David Dallin

David Dallin
Born David J. Dallin
1889
Rogachev, White Russia
Died 1962 (aged 7273)
New York
Cause of death unknown
Nationality American
Occupation writer and lecturer
Spouse(s) Eugenia, Lilia Estrin Dallin
Children Alexander Dallin

David J. Dallin (1889 – February 21, 1962[1]) was a one-time Menshevik[2] leader and later a writer and lecturer on Soviet affairs, who helped Victor Kravchenko defect in the 1940s.

Youth

Dallin was born in Rogachev, White Russia, in 1889.[3]

He studied at the University of St. Petersburg from 1907 to 1909, when he faced arrest and imprisonment for anti-tsarist political activity. After two years of imprisonment, he fled Russia to Germany. He studied at the University of Berlin and obtained his doctorate in Economics from the University of Heidelberg in 1913.[3]

Career

Menshevik Politician

Following the February Revolution of 1917, Dallin returned to Russia. He won election to the central committee of the Menshevik group of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party and represented the group on the Moscow City Soviet from 1918 to 1921. The Bolsheviks arrested him a first time in 1920, and he avoided a second arrest in 1922 by fleeing back to Germany. He stayed in Germany until the Nazis forced him to leave in 1935, when he settled in Poland.[1] He stayed in Poland until the outbreak of World War II in 1939, when he moved to the United States.[3]

Kravchenko affair

Through a friend of his wife Lilia, Dallin came to welcome Victor Kravchenko in their home in New York in January 1944. The next day, Kravchenko revealed his wish to defect from the Soviet embassy. Dallin encouraged Kravchenko to defect. He approached the former U.S. ambassador to Russia, William C. Bullitt, whom he had known in Moscow, for advice. (Bullitt had also been involved with another Soviet defector, Walter Krivitsky.) Bullitt called Attorney General Francis Biddle and then extricated himself from the matter. Biddle brought in the FBI. In March, Dallin met Kravchenko in Pennsylvania, where the latter had an official trip. Dallin advised Kravchenko about his contact with the FBI. Kravchenko followed his advice and contacted the FBI, who interviewed him three times in Washington before the end of the month. Dallin and his wife then met Kravchenko when he arrived in New York again in April as a defector. Dallin advised Kravchenko to tell his story to the New York Times as soon as possible: Kravchenko began drafting his story that first night. The next day, Dallin brought New York Times labor journalist Joseph Shaplen to meet Kravchenko. When Shaplen and Kravchenko did not get along, Dallin turned to a former United Press correspondent to Moscow, Eugene Lyons, by then editor of The American Mercury. He also introduced him to Isaac Don Levine and Max Eastman. (Levine had been Krivitsky's co-writer of the memoir In Stalin's Secret Service.) Lyons, Levine, and Eastman would form the core group of co-writers and co-editors of Kravchenko's best-selling memoir, I Chose Freedom; Dallin would form part of a second tier of supporters.[4]

New Leader

Dallin joined the staff of the left-wing anti-communist magazine, The New Leader in New York, where he worked for nearly twenty years. (Founded in 1924 by the Socialist Party of America, The New Leader had come under executive editor Samuel Levitas, a Russian Menshevik, after which the magazine left the SPA but remained left.[5]) He wrote numerous books and newspaper and magazine articles on economic and political subjects, particularly Soviet affairs.[3]

Dallin also was a visiting professor of political science at the University of Pennsylvania.[3]

Personal life

Family

Earlier in life, Dallin married a woman named Eugenia. In New York, he left Eugenia and lived with Lilia Ginzberg Estrin before marrying her by 1944 (when she became known as Lilia Estrin Dallin), when the Dallins became involved in Kravchenko's defection.[4]

Dallin and Eugenia had a son, Alexander Dallin, born overseas, who later became a prominent academic expert in Soviet studies.

Death

Dallin died in New York in 1962.[1] He was survived by his second wife and son.[3]

Impact

As American historian John Earl Haynes, Jr., has written:

Dallin and Boris Nicolaevsky's 1947 Forced Labor in Soviet Russia (New Haven: Yale University Press) had been a pioneering study of the Soviet labor camp system, well received in the academic world at the time, but again in 1960s it was retroactivley discredited among most American scholars due to its use of defector testimony and Dallin’s Menshevick origins. Indeed, Dallin and Nicolaevsky's 1947 book was so thorough erased from American academic memory that the appearance of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's The Gulag Archipelago in the mid-1970s came as a unexpected shock.[6]

However, New Left academics had come to dismiss Dallin’s works by the mid-1960s due to his citations of testimony from defectors and exiles plus congressional and FBI investigations, all seen as anti-communist. "Such evidence was increasingly distrusted, and Dallin’s Menshevik past was taken as reason for skepticism as well," Haynes has noted.[7]

Works

See also

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 3 "David Dallin, Jewish Expert on Russia, Dies at 72; Wrote 10 Books". Jewish Telegraph Agency. 23 February 1962. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
  2. Lewis, Paul (27 July 2000). "Alexander Dallin, 76, Dies; Precise Historian of Russia". New York Times. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "David J. Dallin Papers" (PDF). New York Public Library. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
  4. 1 2 Kern, Gary (2007). The Kravchenko Case: One Man's War on Stalin. Enigma Books. pp. 42 (marriage to Lilia); 42–51, 54–58, and 84–93 (involvement in Kravchenko defection and memoirs).
  5. McGrath, Charles (23 January 2006). "A Liberal Beacon Burns Out". New York Times. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
  6. "FN#3 - The Historiography of Soviet Espionage and American Communism: From Separate to Converging Paths". JohnEarlHaynes.org. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  7. "The Historiography of Soviet Espionage and American Communism: From Separate to Converging Paths". JohnEarlHaynes.org. Retrieved 4 August 2012.

External sources

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