Members of the Belarusian opposition take part in the authorized march "Grandfathers" in Minsk, devoted to the commemoration of forefathers.01.11.2015#2730427
Members of the Belarusian opposition take part in the authorized march "Grandfathers" in Minsk, devoted to the commemoration of forefathers.01.11.2015#2730412
Members of the Belarusian opposition take part in the authorized march "Grandfathers" in Minsk, devoted to the commemoration of forefathers.01.11.2015#2730411
Members of the Belarusian opposition take part in the authorized march "Grandfathers" in Minsk, devoted to the commemoration of forefathers.01.11.2015#2730410
Members of the Belarusian opposition take part in the authorized march "Grandfathers" in Minsk, devoted to the commemoration of forefathers.01.11.2015#2730409
Members of the Belarusian opposition take part in the authorized march "Grandfathers" in Minsk, devoted to the commemoration of forefathers.01.11.2015#2730408
Members of the Belarusian opposition take part in the authorized march "Grandfathers" devoted to the Forefathers' Remembrance Day.01.11.2015#2730407
A sculpture of St. George on the dome of the Globe Clock on Manezhnaya Square. Back: a highrise building on Kudrinskaya Square.09.05.2015#2622650
Participant of the Russian March, a rally of nationalist organizations in St Petersburg.04.11.2013#2313481
Students of Magnitogorsk Industrial College heading for lessons. Chelyabinsk Region. 2005.20.02.2005#774355
A residential building at the Kotelnicheskaya Embankment in Moscow. Designed by architects Dmitry Chechulin and Andrei Rostkovsky and chief engineer Lev Gokhman.01.09.1996#6417890
The Shalyapin Estate and the high-rise on Kudrinskaya Square, built in 1948-1954 by architects Mikhail Posokhin and Ashot Mndoyants and designer M.Volkhonsky, as seen from Novinsky Boulevard in Moscow.29.08.1995#8262974
A high rise building on Krasnye Vorota Square, Moscow, that houses the Moscow Interbank Currency Exchange (MICEX). The building was designed by architects Alexei Dushkin and Boris Mezentsev and constructed in 1947-1952.01.09.1994#3133948
Participants lay flowers at Joseph Stalin's grave at the Kremlin Wall during a rally staged on Stalin's remembrance day on March 5, 1993.05.03.1993#3230223
Participants lay flowers at Joseph Stalin's grave at the Kremlin Wall during a rally staged on Stalin's remembrance day on March 5, 1992.05.03.1993#3230222
Participants of a rally held on Joseph Stalin's remembrance day on March 5, 1993 near the Lenin's Mausoleum.05.03.1993#3230221
Participants of a rally marking 40th anniversary Joseph Stalin's death held on his remembrance day on March 5, 1993, near the Lenin Museum.05.03.1993#3230220
Leningradskaya Hotel (now Hilton Moscow Leningradskaya) built on Komsomolskaya Square in 1949-1954. Designed by architects Leonid Polyakov and Alexander Boretsky.02.02.1993#8156309
A rally near Gorky Park in Moscow organized by the National Society "Unity for Leninism and Communistic Ideals", Bolshevik Platform of the Soviet Communist Party and others. Participants of the rally.06.07.1992#3221295
Participants in a rally staged on Joseph Stalin's remembrance day on March 5, 1992 near the Lenin Museum on Revolution Square in Moscow.05.03.1992#3049829
Participants in a rally staged on Joseph Stalin's remembrance day on March 5, 1992 near the Lenin Museum on Revolution Square in Moscow.05.03.1992#3049828
Participants in a rally staged on Joseph Stalin's remembrance day on March 5, 1992 near the Lenin Museum on Revolution Square in Moscow.05.03.1992#3049827
Participants lay flowers at Joseph Stalin's grave at the Kremlin Wall during a rally staged on Stalin's remembrance day on March 5, 1992.05.03.1992#3049826
November 7, 1992. Rally on Lubyanskaya Square organized by Moscow's democratic public in memory of the red terror victims.07.11.1991#3054771
Tents outside the Bakhchysarai City Executive Council building. Crimean Tatars demand legalization of their return to the lands that used to be their property. Crimean Region, Ukrainian SSR.10.10.1991#8329308
A roundtable meeting on inter-ethnic issues attended by representatives of Crimean Tatars. Ukrainian SSR.10.10.1991#8225277
A rally demanding the return of Crimean Tatars to the land that used to be their property. Ukrainian SSR.10.10.1991#8227525
The Day of Soviet Political Prisoners. The Solovetsky Stone is a memorial to victims of political repressions in the Soviet Union. It is installed at Lubyanka Square opposite the former People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD) building, later KGB. Unveiling ceremony.30.10.1990#3054769
