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  1. Edward Samoilovich Kuznetsov ( Russian: Эдуа́рд Само́йлович Кузнецо́в, Hebrew: אדוארד קוזנצוב; born 29 January 1939) is a Soviet-Israeli dissident, refusenik, journalist, and writer. One of the leaders of the 1970 Dymshits–Kuznetsov hijacking affair, Kuznetsov's case drew international ...

    • .mw-parser-output .nobold{font-weight:normal}אדוארד קוזנצוב
    • Moscow State University
  2. The court sentenced two defendants, Mark Dymshits, age 43, a former military pilot, and Eduard Kuznetsov, age 30, a dissident who had already done seven years in the gulag, to death by firing...

  3. Eduard Kuznetsov may refer to: Eduard Kuznetsov (dissident) (born 1939), Soviet dissident, human rights activist. Eduard Kuznetsov (politician) (born 1967), Russian politician. Eduard Kuznetsov (pilot) [ ru] (1928—2007), Soviet test pilot, Hero of the Soviet Union. Category: Human name disambiguation pages.

  4. Eduard Kuznetsov - Biography. Eduard Kuznetsov (Russian language: Эдуард Кузнецов; born in Moscow, 1939) is a Soviet dissident, human rights activist, and writer. In 1961, Kuznetsov was arrested for the first time and served seven years in Soviet prisons for making overtly political speeches in poetry readings at Mayakovsky Square ...

  5. 14 de jun. de 2014 · One such refusenik was Eduard Kuznetsov, born 1939, who was first arrested in 1961 for dissident activities – including in the form of politicized poetry readings. He did seven years for that offense, which did not deter him from organizing the ill-fated hijacking attempt.

  6. 18 de jun. de 2010 · In the end, Mark Dymshits and Eduard Kuznetsov, the two leaders, were sentenced to face a firing squad. Worldwide reaction to the news was immediate. Overnight, the small cause of Soviet Jewry —...

  7. 19 de ago. de 2013 · 19 August 2013. They Chose Freedom, a four-part documentary film written and produced by Russian historian and television journalist Vladimir V. Kara-Murza, tells the story of the dissident movement in the USSR from its emergence in the 1950s until the collapse of the Soviet dictatorship in 1991.