the evasive position of the authorities. The driver seems to have declared a conditional Suslov: no need to pretend that you are all sure that you know the answers to all questions. Yes, and we do know one little question, on which you yulite, ducking and look pitiful - so do we have with Stalin? So I hung it: this I have done well or badly?
Waves of Gorbachev and Yeltsin's de-Stalinization decommunization, alas, receded, but still lost to return, however, is impossible. Authorities still can not clearly explain what they got with Stalin. Then suddenly Putin said Natalya Solzhenitsyn, the dictator was a monster, then just as suddenly reproached Glazunov, why he generalissimo with Trotsky in one sleigh planted. It would seem that it would be much easier to deal with the interpretation of the Ukrainian Holodomor, if at all Russia instruct the monuments to the victims of the great famine - but it is impossible to force yourself, does not allow the insides. Butovskii Komunarsk and executions on the polygons to give a better church than on behalf of the state where to put anything other than a tiny plate. Because then you will have some words to write on the pedestal of the monument, and what to write - we can not solve.
The word "Stalin", the Moscow authorities shouting like a child cries out obscenity: he's aware that he know everything, but at the same time pretend that there is no such word. The astonishing thing: was thirty years - and all the same. Only because of the freedom of speech now rebelliousness is not concerned citizens, and the individual layers of bureaucracy, and under the earth. In this way, a middle manager protesting against the ideological mezheumochnosti. But doing so - mezheumochnymi means. Erected in the old place a statue of Stalin at the Kursk station, it would be a bold, unequivocal ideological act, our answer to Chamberlain, NATO, EU and OSCE. But instead of answering continues - "light niche.
http://www.ej.ru/?a=note&id=9399
Total Comments 7
Comments
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Stalin on the Kursk.
STALIN at Kursk: Pregnancy test neo-Stalinism
August. 28, 2009|09:08 am
An official with us, maybe not the smartest in the world, but very sensitive. Even before the revolution, used to say that Russia's official "live up snout, otduda fell and reward and punishment, and most importantly responsive bureaucratic nose quivering caught any change in the direction of political wind. Since then, nothing has changed. Therefore, I am sure that the inscription on the restored station of Mestre "Kursk" in Moscow, where he astonished the audience appeared the words "We grew Stalin to commitment to the people, to work and deeds have inspired" from Stalin's national anthem all the same unforgettable Sergei Mikhalkov, is a kind of a pregnancy test today's Russia neo-Stalinism. If this stupidity will be removed quickly, then it's just a fact of biography leadership of the Moscow metro, and if the sign would remain, it has become a fact biographies of our country.
Delusional explanations of the press-service subway that all this "restoration of historical justice" only shows that have greatly comrades gone crazy. Let us, for the sake of "historical justice" decorate Moscow kumachovymi different posters. For example, at the Foreign Ministry building would be appropriate to hang the old slogan times "Lord - in the face !"... I can cite hundreds of similar examples, simply do not want to take pleasure in others. made by Moscow, it was under" the father of all nations. "Spreading the parks trumpeters and lyabastrovyh" powerful swimmers, empty the Tver "funnel", inspired by the repairmen at Sayan-Shushenskaya slogan "Communism - is Soviet power plus electrification of the country," gave each oligarch to bust Stakhanov, but you never know what else you can think of. And how the whole country can be decorated towers with guards guard!
By the way, the words "We grew Stalin allegiance to the people, to work and deeds have inspired" is a problem not only visitors of the Moscow metro. Nose to the wind and keep all the visitors that arrive in the area of three stations from all over our country. And for all of them is a good hint of where to move the country, because where the capital, there and Russia.
So waiting for test results. Lord in the Kremlin! Search for ten minutes, go down, please, in the Metro station Kurskaya. Look, read, think. I feel the aftertaste. You like it?
http://promanov.livejournal.com/Posted 29-08-2009 at 00:04 by Кирилл Сызранский -
NOT glorify the genocide
28:08:2009 g.
The protest against the glorification of Stalin
in the Moscow metro is directed to the mayor of Moscow.
September 7 statement with thousands of signatures of worthy men were sent to the Movement "For Human Rights" chapter of the capital. Sam collection of signatures had been suspended because of attacks on our site hooligans sign for Hitler, Stalin and other malosimpatichnyh dead.
We thank all who have expressed their attitude to insult the memory of tens of millions of victims of Stalinism.
Outstanding on non-public rehabilitation of Stalinism "to Yuri Luzhkov said:
Mayor of Moscow
Luzhkov
125032, Moscow, st. Tverskaya 13
On the non-public rehabilitation of Stalinism
Dear Yuri Mikhailovich!
On behalf of his colleagues - human rights activists, writers and public figures, to send you a statement of protest against the restoration of the metro station "Kurskaya-ring" lines of the Soviet national anthem, glorifying Stalin. Under this statement a few days signed up on the Internet, hundreds of people - as individuals, and representatives of organizations. Because of the provocative attack on our site, we were forced to suspend the collection of signatures, however, already collected enough to judge a significant rejection of action the leadership of the Moscow subway.
On this question to you has already urged the society "Memorial". I support their arguments, and I want to make the following arguments in favor of changing the station interior for a more neutral, because even in the original wording of the anthem of the USSR (1943), lines were not associated with Stalin.
Arguments about the "historical justice", in my opinion, clearly nepodhodyat to this case. Justice, above all, is the historical truth and the law. The historical truth that the Soviet state, the successor of which is Russia, denounced the cult of Stalin, many aspects of his policies. Decisions were taken on the removal of symbolism, glorifying Stalin. Was changed and the text of the hymn. Therefore, historical justice requires respect for decisions taken. Abandoning them, their actual removal - this is a purely political gesture, which has no relation to the history of architecture.
Stalin's policy was formally condemned in Russia's law (where it is called genocide) and the Constitutional Court and, in the decision of which deal with the millions of victims).
