The Only Survivor of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee Case
As historians have shown, Stalin-era Soviet scientists developed sophisticated survival strategies that allowed them to continue their lives and work.Footnote 1 Scholars’ adaptations to Soviet policies have been analyzed, but less so these survival strategies’ connection to the Cold War context and Soviet-western competition in science and technology.Footnote 2 In this article, I show how the Soviet physiologist Lina Shtern managed to evade a likely death sentence precisely because she was aware of the importance of foreign affairs to Soviet science policy. This case demonstrates that, in shaping Cold War-era ideology, Soviet leaders were beholden to their own prioritization of scientific-technical competition with the west.
Studies of Stalin's science policy have foregrounded cases in which dubious theoreticians were proclaimed luminaries of science.Footnote 3 The valorization of quackery also involved the marginalization and repression of internationally recognized scientists, a phenomenon likewise thoroughly described. This article deals with quite a different case. Its heroine, Lina Shtern, having endured a Lysenkoism-inspired campaign (1948–1949) of her work's denunciation, was first effectively ousted from mainstream Soviet biology. Soon after her arrest in connection with the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee, she faced the threat of physical destruction or, at the very least, long-term (at her age, scarcely survivable) imprisonment. In this situation, she managed to skillfully play on Soviet leaders’ ambitions of overtaking the west, including in the biomedical sciences, and to establish her own indispensability thereto. These efforts, and her particular strategic behavior as a defendant, resulted in a relatively lenient sentence and the subsequent opportunity to return to science, albeit in a far lower status. Shtern's “rescue” may be relevant in analyzing the survival strategies—successful or otherwise—of other Stalin-era scientists.
The Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee (JAC) was founded in 1942 by the Soviet authorities, along with four other such committees. Technically a nongovernmental organization, the JAC was in fact a propagandistic entity (overseen by Sovinformburo, the official news agency), meant to promote the Soviet war effort by strengthening ties between Soviet Jews and western Jewish organizations and soliciting donations that would help the USSR keep fighting in WWII. After the war, with the onset of Stalin's antisemitic campaign, the committee's activities were halted; its leaders were arrested in 1948–49, and in 1952 sentenced to death on false espionage charges.Footnote 4
In accounts of the history of the JAC and its eventual suppression, one case stands out—that of the only member to be charged during the main trial but avoid the death sentence: Lina Solomonovna Shtern, the first female member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences.Footnote 5 Minister of State Security Semёn Ignat΄ev's initial recommendation, submitted to Stalin April 3, 1952, was “ten years’ exile in a remote region of the country.”Footnote 6 The sentence pronounced July 18 was even more lenient: time served (three and a half years), plus five years’ exile in “a remote location”; nor was her personal property confiscated.Footnote 7
Lina Shtern (originally, Liba-Leia Shtern) was born in the suburbs of Kovno (now Kaunas, Lithuania) and grew up in Libava (now Liepaja, Latvia). Having attended German-language grammar school in Libava, she entered the University of Geneva in 1898 and defended her thesis on physiology in 1905. In 1918, she became that university's first woman professor and department head. By 1925, when Shtern decided to move to the USSR, she had already gained international recognition as the author of two major concepts in physiology: tissue respiration and the blood-brain barrier. In 1933, living in Moscow, she was awarded a biology PhD without a thesis defense. In 1938 Shtern joined the Communist Party, and in 1939 was elected to the USSR Academy of Sciences—its first female member.Footnote 8 In 1942 she was elected as a member of leadership of three propaganda organizations at once: aside from the JAC, also the Soviet Women's Anti-Fascist Committee and Soviet Scholars’ Anti-Fascist Committee.Footnote 9 In the 1930s–40s, she earned international renown and press coverage for her discoveries and her life-journey as a woman scientist.Footnote 10
Shtern's biographers, and students of the JAC trial, have hypothesized on the Soviet leadership's sparing of her life. Perhaps the most popular conjecture (albeit not without its criticsFootnote 11) is that Stalin was personally invested in Shtern's work on longevity; her survival, that is, meant he might yet receive a “recipe for eternal youth.”Footnote 12 But this is unsupported by any documents, nor even by the circumstantial evidence of Politburo discussions. As Alexander Nakhimovsky summed up in a special section of East European Jewish Affairs dedicated to the JAC trial: “The sole survivor, Lina Shtern, may have been spared because of her international reputation, though the actual motivation is unrecorded and unknowable.”Footnote 13
