Vera Broido  

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Vera Broido (1907—2004) was a Russian born writer and a chronicler of the Russian Revolution as one who grew up through it and lost her mother to its aftermath.

Life

Vera Broido was born in St Petersburg in 1907, the daughter of two Russian Jewish revolutionaries. In 1914 when Vera was seven, her family was plunged into a life of isolation and fear when her mother, prominent Menshevik Eva Broido, was sentenced to exile in Western Siberia for taking a stand against the war and the Bolsheviks. The memory of her stay in Siberia and her experiences there never left her. She left the wastes of Siberia for Germany, thanks to the efforts of her father Mark. She never saw her mother Eva again and was later told that she had been executed.

During her time in Berlin in the 1920s Vera met avant garde artist and Dadaist turned society photographer Raoul Hausmann and became his lover and muse, living in a Ménage à trois with him and his wife Hedwig in the fashionable Charlottenburg district of Berlin between 1928 and 1934.

In 1941 Vera married British historian Norman Cohn. They had one son Nik Cohn, who went on to become a writer. When she came to the UK with her new husband Vera carved a niche for herself among Russian emigres and went on to write books on women in revolution, the Mensheviks and her strongest work, an autobiography looking back on her childhood in Russia and her journey through Europe to the UK where, after a short sojourn in Derry, in the North of Ireland she eventually made her home first in London and later in Wood End, Hertfordshire. She died peacefully in 2004 at the age of 97.

Works

  • Apostles into Terrorists: Women and the Revolutionary Movement in the Russia of Alexander II. Maurice Temple Smith Ltd 1978
  • Lenin and the Mensheviks: The Persecution of Socialists under Bolshevism. Westview Press, 1987.
  • Daughter of the Revolution: A Russian Girlhood Remembered. Constable, 1999.

As translator & editor:

  • Broido, Eva L’vovna. Memoirs of a Revolutionary. Oxford University Press, 1967.





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Vera Broido" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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