Human rights activist, priest Gleb Yakunin (center of the second row) performing a service for the victims of the Stalinist political repressions at a stone from the then Solovetsky special-purpose camp (the Solovetsky Monastery) set up in front of the KGB headquarters in Lubyanskaya Square, Moscow, on October 30, 1990.30.10.1990#749019
The residential building on Kotelnicheskaya Embankment is one of the seven Stalinist skyscrapers built in Moscow in 1947-1957 by architects Dmitry Chechulin and Andrei Rostkovsky, and design engineer Leonid Gokhman.05.07.1990#8289327
A model of a monument to Stalinist repression victims on display at a contest exhibition, at the Alexei Shchusev Architecture Museum in Moscow.01.02.1990#6753050
A model of a monument to Stalinist repression victims on display at a contest exhibition, at the Alexei Shchusev Architecture Museum in Moscow.01.02.1990#6753047
In 1944, during the Great Patriotic War, Crimean Tatars were forcefully relocated from the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic to Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan, based on several incidents of involvement of Crimean Tatars in collaborationist squads that fought on Nazi Germany's side and cooperation with occupationist authorities, although international law did not stipulate that an entire ethnic group can bear collective liability for actions of its members. In November 1989, the USSR Supreme Soviet recognized the deportation of Crimean Tatars in 1944 unlawful and criminal. The Crimean Tatars deported during the war started to return to their home region. Y.Ablyamitov works as a tractor operator. Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. Crimean Region.27.12.1989#6558234
A rally to commemorate victims of illegal repressions in the USSR organized by Memorial, an international historical, awareness-raising, human rights and charitable society, on Dzerzhinsky Square outside the KGB building in Moscow. October 30, 1989. Memorial candle.30.10.1989#8253825
A rally to commemorate victims of illegal repressions in the USSR organized by Memorial, an international historical, awareness-raising, human rights and charitable society, on Dzerzhinsky Square outside the KGB building in Moscow. October 30, 1989. Memorial candle.30.10.1989#8253824
In 1944, during the Great Patriotic War, Crimean Tatars were forcefully relocated from the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic to Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan, based on several incidents of involvement of Crimean Tatars in collaborationist squads that fought on Nazi Germany's side and cooperation with occupationist authorities, although international law did not stipulate that an entire ethnic group can bear collective liability for actions of its members. In November 1989, the USSR Supreme Soviet recognized the deportation of Crimean Tatars in 1944 unlawful and criminal. The Crimean Tatars deported during the war started to return to their home region. An improvised camp of the relocatees. Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. Crimean Region.27.10.1989#6558245
In 1944, during the Great Patriotic War, Crimean Tatars were forcefully relocated from the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic to Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan, based on several incidents of involvement of Crimean Tatars in collaborationist squads that fought on Nazi Germany's side and cooperation with occupationist authorities, although international law did not stipulate that an entire ethnic group can bear collective liability for actions of its members. In November 1989, the USSR Supreme Soviet recognized the deportation of Crimean Tatars in 1944 unlawful and criminal. The Crimean Tatars deported during the war started to return to their home region. The relatives of E.Shapchi from Uzbekistan inquire about life in Crimea before deciding on returning to their ancestral territory. Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.27.10.1989#6558244