A recent reissue of historian Gennadii Kostyrchenko's Tainaia politika Stalina. Vlast΄ i antisemitizm, has significantly altered this situation. In a note accompanying his account of the JAC trial, Kostyrchenko proposes a theory—a document-based one: “Shtern well knew that she could save herself if she could convince Stalin of the extraordinary value of her intellect, so when she got [to Lubyanka], she immediately informed the prison administration of her intention to prepare a manuscript of the highest state importance. And though they initially refused to give her a pencil or let her write anything down, later, evidently with permission from Stalin himself, they gave her paper, pen, and ink. By late 1951, she had written a 137-page manuscript, ‘On Cancer,’ which she submitted to the Ministry of State Security.”Footnote 14 This passage refers to a document held by RGASPI,Footnote 15 but the book does not elaborate on this topic any further.Footnote 16 Kostyrchenko's explanation, however, provides an alternative to unsupported hypotheses about Shtern's near-pardon, pointing to a previously unknown aspect of her scientific and medical interest, which could have influenced the decision of Soviet leaders.Footnote 17 And this explanation is based on preserved historical evidence.
In this article, I will use primary sources to clarify Kostyrchenko's account: did Shtern really write an essay on this subject? Was it written during her imprisonment, and what ideas did it propose? Next I will discuss how an essay on cancer treatment could have saved its author's life in 1952. This means considering the political and cultural meaning of “a cure for cancer” in the late 1940s–early 1950s (as discussed at length in the work of Nikolai Krementsov), Shtern's sudden interest in this topic during her imprisonment, and her non-publication of anything on it after her return from exile. Notably, students and colleagues who knew about Shtern's cancer essay never publicly speculated that it was the reason her life was spared. Interpreting these facts will improve our understanding of Shtern's (successful) survival strategy, and more generally, of the Soviet politicization of medicine in the late 1940s–early 1950s—the time of “Stalin's science wars.”Footnote 18 We also cannot sideline the “longevity theory,” and the popularity thereof: thus I will also examine how the mythology of absolute and unchanging power is linked to the cultural myth of the transformation of human nature through Soviet scientists’ scientific achievements.
The Longevity Theory: Documental Evidence against the Popular Myth
The archival reference provided by Kostyrchenko is truly invaluable. The RGASPI holding does not contain Shtern's essay “On Cancer,” but an entirely different document that allows us to rule out longevity as the topic that saved her: a private letter from Shtern to Stalin, dated January 30, 1947.Footnote 19 This addresses the subject of aging and life extension, though in a context and modality Stalin would probably have found infuriating, if he read it. (Which, as discussed below, is unlikely.) Here Shtern advises the dictator that “premature aging” can be countered, particularly, in the USSR, by eliminating work-related stress and night shifts:
For all intents and purposes, it would be best to introduce measures to rationalize and improve conditions of labor and everyday life as soon as possible, starting with workers in high-level positions, which includes government workers.
First, we should abolish the “overnight shift,” which has recently become a real blight. In most cases this can be done without significant productivity loss.
For a minority, the overnight shift may be a natural part of their circadian rhythm, and thus can be balanced by daytime rest; however, it is evident that for the health and productivity of the overwhelming majority it is detrimental.Footnote 20
Did Shtern realize how provocative this was? Stalin was famously a night owl, as reflected in propagandistic poetry: “a single Kremlin window is illuminated”: the “leader” is hard at work in his office. Party officials and administrators were expected to forego sleep, as an urgent directive could come from Moscow at any time of the night. Memoirists who interacted with Stalin in the last years of his life have since corrected the popular picture of his heroic asceticism: some of these “working” nights were spent watching movies or drinking with party leaders.Footnote 21 Meanwhile, Soviet workers were expected to stay awake and work. Shtern was certainly right: this schedule was bound to lead to mass exhaustion. But implicitly questioning the dictator's personal habits, and overtly critiquing the strategy of labor mobilization through total physical exertion was outrageous.
