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160 pages, Paperback
First published October 1, 1976
"Is it possible or impossible to transmit the experience of those who have suffered to those who have yet to suffer? Can one part of humanity learn from the bitter experience of another or can it not? Is it possible or impossible to warn someone of danger?" (47)This is a collection of speeches that Solzhenitsyn gave in the United States and the United Kingdom in the mid-1970s. Solzhenitsyn had moved to the U.S. after his Soviet citizenship was revoked in 1974 (having won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1970). The speeches were given on various occasions, as he was invited to address different organizations in the U.S. and, later, in the U.K. (mostly the BBC). The theme is clear and inspires the title: he is giving a Warning to the West about the dangers of totalitarianism in general and about communism in particular. He thinks that the West is being too complacent, have given up fighting for their freedom.
Some of the developments that he discusses are topical and mostly of historical interest; but there are great passages here and there, especially about the history and workings (and dangers to humanity) of communism as he experienced it. It's interesting to compare what was happening in the mid to late 70s to today (one really can't help but compare). In particular, there is the complacency that those in the West felt with regard to their freedom. Once you've had freedom for a while and have gotten used to it, it's difficult to imagine yourself losing it, and harder still to realize when you (slowly—that's the problem!) are in danger of irreversible losses. Solzhenitsyn uses a Russian proverb to drive home the point: Catch on you will when you're tumbling downhill.