In 1944, during the Great Patriotic War, Crimean Tatars were forcefully relocated from the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic to Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan, based on several incidents of involvement of Crimean Tatars in collaborationist squads that fought on Nazi Germany's side and cooperation with occupationist authorities, although international law did not stipulate that an entire ethnic group can bear collective liability for actions of its members. In November 1989, the USSR Supreme Soviet recognized the deportation of Crimean Tatars in 1944 unlawful and criminal. The Crimean Tatars deported during the war started to return to their home region. At the same time, some members of the Crimean Tatar ethnic group started taking over plots of land without authorization, which the Crimean Tatars called voluntary recovery. Participants in the conflict. Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. Crimean Region.27.10.1989#6558235
On November 14, 1989, the USSR Supreme Soviet adopted a declaration on the restoration of the rights of the deported peoples. The Crimean Tatars deported during the war began to return to their historical homeland. Mullah of the Muslim community Bakhtimaev (left). Ukrainian SSR. Crimean Region.02.09.1989#8135664
On November 4, 1989, the USSR Supreme Soviet adopted a declaration to restore the rights of deported ethnicities. The Crimean Tatars deported during the Great Patriotic War started to return to their home region. New houses for the migrant who returned to their historical homeland. Crimean Region, Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.01.09.1989#8136772
On November 4, 1989, the USSR Supreme Soviet adopted a declaration to restore the rights of deported ethnicities. The Crimean Tatars deported during the Great Patriotic War started to return to their home region. Secretary of the Party Committee of the Ukraine Collective Farm Y.Verdenko speaks to the people who returned to their historical homeland. Crimean Region, Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.01.09.1989#8136768
A ceremony of reburial of Lithuanian citizens who fell victim to mass political repressions in the 1940s- early 1950s, Vilnius.07.08.1989#8159740
A ceremony of reburial of Lithuanian citizens who fell victim to mass political repressions in the 1940s- early 1950s. The procesions passes through Gediminas Square (currently Cathedral Square) in Vilnius.07.08.1989#8159739
A ceremony of reburial of Lithuanian citizens who fell victim to mass political repressions in the 1940s - early 1950s, Vilnius.07.08.1989#8159737
The Stalin: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow exhibition during the Week of Conscience in memory of the victims of political repressions, the Culture House of Railway Workers, in Leningrad.15.04.1989#5541370
Visitors at the Self-Portrait with 3K Brigade by V.Kufko at the Stalin: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow exhibition during the Week of Conscience in memory of the victims of political repressions, the Cultural Center of Railway Workers, in Leningrad.15.04.1989#5540986
A guest book at the Stalin: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow exhibition during the Week of Conscience in memory of the victims of political repressions, in Leningrad.15.04.1989#5540985
Russian Popular Front supporters rally for restoring justice towards victims of political repression.01.02.1989#6752917
The Week of Conscience at the Cultural Center of the Moscow Electric Bulb Company. November 19-26, 1988. Visitors at the Wall of Memory with the photographs and documents of victims of Stalinist repressions.20.11.1988#6752912
The Week of Conscience at the Cultural Center of the Moscow Electric Bulb Company. November 19-26, 1988. Family members of those convicted and killed at the Wall of Memory with photographs and documents of victims of Stalinist repressions.20.11.1988#6752910
The Week of Conscience at the Cultural Center of the Moscow Electric Bulb Company. November 19-26, 1988. A project of a monument to victims of Stalinist repressions.20.11.1988#6752905
The Week of Conscience at the Cultural Center of the Moscow Electric Bulb Company. November 19-26, 1988. Visitors at the Wall of Memory with the photographs and documents of victims of Stalinist repressions.20.11.1988#6752902
This certificate of posthumous exoneration is displayed on Memory Wall at Moscow Electro-Lamp Factory's culture palace during "Conscience Week." 20.11.1988#61617
Vyacheslav Molotov (1890- 1986 gg.) - Soviet statesman and party leader. Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars 1930-1941 gg .; People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the USSR 1939-1946 gg .; Minister of Foreign Affairs of the USSR 1946-1949 gg. and 1953-1956 years. He was a member of the inner circle of Stalin. Reproduction. Of 1930-1940.01.07.1988#2854795