For example, in "On the constitutionality of Presidential Decree of 23 August 1991 N 79" to suspend the activities of the Communist Party of the RSFSR, dated 25 August 1991 N 90 "On the property of the CPSU and the Communist Party of the RSFSR, and from November 6, 1991 N 169 "On the activity of the CPSU and KP RSFSR, as well as the constitutionality of the CPSU and KP RSFSR case was May 26, July 6-15, July 20 - August 4, September 14 - October 23, October 28 - November 30, 1992. Resolution of N 9-P of 30 November 1992, stated: "... 3. Materials of the case, including testimony from witnesses, confirmed that the governing structure of the Communist Party were the initiators and the structure of the field - often a policy of repression against millions of Soviet citizens, including in respect of the deported peoples. This went on for decades ... "
The Law of the RSFSR of 26 April 1991 "N 1107-I" On the Rehabilitation of Repressed Peoples "(as amended on July 1, 1993) refers to the genocide of Repressed Peoples," the policy of arbitrariness and lawlessness, praktikovavshaysya at the state level. "
The Law of Russia on October 18, 1991 "On the Rehabilitation of Victims of Political Repression" (with amendments of 26 June, 22 December 1992, September 3, 1993, 4 November 1995): Over the years of Soviet rule, millions of people have been victims tyranny of the totalitarian state, were repressed for political and religious beliefs, social, national and other characteristics. Condemning years of terror and mass persecution of his people as incompatible with the idea of law and justice, the Supreme Soviet of Russia expresses its deepest sympathy to the victims of repressions and their relatives and friends, said the company's continued commitment to see the real guarantees of legality and human rights. The purpose of this Act is the rehabilitation of all victims of political repression, exposed as such on the territory of Russia from October 25 (7 November) in 1917, the restoration of their civil rights, the elimination of other consequences of the arbitrariness and ensuring feasible at the present time compensate for material and moral damage. "
All this - a clear legal solutions, qualifying policies of Stalin as a criminal. Under these conditions, obsolete words anthem "We grew Stalin, etc. shown in public places and on behalf of the state, seen as the political rehabilitation of Stalin's repressive policies. At the same time, it is an excellent opportunity for foreign politicians to talk about returning our country to the days of the cult of personality.
Unable to recognize the tremendous role of Alexander Solzhenitsyn and promote Stalin.
Given all this, I urge you to take everything in your power to sign, glorifying Stalin and approving of its critical role in nravsvtennm and ideological formation of generations in the interior of the station "Kurskaya ring", was replaced by another - or existed at the commencement of repair or Containing a different line from the hymn.
Appendix: statement
Best regards,
LA Ponomarev,
CEO
All-Russia Public Movement "For Human Rights"
member of the Moscow Helsinki Group
We demand to stop the glorification of Stalin
Statement
Recently in Moscow metro station opens after reconstruction Kursk ring, which restored the destroyed after the exposure of Stalin's personality cult words of the old hymn: "We grew Stalin allegiance to the people to work and exploits inspired us" and the inscription "For the Motherland, for Stalin. "
This was done, according to the guidelines subway, in the name of "restoring historical justice."
It is outrageous and wary of the fact that recently in Russia is a permanent and systematic rehabilitation of Stalin's personality - the way the manager, then as commander, under whose wise leadership, with the slogan "For the Motherland! For Stalin "were dying soldiers and defeated Nazi Germany.
It seems as though there was no millions murdered and tortured to death in Stalin's camps and their exiled families, just before the war had not been destroyed talented commanders, resulting in victory went to the country an unusually high price, cost thousands of lives that would have been much less if it had not <wisdom> and highly professional management of the army, if it was not blocking detachments, by pursuing the bullets often vooruzhennyhkrasnoarmeytsev.
You can recall and destruction of hard-working peasants, for which we are now paying the price, and more on the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, and the expulsion of the places not so remote, away from the eyes of the people of those war crippled, the "Leningrad case", the murder of Mikhoels <the doctors>. All this at one time spoke and wrote a lot, but now they say less and less. As a result, grew up after the war generation, as well as those whom the repression was not affected, get used to the new appearance <leader's>. And now his name is called almost the first among the names that epitomized the glory of the country.
We consider this an insult to the memory of the victims - both on the front and in the camps. And also feel bad harbinger of "justice" on the Stalinist model.
Maybe someone, anyone, really, <Stalin grew> or his ideas, it seems that his method is easier and simpler to put the country in order? Perhaps their fear is the best way to control population?
It is hard to believe that the "restoration of historical justice" in the Moscow subway, made without coordination at a high enough level.
We demand the elimination of the Moscow metro inscriptions, which were removed after our country has condemned the crimes of Stalin. Restoration of the inscriptions in praise of Stalin did not restore historical justice and distort the history of our country.
We are not just for the sake of the truth about the past of the country, but for the sake of its future.Posted 27-09-2009 at 17:32 by Кирилл Сызранский -
(continued)