Rumors of Stalin's interest in longevity probably reached Shtern.Footnote 22 A list of her scientific papers, preserved in the archives of the Russian Academy of Sciences, mentions presentations (from 1939 on) on the physiology of aging.Footnote 23 Senescence, Shtern argued, could be slowed by adjusting the body's blood-tissue barriers. Apparently, after her election to the USSR Academy of Sciences in 1939, Shtern came (perhaps through utopian faith) to see these barriers as key to all-around human improvement. In 1940, she gave at least two lectures with the same title—“The main causes of aging, death, and the fight against them”—to officials of the Moscow and Leningrad party committees.Footnote 24 That same year, she published her first article on this subject—not in a scientific journal, but in a purely ideological one.Footnote 25 Delivering two talks on longevity to party officials at the outset of her work on the topic, and her choice of venue for this first publication, demonstrate that Shtern saw her research as closely tied to the ideology of the Soviet project. Moreover, and crucially for the story of her survival, Shtern apparently believed that her insights into blood-organ barriers could be used to develop a host of medical treatments.
In the 1940s, physician and physiologist Alexander Bogomolets, one of the world's leading scholars of aging and longevity, enjoyed the unconditional support of Soviet leadership. However, he died of tuberculosis in 1946, aged 65. Shtern's offer of guidance to Stalin on improvements to quality of life may have been also meant she was offering herself as the post-Bogomolets longevity expert. But she might not have known that after Bogomolets's death, longevity research lost its “most-favored” status in the USSR. In 1950–52, leading Soviet longevity researchers would be stigmatized for ideological “violations.”Footnote 26
We cannot know for certain whether Stalin read Shtern's letter; it seems unlikely, as there is no penciled-in resolution, nor the kind of notations he liked to leave on documents.Footnote 27 Moreover, had Stalin read this advice on how to extend the lifespan of Soviet workers, it would hardly have motivated Shtern's near-pardon: her reasoning would have seemed offensive to the dictator, and the measures she proposed would never have been implemented. On October 6, 1949, after Shtern's arrest, Stalin assessed her as an enemy, though not a particularly dangerous one, calling her an “amateurish scientist” (kustar΄ ot nauki)—in the general context of his rhetoric, an epithet more dismissive than aggressive.Footnote 28 Let us now turn to what did most likely save Shtern's life—her manuscript “On Cancer.”
“On Cancer”: Dating, Textual Criticism, Pragmatics
Shtern's manuscript on cancer was preserved in her personal fond in the Academy of Sciences archive. To my knowledge, no copies of it exist in other archives or fonds. The earliest published reference to “On Cancer” comes in a 1995 article about Shtern's arrest and exile by her student and colleague, Viktor Malkin.Footnote 29 This article was probably the source of Kostyrchenko's hypothesis; there are obvious similarities between the two authors’ mentions of the length of the manuscript and the fact that it was written in prison. Per Malkin:
After multiple requests, Shtern was given paper and pencils, and later, a pen and ink.Footnote 30 Shtern got straight to work. She wrote a series of popular-science articles while in prison. They all had a special focus on the possible medical uses of her research on physiological barriers.
The most significant and original of the studies Shtern completed in prison was her essay “On Cancer,” which she enclosed with a letter to Minister Abakumov in late 1951.Footnote 31 This 137-page essay proposes practical recommendations for diagnostics and treatment of cancer based on the discovery of histohematic barriers.
The main reason for her letter to Abakumov was to request permission to continue her experiments, and her release from prison.
She did not know that the minister had already been arrested, and was being held in a nearby cell of the same prison.Footnote 32
Malkin does not mention the possibility that this manuscript saved Shtern's life. He suggests that writing to the already-disgraced Abakumov in effect negated her efforts to appeal to party leadership.Footnote 33 Malkin's precis of “On Cancer,” and the fact that his name is listed among the manuscript's requesters at the RAN archives, suggest that he carefully studied it, albeit without realizing its importance to Shtern's “salvation,” unlike Kostyrchenko, who, however, apparently did not study it himself.
