Talk:Zoya Krakhmalnikova

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"which led to her being fired from her job. Her baptism also led to her dismissal from the USSR Union of Writers, which meant that she could no longer publish any of her work in the Soviet Union."'This quote is based only on an unsubstantiated statement from the guardian's article, which has no sources, the Russian Wikipedia also does not mention anything like that, so most likely it's just a lie, in the USSR they didn't just fire you for being a believer, especially in later years, my grandfather was the chairman of the state farm and he easily celebrated such Orthodox holidays as Christmas, Easter and even Trinity Цйфыву (talk) 19:13, 23 August 2022 (UTC)[reply]
and there was no pre-revolutionary magazine Nadezhda and its revival by Krakhmalnikova, there was only a samizdat collection under that name and her husband was not a religious figure, he was a political prisoner who sat down for his beliefs, but not for faith, and she was no pro-democratic political figure was not at all, as she collaborated with the anti-democratic, far-right pro-Stalinist and orthodox-monarchist Petr Kuchera and Dmitry Dudko and spoke out in their support Цйфыву (talk) 19:40, 23 August 2022 (UTC)[reply]