Signatures:
Nina Katerli, writer, member of the Moscow Writers' Union, member of the PEN
Jacob Bagrov, MD, Professor
Lyudmila Alekseeva, Chairman of the Moscow Helsinki Group
Natella Boltyanskaya, journalist
Elena Bonner
Alla Gerber, president of the Holocaust, a member of the Public Chamber
Jacob Gordin, a writer
Daniel Granik, writer
Constantine Azadovsky, writer,
Chairman of the Executive Committee of St. Petersburg branch of the PEN Club
Lev Ponomarev, Movement "For Human Rights"
priest Gleb Yakunin, Public Committee for Protection of Conscience
Ernst Cherny, executive secretary of the Public Committee in defense of scientists
Vladimir Kavtorin, writer, member of the Writers at exhibition
Boris Strugatsky, writer
Yuri Samodurov, curator of the exhibition projects
Antuan Arakelyan, "Coalition of Dialogue and Case", St. Petersburg
Vadim Postnikov, son of "enemy of the people"
Chief editor of the legal newspaper "... The Tribunal is now in Tyumen"
Boris Vishnevsky, a member of the Bureau of Yabloko party, a columnist for Novaya Gazeta
Vladimir Shaklein, Ural Interregional Center of Human Rights
Galina Nechayeva, journalist, lecturer of St. Petersburg University of Film and Television
Dmitry Shusharin, historian and journalist
Andrew Naletov Committee Anti-War Action
Yevgeny Ikhlov, journalist
Love Bashinova, journalist
Leonid Lamm, Revista "Volunteer Corps" (Moscow)
Alexander Gnezdilov, director, member of the Yabloko party
Vera Vasileva, journalist Portal "Human rights in Russia" (HRO.org), Moscow
Alex Skripkin, programmer, Kostroma
Stalin was a murderer! "We can not glorify the killers! Ilya Hadrikov, Chairman of the All-Russia movement "For a fair market"
Lomonosov, DB, retired, disabled CQ son tortured to death in Stalin's camps parents
Leonid Romankov, Igor Karlinsky, members of the Human Rights Council of St. Petersburg
Nicholas Sudenko, musician, writer and human rights activist
Eugene Ammondt, musician
Elena Efros, and Journalist
Vladimir Oyvin Foundation "Glasnost"
Ella Polyakova, Yelena Popova, "The Soldiers' Mothers of St. Petersburg"
Nicholas Zboroshenko, "Legal Team"
Gregory Amnuel, executive director of the Open Club International Dialogue ", a film director, producer
Natalia Novozhilov, journalist, member of the Public Movement "Solidarity" (Vladimir)
Evgeny Barkar, religious (St. Petersburg)
Marina Solodovnikova, teacher (Kaliningrad)
Yury Vdovin, "Civilian Control" (St. Petersburg)
Alexander Gudimov, St. Petersburg
Oleg Kolganov, a graduate student, historian and journalist, Voskresensk
Cheap Alexander, engineer, Rostov-na-Donu
Obolenskaya Svetlana Valerianovna
Irina Kizilova, journalist, member of the society "Memorial", Perm
Oleg Avdonin, a psychologist, Moscow, the grandson of "enemy of the people"
Vladimir Schnittke, Memorial Society
Mamay Olga
Inna Kaganova, physicist
Maglevannaya Elena Ilyinichna Imatra, Finland journalist
Gudskov Nicholas L. Moscow Esperanto
Igor Loshchilov Novosibirsk literary critic
Filippova Elena Moscow journalist
Artem Marchenkov Rome philosopher
Nesterov Yurii
Daria Kotlyarova St. Petersburg photographer
Manykin Tatiana Moscow culturologist
Maria G. Eytingina Petersburg historian, teacher
Krasnosel'skaya Margarita Alex Moscow housewife
Krasnosel'skaya Margarita Alex Moscow housewife
Isakevich Evgeny Apatity, Murmansk region. manager
Ryabov Vladimir Samara teacher
Yakimov, Nikolai St. Petersburg musician
Strugachyov Natalia St. Petersburg physician nephrologist
Borisov Nikolai Mikhailovich Moscow Doctor of Technical Sciences, Head of the Laboratory of the Federal Medical Center biophysical them. AI Burnazyan
Boriskin Vladimir St. Petersburg manager
Lyakhovich Oleg Moscow news agency editor
Michael Nisenbaum Moscow writer
Galina Polyakova Mstislavovna Samara (biologist)
Falikman Maria V. Moscow State University Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology
Martynov, Oleg Moscow translator
Landau Daniel V. St. Petersburg SysAdmin
Wheat Julia Gennadievna editor Moscow News Agency
Potapova Valentina Moscow pensioner
Muraveva Vlada Moscow journalist
Marina Chernyak Arkadievna St. Petersburg translator
Mitrofanov Sergey Moscow publicist
Artyom Liss G. Moscow journalist
Maxim Tavev Moscow museum employee
Boris Kherson Odessa prof., Head of the Department of Clinical Psychology of the Odessa National University
Utkin Galina Odessa housewife
Tatiana Batishcheva Timofeevna Kaliningrad economist and mother of three children
Kolomenskij Dmitry Evadievich St. Petersburg Logistics Manager
Ekaterina Potapova Roon designer
Anastasiya Vinogradova St. Petersburg Volny artist
Meadow Ilya Moscow teacher
Eugene Berkovich St. Peterberg Moscow director, a student at Moscow Art Theater School
Maria Sosnovskaya St. Petersburg art critic, poet, translator
Oleg Gorodeckij Moscow doctor
Julia Klochkova St. Petersburg piatel
Monakhova Tatyana Moscow Librarian
Lyubzhin Alexey Moscow philologist
Dmitry Velikov Moscow, Palo Alto (California) Engineer
Alexander Bakharev Melbourne Research Engineer
Daria Maslenikova Moscow artist
Ostroukhova Eugene Novosibirsk philologist
Shpilkin Sergei Moscow physicist
Sosnina Mehriban Железнодорожній of Moscow region dressmaker
tarskin Muhamad France political refugee from Russia France
Rogov Galina Moscow historian, retired
Menshova Alain Alekseevna St. Petersburg teacher
Eisner Dmitri Moscow translator
Laschiver Irina Rudolfovna Jerusalem secretary
Mikhail Ilyin Vsevolodovich Moscow Geologist
Elena Novitskaya New York editor
Alexander Zeldovich Efimovich director
Lekmanov Oleg Andershanovich Moscow philologist
Khlebnikov Oleg Nikitievich Moscow writer
Leonov Nikolai Konstantinovich Moscow Engineer
Andrey Shemyakin Moscow documentary, cultural historian, a member of the Union of Cinematographers of Russia
Sannikova Elena Nikitichna Moscow journalist
Kulbakino Evgeny Nikolaevich Murmansk unemployed
Kolesnikov Sergey St. Petersburg driver
Gennady Alexandrov Lysa nad Labem Artist
