Search JTA's historical archive dating back to 1923

Four Women Arrested in Moscow

June 26, 1973
See Original Daily Bulletin From This Date
Advertisement

Four Jewish women staged a rare public protest in downtown Moscow today and were immediately arrested, Jewish sources said. The four women, wives of Moscow Jewish engineers who had been refused permission to emigrate to Israel, demonstrated outside the Soviet visa office, the sources said. They carried signs reading “Let My People Go.”

Minutes after the protest began, KGB (Soviet secret police) agents hustled the women into the visa office and arrested them. The women were taken away in unmarked police cars, the sources said. The women are the wives of Jewish activists arrested briefly in Moscow June 17 because the Soviet government feared they were planning demonstrations during Soviet Party Leader Leonid I. Brezhnev’s visit to the U.S. They were identified by telephone from Moscow as Nina Balfour, Valeria Krizhak, Olga Rutman and Rima Peskin.

Recommended from JTA

Advertisement