Vladimir Mikhailovich Zenzinov was born in Moscow, the son of a merchant,
in November 1880. Upon finishing the Moscow classical gymnazium in 1899,
Zenzinov went to Germany for his higher education and for four-and-a-half
years spent time at the universities in Berlin, Halle and Heidelberg,
where he studied philosophy, economics, history, and law. His attraction
to the ideas of emancipation of the sixties and seventies, which had been
evident already in his high-school years, strengthened after his
acquaintance with the circles of revolutionary emigres in Switzerland and
led to his joining the Socialist-Revolutionary party.
In January 1904 Zenzinov returned to Moscow. On the eve of January 9, 1905
("Bloody Sunday"), during a wave of arrests, Zenzinov was arrested and
after a six-month detainment in Taganaskaya prison he was sentenced to
administrative exile in Eastern Siberia for five years. However, the
Siberian exilein view of the absence of any means of transport to the
region due to the Russo-Japanese Warwas replaced by exile to Northern
Russia (Arkhangelsk province), from which Zenzinov escaped on the day he
arrived. He succeeded in making his way abroad, and in August 1905 he was
already in Geneva, where he learned of the manifesto of October 17.
Zenzinov then went to St. Petersburg, and in 1906 he joined the Terrorist
Militant Organization of the S.R. party. But Zenzinov did not remain long
in this organization and in the spring of 1906, in his role as
representative of the Central Committee of the S.R. party, he set off to
do peasant labor in the Kiev and Chernigov districts. This work was
interrupted with the dispersal of the First State Duma (July 9 1906).
Zenzinov hurried to Petersburg where he was arrested in September of the
same year and again sentenced to administrative exile for five years in
Eastern Siberia. In the summer of 1907, with a group of other prisoners,
Zenzinov went to Yakutsk, from wherein the guise of a gold-mine
ownerhe escaped through the taiga to Okhotsk (a distance of almost
1000
miles); from Okhotsk he escaped to Japan on a Japanese fishing schooner;
and from Japan, on a ship sailing through Shanghai, Hong Kong, Singapore,
Colombo, and the Suez Canal, he made his way back to Europe.
In 1910 Zenzinov was again arrested in Petersburg and after a six-month
incarceration in the Peter and Paul fortress was yet again sent for five
years to the Yakutsk regionthis time to a place from where no escape
was
possible: 1800 miles north of Yakutsk. The time spent in this region was
devoted to ethnographic and ornothological studies, the result of which
was the appearance of several books which provided new information of this
far-off, poorly known and interesting area: Starinnye liudi u
kholodnogo
okeana (Moscow, 1914); Ocherki torgovli na severe Yakutskoi
oblasti
(Moscow, 1916); Russkoe Ust'e (Berlin 1921); The Road to
Oblivion
(New
York, 1931); Chemin de l'Oubli (Paris 1932).
In 1915 Zenzinov returned to Moscow from exile; from January 1917 through
January 1918 he lived in Petersburg, where he witnessed, and participated
in, the stormy events of those times. He was elected a member of the
Constituent Assembly.
In the summer of 1918 Zenzinov moved from Moscow to the Volga region,
where at the time anti-Bolshevik forces were gathering and accumulating;
he joined the Committee of members of the Constituent Assembly in Samara,
which was conducting armed resistance to the Bolsheviks; in September 1918
in Ufa he was elected to the Provisional all-Russian Government (together
with N.D. Avksentiev, general V. G. Boldyrev and othersthe so-called
"Directorate"). In November 1918, after the military coup in Omsk, he was
exiled from Siberia by Kolchak, together with his colleagues in the
government, to China by. In January 1919 he arrived in Paris (via the
United States). From 1919 through 1939 he resided in Paris, Prague,
Berlin, and again in Paris, where he took part in a variety of democratic
and socialist newspapers and journals ("Volya Rossiya"; "Golos Rossii";
"Dni"; "Novaya Rossiya"; "Sovremennye Zapiski"). In 1929 "Sovremennye
Zapiski" issued Zenzinov's book Bezprizornye, which was translated
into
four foreign languages.
In 1939, at the start of the Second World War, Zenzinov left Paris for
Finland, where he collected material about the state of the Soviet Union,
the result of which was a book published in New York in 1945 under the
title Vstrecha s Rossiyei).
From 1940 until his death on October 20 1953 Zenzinov lived in New York,
where he published shortly before his death his memoirs,
Perezhitoe.
Other books include Iz zhizni revoliutsionera (Paris, 1919);
Nena
(Berlin,
1925); and Zheleznyi skrezhet. Iz amerikanskikh vpechatlenii
(Paris,
1926).