Tanunin Alexander V. Lipetsk writer
Kolchin Alexey Moscow administrator
Goldobin Dmitry Cannes (France), musician
Vitaly Shchukin St. Petersburg physicist
Sorokina Anna Moscow musician
Kanevsky Gennady Moscow editor
Shevchenko, Vitaly Moscow radio broadcaster
Hodunova Maria St. Petersburg director
Pauline Iasnogorodski Moscow economist
Mary B. Berkowitz St. Petersburg teacher
Dimenstein Rachel Romanovna Moscow editor
Rosenblatt Julia Rafaelovna Samara teacher
Tipiseva Tatiana Saint-Petersburg culturologist
Gechtman Vlada Moscow analyst
Alexander Zaretsky Boston Engineer
Magdalene Novitskaya New York pensioner
Elizarova A. St. Petersburg teacher
Tillib Nellie N. Moscow translator
Plekhov Viktor Glazov pensioner
Mikhail Bor Koloberdin Pine St. Petersburg area economist, grandson of dispossessed peasants
Denisova Ksenia Novosibirsk teacher
Kovtun Tatiana Ekaterinburg pensioner, the granddaughter of "enemies of the people"
Violetta ivernit Paris writer, rector of the CSF. Sakharov
Tokarev Yana Moscow poet, translator
Kulish Alexander Arkhangelsk unemployed
Remizov Vladimir Moscow marketer
Mutovina Ekaterina Moscow editor, granddaughter of the exiles "kulaks"
Bielawski Dmitry Moscow programmer
Schneider Tcherniakov Moscow physicist
Dorutina Tatiana Saint-Petersburg, the head of NGO "League of Women Voters of St. Petersburg"
Shcherbina Tatiana Moscow poet, writer, member of the PEN
Nesterov Yurii Petersburg Engineer
Kobets Elena Nikiforovna Petersburg environmentalist
Yury Vdovin Innokentievich Petersburg human rights activist
Gabunia Joseph Togoevich Petersburg lawyer
Strakhov Mikhail Sergeevich Saratov Programmer
Natalia Evdokimova Petersburg Lawyer
Chudakova Marietta Omarovna Moscow philologist, professor Institute of Literature
Yazovskih Natalia Moscow teacher of Russian
language and literature.Posted 27-09-2009 at 17:36 by Кирилл Сызранский -
(continued)
Signatures:
Nikulin, Oleg Saratov historian, a descendant of exiled families
Don Alexander Arkhangelsk Couch
Nick Epple Moscow translator
Medvedev Elena Volgograd-Moscow student
Anna Makarova Moscow Registrar
Katerina L. Thessaloniki archaeologist
Eugene Zhmurikov Izotovich Novosibirsk engineer-physicist
Julia Foster, Washington personal trainer
Yakimova Eugene Gennadievna Moscow corrector
Belyavskaya Nina O. Moscow programmer
Taskaeva Svetlana Dolgoprudnyy translator
Yudin, Konstantin Pavlovich Moscow. Zelenograd the musician, teacher
Denis P. Yudin Moscow administrator
Kaluga Mikhail Moscow editor
Tsyganov Mikhail E. Brno teacher
Daria Kutuzova Psychology
Samorodova Svetlana Moscow engineer
Mikhail Tsyganov Evgenvich Brno teacher
Samorodov Gregory A. Moscow political analyst
Chait Moscow teacher
Derevyagin Alexander Moscow musician
Schneider, Michael Moscow scientist
Dimas-Tkachuk, Nina Igorevna New York Translator
Dmytro Yevtushenko Maratovich Moscow Artist
Makushinsky Alexei Anatolyev Munich, Germany writer
Vasily Popov Evgen'evich Moscow photographer]
Book marks Theodore Israel, Jerusalem physician radiologist
Denis Karasev Moscow translator
Kaganov Moses Isaakovich Belmont, MA, U.S. physicist
List Gennady Perm unemployed
Nikulin, Oleg Saratov historian, a descendant of exiled families
Fedorov, Igor L. Moscow Loader
Vedenicheva Anna A. Moscow translator
Rosenblum, Eugene (grandson of \ "in Moscow historian
Leo Rubin Geologist
Catherine Lukin Moscow designer
Dmitry Belomestnov Moscow journalist
Rose Koval Boston, U.S. art
Gorfunkel Alexander Bostonb U.S. historian
Volkov Valery Moscow Librarian
Korobeinikov Andrew Alexander Chita Engineer
Heymets Nina G. Jerusalem translator
Rybnikov Gregory L. Moscow teacher
Shaldaev Mikhail V. Moscow is not working
Tatiana Samoilova Samara journalist, editor
Rybnikov Gregory L. Moscow teacher
Michael Shoilovich Podlubny Moscow programmer
Epstein, Alexander Davidovich Moscow /Jerusalem historian and sociologist
Kuzmin, Dmitry Moscow writer
Shapoval Svetlana Moscow teacher
Gayane Arakelyan V. Moscow doctor
Maria Shulrufer St. Petersburg journalist
Gromova Natalia Moscow writer. st.nauchny the museum of Marina Tsvetaeva in Moscow
Swarovski Fedor moscow journalist
Gorbachev Ada Emmanuilovna Moscow journalist
Valery Ledenev Moscow journalist
Nikita Protsenko Moscow student
Tumarkin Victor:: Moscow computing
Vadim Solomonik New York profession is not listed
Brun Pavel Moscow director Kushlina St. Petersburg Olga
Brun Pavel Moscow director
Vladimir Nikritin Moscow poet, musician
Ledoolov Sergei Moscow designer --
Mikhail V. Ananiev Moscow director
Bernatskaya Marina Stepanovna Kaluga journalist, writer; family had been deported
Minkin Anatoly E. Moscow journalist
Maria S. Karpov Moscow editor
Stanislav Lviv Moscow poet, novelist, translator
Bakushinskii Olga Moscow journalist, TV presenter
Elena Umerova Memetovna Moscow journalist, the granddaughter of the repressed and deported
Tamarchenko Nathan Davidovich Moscow philologist, teacher
Samotorova Anastasia V. Moscow journalist
Sakbaeva Olga Moscow teacher
Bukhov Leonard Semenovich Moscow translator, a former filmmaker, member of the Second World War, his father was shot in
Magomedov Dina Mahmudovna Moscow philologist, teacher --
Tatiana Kamenev St. Petersburg biologist
Goose Svetlana Moscow musician
Konoplyev Alexey Samara Electrical engineer
Nikolaeva Darya Alexandrovna Grenoble biologist
Goose Svetlana Moscow musician
Loskutov Vasily Yurevich St. Petersburg photographer
Neudorf Olga Leonardovna Moscow marketer
Tatjana Hein Moscow journalist
Gadzhieva Alina Musaevna Moscow therapist
Sadovskaya Elena Kirillovna Moscow artist --
Selver (suitcases) moscow writer
Roy Tatiana Saint-Petersburg psychologist
Marenin Natalia Moscow editor
Sudorzhenko Elena Moscow manager
Sorin Konstantin Borisovich Moscow military engineer in stock
Sarkisian Eagle journalist Georgy Stepanovich
Zubov V. L.dmila St. Petersburg scholar, professor
Dragunskij Irina Moscow journalist, teacher
Volin Galina Adolfovna Moscow editor, vice president MBOF "Farvvater --
