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Nina Lugovskaya : ウィキペディア英語版 | Nina Lugovskaya
Nina Sergeyevna Lugovskaya ((ロシア語:Нина Серге́евна Луговская); 25 December 1918, in Moscow – 27 December 1993, in Vladimir), was a Russian painter and theatre designer in addition to being a survivor of the GULAG. During Joseph Stalin's Great Purge, a teenaged Nina was also the author of a diary, which was discovered by the Soviet political police and used to convict her entire family of Anti-Soviet agitation.〔''I Want to Live!'' pages 253.〕 After surviving Kolyma, Nina studied at Serpukhov Art School and in 1977 joined the Union of Artists of the USSR. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Nina's diary was discovered intact inside the NKVD's file on her family. It was published in 2003, caused Nina to be labelled, "the Anne Frank of Stalin's Russia." == Family == Nina had two older twin sisters, Olga and Yevgenia (also called Lyalya and Zhenya). Her father, Sergei Rybin-Lugovskaya, was a passionate supporter of the Socialist Revolutionary Party. Although she had many friends, Nina suffered from depression, and repeatedly confided her suicidal fantasies to her diary. Nina further suffered from lazy eye, which made her very self-conscious. In her diary, she often confided her hatred for Stalin and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.〔''I Want to Live!'' pages 35-36.〕 These beliefs came from witnessing the NKVD's repeated harassment and internal exile of her father,〔''I Want to Live!'' pages 35-36.〕 who had been a NEPman during the 1920s.
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