Dissident patriot
Alexey Navalny’s memoir is a testament to resisting authoritarianism

No one who watched Alexey Navalny’s meteoric trajectory, from civic activist to opposition leader to the world’s most famous political prisoner, could avoid the question: how will this extraordinary saga end? Was Navalny destined to become Russia’s Nelson Mandela, a redemptive leader who guided his people from oppression to the promised land of democracy? Or was he doomed to be silenced by the henchmen of the despot whose rule he had challenged?
As a political prisoner, Navalny demonstrated extraordinary moral courage, speaking out against war while enduring mistreatment that can only be described as torture.
The most common smear is that Navalny was not a freedom fighter, but a far-right nationalist, a Russian imperialist.
Unlike Putin and most Russian imperialists, Navalny was indifferent to the breakup of the Soviet empire
What aroused his indignation was the hypocrisy of the “democratic reformers” of the 1990s
By the time of his imprisonment, Navalny had created a nationwide network of committed activists who represented a serious challenge to the stability of Putin’s sham democracy.
Like earlier chroniclers of the gulag, Navalny offers a kind of survival manual for future prisoners.

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