Bogomolov, Yuri Moscow film critic
Lar'kina Tatiana Moscow provizorNikolaenko Vladislav Vladimir Moscow philologist --
Pavlova Nadezhda g, Ekaterinburg pensioner --
Philip R. Minlos Moscow linguist
Sobakar Natalia Moscow director
Mikhail Sitnikov, Moscow journalist
Sergei Kurdin Miass programmer
Valery Geshele Berlin Geologist
Zakharych Dmitry V. Kazan Researcher
Andrew Finkel Evseyevich Moscow engineer
Filippov, Pavel V. Jerusalem programmer
Freger Cyrus Mikhaylovna Moscow journalist --
Valentina Ivanovna Galkina, Minsk doctor
Lebedeva Natalia Toronto, Canada Programmer
Alexandrova Elena G. Moscow Geologist
Alexander Orlov Moscow architect, photographer
Smagin Dmitrii Smolensk trade
Alexander Ekaterina Alec Moscow lawyer
Anokhin Dmitry Balashiha designer
Yaroslav A. Alexandrov Moscow student
Eugene V. Serov, Moscow Economist
Boris Podolsky Natanovich St. Petersburg engineer --
Melnikov Alexander Yuzefovich Moscow doctor
Podolskaia Nadezhda St. Petersburg Engineer
KUZINA Sergei Moscow Engineer
Dmitriy Voronkov Spartakovich Moscow screenwriter
Waving Dmitri Moscow Trading
Elena V. Kharitonov Moscow is not listed
FRENKEL EFIM ELIKOVICH Volsk high school teacher
Andrey Mukhin Moscow journalist
Trishina Elena Moscow journalist --
Nikolaeva Darya Alexandrovna Grenoble biologist
Efim Shifrin Moscow artist
Aleshin Alexander Vadimovna Kiev student
Shabunya Dmitry Moscow engineer
MUHUTDINOVA IRINA HAFIZOVNA MOSCOW ECONOMIST
Sergei Astakhov NEW YORK MANAGER
Datnov Ksenia V. Moscow writer
Barinova Lubov Moscow coder
Belanovsky Dmitry Alexandrov Moscow translator, editor
Dmitry Shibaev Moscow journalist
NATALIA ALIMIRZOEVA MOSCOW EMPLOYEE
Dubin Vadim V. Rostov-na-Donu programmer
Kaplan Oleg Moscow unemployed)
Papsuev Oleg O. Moscow Researcher
Xenia Ratkevich Leonidovna Samara Teacher Theater
Anatoly Uhandeev Naberezhnye Chelny writer
Nikolaeva Elena moscow journalist
Butov Mikhail Moscow writer
Keilin Vadim St. Petersburg writer, journalist
Sidorchuk Pavel Exactly manager
Julia Titova Kaluga Kaluga volunteer movement "For Human Rights"
Mary and Eugene Сафроновы Vorotynsk Kaluga region co-chairmen VOROTINSKY NGO Support for Migrants "Vorotynsk-immigrant"
Alexey Slutskin St. Petersburg (engineer)
Egorov Sergei Mikhailovich St. Petersburg physicist
Gryzunova Anastasia B. Moscow translator
Love Moseeva Ele-Chairman of the Supervisory Commission Kaluga Kaluga region
Polivanov Konstantin Mikhailov Moscow philologist
Mikhail of Tver St. Petersburg Science
Shulman, Nelli Moscow teacher
Klebanov Natalia Vytegra pensinerka, years --
Volkov, Vadim Borisovich Moscow businessman
Siskin Maria S. Vytegra, Vologda region. pensioner
Afonin, Mikhail Moscow philologist, museum employee
Boris Zhukov Moscow journalist
Dedkov Eugene Moscow Engineer --
Novitsky Saarbruecken, Germany Engineer
Nikonov Irina Saratov designer
Nedorubova Olga E. Moscow housewife
Elena Timchenko Denver, U.S. Designer
Anna Robertovna Andriasyan Yerevan, Armenia person
Ilnitskaya John V. Rome linguist
Olga Lavut Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA translator
Budin Vorkuta superintendent
Kruzhkova Darya Vladimirovna Moscow photographer
Avetisov Harry Vagaoshakovich Pyatigorsk pensioner --
Spitsin Anton Moscow economist
Vasily Borisovich Kudryavtsev Moscow programmer
Bokov Maxim Moscow biotechnological
Natapov Benjamin Moscow pensioner
Levin, Mikhail Borisovich Moscow pensioner
Konchits Mikhail Moscow artist
Smirnov, Alexander Y. Novosibirsk locomotive
Petrova (Dashevskaya) Natalia Mi Moscow researcher
Batueva Evgenia Perm Librarian
Levin, Mikhail Borisovich Moscow pensioner --
Velikson Boris Abramovich Paris university professor
Chebotarev Andrey Moscow teacher --
Nosovich Marina Guramovna Moscow housewife --
Redkin Dmitry Moscow programmer --
Pavel Zolotarev Moscow lawyer --
Andrei Podyryako Kiev a --
STEPANENKO Marina MOSCOW ENGINEER
Zelenin Olga Moscow Consultant
Havtorina Evgeniya Moscow student
Berson Herman Zalkovich St. Petersburg Engineer
Alina Gavrilova Kamyshin manager
Zhehovsky Vasily Pavlovich, \ "Moscow Ways of Communication
Berson Herman Zalkovich St. Petersburg engineer --
Akopian, Albert Mikhailovich Moscow journalist
Volchek Nikolai Moscow lawyer
Geyts Jacqueline Moscow housewife
Vladislav Braginsky Tel Aviv (Israel), Dnipropetrovsk (Ukraine) Manager
Alexandr M. Batishchev Moscow programmerPosted 27-09-2009 at 17:39 by Кирилл Сызранский -
(continued)
Signatures:
Havtorin Daniel A. Moscow student
Kruglov, Alexey Moscow student
Winter Tatiana Moscow poet, photographer
Alexander Silonov Moscow translator
Fishgoyt Irina Moscow teacher
Shergova Ksenia Moscow documentary filmmaker, teacher
Bardoli screenwriter Julian Berlin
Antonov Vladimir Moscow navigator
Vorontsov, Sergei Moscow artist
Alina S. Bodrov Moscow philologist
Gnezditsky Anastasia V. Moscow Project Manager
Bruni, Nina Lvovna Moscow student
Karakurchi YV Moscow director of educational projects
Schechtman Paul I. Moscow historian
Ryzhikov Gennady Antonovich St. Petersburg physicist
Kalechits Vadim I. Moscow Researcher
Emel'yanov Vladimir Vladimirov St. Petersburg Orientalist
Kartashov Alexey Izmailovitch Boston Scientific Officer
Iosub Vadim Petroich Minsk Economist
Zhbankov Vladimir Moscow writer
Roman G. Leibov Tartu, Estonia teacher --
Stabenova Eugene St. Petersburg illustrator --
Nadezhda N. Sokolov, Moscow editor --
Epiphany Tatiana Rostov-on-Don poet --
Tatiana Orlova, Moscow amateur generalists --
Nevsky Sergei Pavlovich Moscow Musician --
Artyom Bolgar Stepanovich Yaroslavl Software Developer
Semenov Evgeny Sergeyevich Moscow engineer --
Ityuzhov Alexey Yu Moscow musician --
Ivannikov Alexander Gennadevi Rostov-on-Don writer --
Natalia Fedorova Kiev student
Smirnov, Alexander Alexandrov, Moscow writer
Ivashkin Sergei Moscow administrator
Anton Averin Moscow official
Andrusenko Lidiya moscow journalist
Frumkin Alexander St. Petersburg Programmer
