Leopold Labedz

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Leopold Labedz (January 22, 1920 Simbirsk, Russia - March 22, 1993 London) was a conservative Anglo-Polish historian of the Soviet Union.

Labedz was born to a Polish Jewish doctor in Russia. The family soon returned to Warsaw and the young Labedz decided to follow his father into the medical profession. He studied medicine in Paris. In 1939, he fled to the Soviet zone of occupation and was imprisoned by the Soviets in the Gulag. Many of Labedz's relatives died in the Holocaust.

He left the Soviet Union in 1942 as part of the Polish Army led by General Władysław Anders. After the war he studied at Bologna University before settling in London, where he studied at the London School of Economics. Strongly anti-communist, Labedz edited Survey journal and headed the London office of Committee for the Defense of Workers known by its Polish abbreviation as KOR.

Labedz often campaigned for the Solidarity union in Poland, and for political prisoners in the Soviet Union. Labedz was one of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's principal champions in the West and often defended the Russian writer against the charge of anti-semitism.

[edit] Works

  • The future of communist society edited by Walter Laqueur & Leopold Labedz, New York : Praeger, 1962.
  • Polycentrism : the new factor in international communism edited by Walter Laqueur and Leopold Labedz, New York : Praeger, 1962.
  • Revisionism : essays on the history of Marxist ideas edited by L. Labedz, London : G. Allen and Unwin, 1962.
  • Literature and revolution in Soviet Russia, 1917-62, a symposium, edited by Max Hayward and Leopold Labedz, London, Oxford University Press, 1963.
  • The Sino-Soviet conflict : eleven radio discussions by L. Labedz & George Urban, London : Bodley Head, 1965, 1964.
  • International communism after Khrushchev edited by Leopold Labedz Cambridge, M.I.T. Press 1965.
  • The State of Soviet Studies edited by Walter Laqueur and Leopold Labedz, Cambridge, Mass., M.I.T. Press 1965.
  • Solzhenitsyn : a documentary record Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England ; Baltimore : Penguin, 1974.
  • The use and abuse of Sovietology edited by Melvin J. Lasky New Brunswick, N.J., U.S.A. : Transaction Publishers, 1989.

[edit] Reference

  • Shils, Edward Portraits : A Gallery of Intellectuals, University Of Chicago Press 1997.


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