Anisimovich Konstantin Vladimir Moscow programmer
Frankeynshteyn David Isaakovich Moscow Entrepreneur
Trubetskoi Pyotr Andreyevich Moscow engineer
Elena Bondarenko, Kiev publisher
Kmit Andrey Minsk translator
Yuri I. Adamovich Minsk organic chemist --
Zelenkov Vadim Isaakovich Minsk physicist
Natalia G. Kondratiev Moscow pensioner
Martianov Alexey G. Moscow manager
Daria Rozensheyn Danovna Moscow translator
Smirnov, Stanislav Aleksandrov Moscow (businessman)
Solomatin Mikhail Moscow historian --
Malkin Tatiana Arkadievna Moscow journalist
Panasenko Alexander I. Odessa Artist
Dashevskii Grigory Mikhailovich Moscow translator
Vladimir Tuchkov Moscow writer
Pavel Borisov, Moscow translator
Maksim Sokolov Moscow journalist. Observer newspaper "Izvestia"
Simakov Valerian Moscow student --
Vera Yudintseva Moscow student
Simakov Valerian Moscow student
Belyakov Tatiana Moscow teacher of German
Maria Kotova Moscow teacher
Bugaenko Vadim O. Moscow mathematician
Sergei Zhandarov Gomel physicist
Biryulina Marina Svyatoslavovna St. Petersburg physicist
Alexander Rubinstein Milwaukee programmer
Marina K. Perchihina Moscow artist
Lunev, Igor St. Petersburg by the Executive
Vera Votintseva Tobolsk by Executive AP
Karabanov Ilya Y. Moscow designer
Kalashnik Daniil Vladimirovich Moscow indivilualny entrepreneur Bleyzer Yuriy Houston engineer
Sergey Alexanian Princeton pharmacists
Brazhkina Anna:: Prague historian, journalist
Viktorov, Igor:: Moscow lawyer
Salakhov Ilnur Saviryanovich Neftekamsk system administrator
Shulika Kirill O. Moscow Specialist Public Relations
Nathan Hershkowitz Albertovich:: Krasnoyarsk writer
Borogan Irina Moscow journalist
Stolyarov, Dmitriy B. Moscow graduado
Soboleva Natalia Moscow journalist
Rybakova Natalia Berlin, Germany mapmaker
Uvenchikov Ian I. Moscow Entrepreneur
Tashelman David Moiseevich Moscow manager of national projects Khmelnitsky, Dmitry Berlin architect
Rybakova Natalia Berlin, Germany mapmaker
Kapelman Iosif Davidovich Moscow Economist
Vitaly V. Filippov Nizhny Tagil journalist
Swarovski, Eugene Moscow Counsel
Maria Fedotova St. Petersburg translator
Yuri Dudorov Moscow Engineer
Gonshteyn Albert Izrailevych Moscow businessman
Margarita Kolegaeva U.S. business
Chernyak, Sergei Moscow lawyer
Cyril Kuzishchin Moscow Programmer
Alex Pilinsky Los Angeles, USA Manager
Lutz, George B. Moscow Entrepreneur
Molotov Andrey Moscow of entrepreneurs
Larisa Alexandrov Sankt-Peterburg Medical Technologist
Barkhudarov Michael R. Moscow engineer, programmer
Zharov Petr Ozersk Engineer
Leonid Romanov Novosibirsk, Russia Acton, U.S. physicist '
Ilyin Vladimir Omsk Researcher
Stepanenkov Alexander Benjamin Moscow driver
Mikhail Mishin Samara entrepreneur
Areg Danagulyan Boston physicist
Kuznetsov, Igor Moscow Researcher
Igor Dronov Albertovich Irkutsk entrepreneur
Irina Worthey San Francisco, CA USA Stanford University
Klyuev Eugene Copenhagen writer
Vasilkova Natalia Moscow translator
Dmitry Zlochevsky Moscow Programmer
Vasilkova Natalia Moscow translator
Vasilkova Natalia Moscow translator
Dmitry Zlochevsky Moscow Programmer
Edward Izikson Toronto, Canada engineer
Piunov Daniel Markovich Moscow translator, student
Resnick Nina Moscow philologist
Beguiling Nikolai Moscow translator
Maria Yanushkevich Moscow editor
Maxim Shevchenko Leonardovich Moscow journalist
Dudayev RY Moscow is not a profession
Bonch-Osmolovskaya Tatiana Boris Moscow-Sydney philologist
Ziryukin Yakov Novokuznetsk Business
Makarowa M. Siedlce studentka
Fedorenko Denis V. Ufa cynologist
Istomin Toren II of Kiev, Moscow Chairman of trade union social workers
Moiseev, Mikhail V. Novosibirsk manager
Agapcheva Tatyana Ufa designer
Alexander G. Petrov, Moscow diplomat
Istomin Olga Torenovna Moscow social workers
Kornilov, Valery Yu Moskau manager
Evgen'evich Ariel Shulman Moscow tailor
Natalia Vassilieva Moscow engineer
Ada Aronovna Malmut Moscow prostitute
Kuzmina Olga Ekaterinburg Engineer
Mishina Marina Moscow theater employee, editor Doroshchenko LG Moscow translator
Klimov, Mikhail Mendelevich Moscow Writer
Gorynin Andrey Mytishhi Engineer
Andrievsky Viktor Vladimirov Moscow engineer
Avigdor Natanovich Tuhverderber Moscow plumber-th digit
Green Michael Toronto programmer /analyst
Kobylin Pavel Pavlovich Moscow programmer
Zakharov Vladimir Anatolievich Moskva /Tokyo Photographer
Konstantin Orlov Tyumen IT-specialist
Pockmarked Alexander D. Severomorsk radio engineer
Vladimir druk.Nyu Nork writer
samuel nikols new york worker
Vsevolod Luchansky Novosibirsk doctor
Mishchenko Elena Novosibirsk teacher
Mike Sigal Raleigh entrepreneur
Lutz, George B. Moscow Entrepreneur
Ronin Mark L. Moscow was not identified
Pavel Zelenin Moscow science, education
Drowned Alexander Romanovich Odessa designerPosted 27-09-2009 at 17:40 by Кирилл Сызранский -
(continued)
Signatures:
Pavlovets Michael G. Moscow teacher
Sergei Yakovlev Moscow programmer
Smirnov Dmitry Moscow unemployed
Nommo Anna St. Petersburg translator
Yuri Ilyin Moscow journalist
Koloskov Alexander Kameshkovo Vladimir Region Engineer
Alexei Panich Moscow Counsel
Drandin Igor Moscow candidate in the Moscow City Duma deputy, member of the board IHO Solidarity
Ronin Mark L. St. Petersburg's leading specialist
Osokin Michael G. Vladimir chairman of the regional organization VOI.
Amirdzhanov Moscow mathematician Grigory Petrovich
Ermakov Sergey Mikhailovich Moscow Engineer
Osokin Michael G. Vladimir chairman Vladimir regional organization VOI
Alexei Kabanov Vyacheslavovvich Moscow cafe
Popova Nadezhda Moscow engineer
Yartsev Mikhail Moscow doctor
Kharitonov Larisa Moscow Editor-bibliographer
Igor Kuchuk Philadelphia Programmer
Igor Lomakin Moscow Programmer
Andreeva Akhmatova Moscow IT-specialist
Chikineva Oksana Novosibirsk programmer
Heifetz Yuri B. (Boris B Moscow doctor, therapist, writer Akhiyarova Olga Dyurtyuli, RB Accountant
Shulga Elena moscow doctor
Elena Mokeeva Moscow artist
Denis V. Petrenko, Moscow cook. Korean cuisine.
Vitaly G. Moscow engineer
Keren Pevzner Ashkelon writer, daughter, granddaughter and great-granddaughter of the enemies of the people
Muravsky Valentin Tihonovich St. Petersburg reabilitirovany
Churilin Maxim Moscow mathematician
Fix Elena Jerusalem journalist, translator
Botvinnik Alexander Aaronovitch Novosibirsk programmer
Alexander Abramov, Moscow invalid
Rabkin Boris Moscow pensioner
Matusevich Anatoly Vikentievich Minsk engineer
Belsky, Konstantin V. Moscow Chief Editor NEWSmsk.com
Kiseleva, Lyubov Tartu, Estonia philologist
Khvoshchinski Alexander Valerevi Moscow lawyer
Cychev Vladimir Moscow engineer
Kanaeva Olga Moscow serves
ZAKHARCHUK Andrey Moscow programmer
Kiselev, Alexander V. St. Petersburg mathematician
Yampol'skaya Alla S. Moscow economist
Smirnych Sergey V. St. Petersburg philosopher
Timofei Kudryashov Moscow Engineering
Kravets Alla Pavlovna Samara Accountant
Melnikov, Dmitry, Moscow Vice-chairman of the Association of Christian "Unification Church"
Samursky Cyril Moscow journalist
Samursky Cyril Moscow journalist
Mastyukin Vladimir Petersburg manager
Yuryeva Natalia Lithuania Silale physicist
Chizhov Tatiana Khabarovsk designer
Mark B. Shoikhet Moscow mathematician
Alexey Rusakov Moscow marketer
Aleksandr Loginov Moscow writer
Eugene Holodnikova Moscow analyst
Popova Anna Moscow student
Smolko Alexander V. Moscow sound
Fomin Alexey Moscow Project Manager
Belinskaya Marina Tahirovna Moscow engineer
Bel'skaia Ioannina Yurievna Moscow Editor in Chief
Pavlinov Igor Yakovlevich Moscow Science
Futornyi Vitaly Sergeevich, the Cakramento cleric
Nikitin Alexey Moscow student
Alekseev, Dmitry V. St. Petersburg Controller
Belkin GE Moscow pensioner
Shamaytis Sergey St. Petersburg Engineer
Ermakov, Alexander V. Moscow designer
Gurevich, Mikhail Borisovich Moscow SNA
Supyan YAkov Jerusalem programmist
Alexander Silin Moscow businessman
Dunsky Julia I. Moscow Psychologist
Kopylov Valery Yaroslavl Programmer
Lustina Vasily V. Voronezh programmer
Petrenko Vladimir Krasnodar insurer
Mysin Alexander Krasnodar Engineer
Chachko LM Moscow pensioner
Nozhenko Sergei Moscow Consultant
Hawks Gordei A. Moscow (economist, sociologist)
Nekrasov Alexey Moscow businessman
Plets (Lasovskaya) Helena Petrovna Cologne Translator
Yamborisov Alexei Moscow Estimator
Sharapov, Ilya Moscow Designer
Malkin Sergei Saint-Petersburg sysadmin
Boguslavsky, Alexander Mikhailov Yekaterinburg Engineer
Nina Polish Moscow Accountant
Berman Michael Daniilovich Moscow IT
Rusakov Alexander Pimenovich Moscow teacher
Zgoruyko Sergey Saratov Entrepreneur
Sychev Andrei Semenovich Kharkiv Programmer
Denis moscow Work
Gennady Ivanov Moscow business
Eugene Rokhlin Moscow builder
Alexey Kochetkov Moscow IT
Klimova Anna Moscow. Once again, I am ashamed for our country economist
Blinov Linda Alexandrovna Vladivostok student
Sergey Nikiforov Moscow webdesigner
Vereshchagin Yuri Moscow student
Aleksandr Olech Vilnius IT
Polina Ivanova Alekseevna Moscow lawyer
Kretov Dmitri A. Petrozavodsk System Administrator
Shunin Mikhail Moscow Information Technology
Absheron Maxim Moscow Counsel]
Yuri Sidorov Moscow lawyer
Zinoviev Eugine Moscow lawyer
Shtovba Valentin Yurievich Moscow Engineer IT
Zavershneva Katherina Moscow teacher
Kovalev Artem O. Odintsovo Paralegal
kyvelidi vassili moskva geolog
Lukin, Pavel historian
Naumov, Evgeni New York federal employee
Sergey Ponomarev Moscow engineer-economist
Babichenko Moscow Science
Boldyrev, Ivan Moscow teacher
Barabanov Nikolay E. Moscow manager
Varlygin Vladislav Dmitrievich, Moscow Kommersant builder
Arkhipov, Vladimir Mikhailovich, Moscow pensioner
Kunin, Aleksandr Petrovich Moscow programmer
Xenia Poluektova Cremer Jerusalem doctoral student
Zubkovskaya ON Budapest student
Chernov, Andrey G. Arkhangelsk Engineer
Semenov VV Moskva programmer
kirsh valeriy vladimirovich moscow teacher
Braginsky Andrei Alexandrov Moscow banker
Smirnov Konstantin Moscow programmer
Milov Oleg Teplice, Czech Republic Entrepreneur
Andrei Kharchenko Moscow cameraman
Evgeny Arkhipov Gertsevna Moscow pensioner
Vasilieva NS Moscow banker
Danilova NI Moscow journalist
Migunov Alexander, Moscow, ashamed and sad pensioner
Logvinova Svetlana Moscow Manager
Kryuchkov Elena Moscow logistician
Zubkov Artem Moscow artist
Zenkov Igor Moscow manager
Mikhail E. Panov Moscow IT
Zenkov Igor Moscow manager
Semenov, Vladimir, Moscow, no one ..
Zenkov Igor Moscow Manager
Yuri Khristoforov Sereevich St. Peteruburg Engineer
Palto Alexander Kiev Programmer
Durnovo Grigory Moscow journalist
Bakakin Maxim S. Ivanovo Engineer
Popov VA Stalin, the most Russian of them all! (menedzher_)
Chebotarev Andrey Kiev journalist
Fischer, Alexander Emmanuilovich Moscow Musician
Levshni Igor Moscow editor
Litvin Alexander Leonidovna Moscow editor
Semenov Sergey Mitrofanovich Voronezh mathematician
Ryzhova Elena Moscow philologist
Loshmanov Roman A. Moscow Editor
Onik Leon Leonovich Moscow economist
Anna Egorova Moscow
Andrei Gusarov St. Petersburg writer, screenwriter
Sinko Julia Moscow IT
Feigelman Artem Markovic Nizhny Novgorod student
Eagle Dmitri Kiev mathematician /programmer
Glazkova Ekaterina Moscow Technician
Fedichkin Alexei Moscow Interpreter
Duganov Alexander V. St. Petersburg IT
Ruben E. Arutyunyan Moscow Programmer
Chernyak, Jan A. Paris businessman
Fyodor Kuznetsov Moscow businessman
Pukhov Vyacheslav Semenovich Moscow pensioner
Kornev Ekaterina V. St. Petersburg translator
Pravikov Alexander Moscow manager
Stepanishchev TN Tartu Teacher
Shaposhnikov Vasily Andreyevich Moscow Bank Employee
Sharkich for the inscription is the story Balashiha Specialist
Zolotarev Ksenia Voronezh philologist, teacher
Soldatkina Yanina V. Moscow KK n., Associate professor, professor of Russian literature of the twentieth century
Generozova Elena Moscow manager
Kagalnyak Marina Radievna St. Petersburg engineer
Kafidova Natalya Moscow philologist
Guskov Andrey Moscow Engineer
Bald patches Igor Moscow teacher
Rudich Maxim O. Moscow businessman
Vitkovs'ka Julia Nikolaevna Moscow psychologist, playwright
Khoroshavin Karelia Sergey journalistPosted 27-09-2009 at 17:41 by Кирилл Сызранский -
(continued)
Signatures:
Gavrilova Sofia Andreyevna Moscow cartographer
Efimov Alexander Moscow Programmer
Andrei Gavrilov, Moscow journalist
Savinykh Moscow journalist Anna
Anna Vishnevskaya Munich, Germany programmer
Fetisov Auntie Moscow pensioner
Arkhipov Larissa V. Moscow psychologist
Kira Litvin Mikhaylovna Moscow mathematician
Konyukhova Elena moscow dokumentoved
Ryzhova Elena Moscow philologist
Yakovlev Stepan Evgen'evich Moscow Webmaster
Botev Maria Vyatka journalist
Zaslavsky, Ilya Mikhailovich Tula PR-manager b
Maria Kazakova Moscow IT Specialist
VILLA Marika Moskva /Berlin Journalistin
Otmorskaya, Alexander S. St Petersburg actress
Voronkov Konstantin V. Moscow member of the Central Council of the party "Fair Russia"
Avilova Katia Saint-Petersburg
Paul Feinstein Berlin artist
Danilov, Gleb A. Moscow servant of the church
Rykov Olga Petersburg designer
Velavichyute Olga Vilnius philologist
Alexander Ulyanov Kaliningrad Engineer
Rozovskaya Yanna Abramovna Moscow pensioner
Mikhail Ustinov Moscow programmer
Mitzel Maya E. New York Teacher
Nikitinskaya Tatiana Glebovna moscow interpreter
Kondratenko Halina St. Petersburg. bibliographer
Dargolts Irina L. Moscow engineer
Paulina Pevzner Marburg /Germany programmer
Alex Latsis Ottovich Moscow programmer
Shainyan Natalia Bagratovna Moscow Researcher
Zimakov Vitaliy Moscow manager
Alexander L. Polishchuk Moscow enonomist
Danilov Andrey Kostroma Pastor
Kozlova Irina Moscow serves
Fedotov Alexandra Moscow editor
Vishnevskaya, Nina Efimovna Munich Head Club
Zhitsky Stanislav Moscow designer
Fedotov Alexandra Moscow editor
Minkin Zoellick Semenovich Israel Economist, Retired
Nechvolodov Igor hare ban posts freaks! Reporter
Polyanskaya Darya Mikhailovna Moscow manager
Julia Ionushayte Vyatka (Kirov) journalist
Ryskin Nikita Saratov physicist
Poggio Viktoria Moscow editor
Murahin Alexander St. Petersburg physicist
Trofimchuk Gregory L. Moscow Head of Marketing Department Tatiana Berezhnaya Moscow teacher
Gabe Olga St. Peteruburg translator
Shishkov Anna St. Petersburg housewife
Ekaterina Gavrilova, Vladimir Moscow artist
Bassenko Svetlana Moscow economist
Kuzhavsky Sergey Moscow designer
Vyacheslav Klimovich Gomel (Belarus), musician, writer-performer
Batu Boris V. Rostov-on-Don, entrepreneur, social and political activist
Bukina OI Yaroslavl Accountant
Anisimova, Natalia Moscow doctor
Lonosov Moscow political analyst Igor Andreevich
Vladimir Yegorov St. Petersburg designer
Uhlin Dmitry Moscow writer
Felix Evgen'evich Maksimov Moscow journalist, writer
Sorokina Elena Moscow Poligrafist
Markunina Julia G. Moscow editor
Krasil'shchik Joseph Semenovich, Professor, Moscow State Humanitarian University
Bershidsky Yuri Germanovich Moscow editor
Golyaeva Irina Odessa journalist
Balandin Natalya Petrovna Moscow Film critic
Radzievskii Aleksandr Yul'evich Moscow linguist
Arana ES Moscow teacher, translator
Lesskis Irina Moscow psychologist
Kharitonov, Leonid Romanovich Moscow teacher, translator
Eugene Kogan Moscow editor
Shainyan Karen Bagratovich Moscow journalist
Aksenova Irina Voronezh civil society activist
Greseva Galina Moscow art critic
Ponomareva, Maria Moscow designer
Rykov Olga Petersburg designer
Julia's head chemist, Moscow
Semakin Anton N. Perm Designer
Artem Nazarov Vilnius student
Stas Andrei Tomsk informatics teacher, programmer Noskov, Andrey Moscow programmer
Anton Terekhov Moscow designer
Vyglovsky Andrei Moscow m
Father Innocent Kostroma (Izhechev Sergei Anatatolevich.)
Vladimir Alla Novosibirsk lawyer podpoklvnik Justice Ryabov Alexander Lvov Bronislavovsi Researcher
Luzhbina Vladimir Omsk designer
Tishkovskaya Julia I. Moscow surdopedagog
Shlin Anastasia Hamburg IT project manager
Venyavkin Ilya G. Moscow historian of literature
Semenov, Alexander Alexandrov, Moscow engineer assistant
Comova Lyubov Moscow pensioner
Lemak Maria Stepanovna Moscow neurobiologist
Gol'bert Felix Israel. Petach Tikva. Doctor
Chaplinskaya Paulina St. Petersburg designer
Yuri Belogortsev Obninsk programmer
Yarzhombek TS moscow illustrator
Egorushkina Anna A. Moscow Specialist
Rossiev Yaroslav Y. Moscow corrector
Godunov Roman Viktorovich Moscow designer
Matveeva, Evgenia Moscow student
Tansky, Mikhail Mikhailovich, Moscow Designer
Lyakhov YB Moscow engineer
Kurchatov Lopota Montreal Programmer
Postonogov Oleg Ekaterinburg designer
Sukalskaya Maria G. Moscow editor
Baru Mikhail Borisovich Moscow chemist
Kalinina Marina Moscow translator
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Chancellor of Cambridge physicist Vasily Pavlovich
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Eugene Kramarova, a member of the International Association of combat racial intolerance and punitive psychiatryPosted 27-09-2009 at 17:42 by Кирилл Сызранский