The materials in question do not constitute a single essay of 137 pages, but three drafts of the same essay, written in pencil and ink on sheets folded in half, then typewritten on sheets of the same size. The two drafts and final version are all enclosed in a cover made by the author, on which she handwrote: “My appeal to the Minister of State Security regarding a proposed method of cancer treatment (late 1951).”Footnote 34
The order of the documents in the folder does not match the order in which they were written. The first (not chronologically, but within the folder Shtern assembled) contains twenty-seven typewritten pages and about forty-two handwritten ones.Footnote 35 This study consists of a series of sections whose length and content were probably determined by how much paper, ink, and time were available. The first section is undated, though it bears the same title as the folder: “My appeal to the Minister of State Security regarding a proposed method of cancer treatment (late 1951).” Here, Shtern briefly summarizes her main scientific discovery, made in 1921–23 before her move to the Soviet Union in 1925: the existence of the blood-tissue barrier, through which each bodily organ is provided a specific (and normally unalterable) combination of nutrients. According to Shtern, many diseases (including cancer) could be treated by suppressing the barrier function, thus allowing the introduction of a drug directly into a diseased organ or nearby artery. Shtern assures her readers that her work on the blood-tissue barrier is “Soviet in its orientation,” and that her conclusions “do not contradict the observations of Pavlov, but rather support and develop them.”Footnote 36
The reference to Ivan Pavlov requires separate comment. The last years of Stalin's life (1945–53) were the time of the greatest ideologization of Soviet science, when not only in the humanities but also the life sciences, scholarly arguments were often reinforced, or even replaced, by references to officially approved authorities (from Ivan Pavlov to Trofim Lysenko), or to recent ideological pronouncements.Footnote 37 Shtern seems to have been well aware of these rules of the game. Even her work on longevity from 1939–40 shows a readiness to participate in the political use of scientific concepts.
Paying homage to Pavlov was an important gesture; after the Academy of Sciences’ and Academy of Medical Sciences’ joint “Pavlovian session” of 1950, references to the work of physiologist Ivan Pavlov (1849–1936) in medical research served as proof of one's ideological trustworthiness,Footnote 38 and of one's forswearing of baleful western science.Footnote 39 Shtern might not have known anything about this session while incarcerated, but what she had already learned by the time of her arrest was sufficient to understand that Pavlov's name had acquired even greater symbolic value in the new ideological context.
The essay's second section, dated January 24, 1952, opens with a personal revelation:
My mood has improved because of [being allowed to work on] a potential cancer treatment that I had been thinking about before my imprisonment and have not stopped thinking about even after my arrest; then there occurred a sudden decline in my mood and obsessive thoughts about my impending death. [I am afraid] I am haunted by the thought that [I will not live to see my trial and] I will die without finishing my work, to which I devoted the last years of my life [and which was meant to justify my existence].”Footnote 40
Shtern then explains, in a simplified way, the blood-brain barrier, and how it can be artificially permeated to treat a variety of conditions, including malignant tumors. The section ends mid-sentence at the bottom of page 7 ver.: “Our observations when studying the conditions . . .”
The third section, dated January 27, 1952, starts on page 8, and comprises three archival pages. Shtern returns to the theory of the blood-brain barrier and its clinical implementation. We know from transcripts of the 1952 trial that Shtern was summoned for interrogation on January 30 and signed a confession.Footnote 41 Investigations for the JAC trial had resumed, and interrogations probably continued throughout February 1952, so it is unsurprising that the fourth section is dated March 2, 1952.Footnote 42 This occupies eight pages (fifteen single sides) and contains theses on cancer diagnosis and treatment; there are no autobiographical confessions. Though it repeats ideas formulated in earlier sections, this text appears more thorough, and contains a preliminary plan for developing new cancer treatments: “It is imperative that we assemble a small team to develop a technique to introduce drugs into the diseased organ and simultaneously collect blood flowing from the organ, as well as lymph fluid, if possible. Work can start right away. The cooperation of an anatomist or pathologist, a surgeon, biochemist, physiologist, or pathophysiologist is required.”Footnote 43
The fifth and final section in this draft is dated May 25, 1952, that is, after the JAC trial had begun. It contains four parts: the first, on how to identify early-stage cancer; the second, on the placental barrier; the third, although titled “outline of work,” actually contains a list of previous discoveries by Shtern and her colleagues; and the fourth and final part is headed “Various thoughts on the treatment of cancer.” It is important to relate the chronology of these writings to the JAC trial. Ignat΄ev's recommendation to exile rather than execute Shtern came (in the above-mentioned letter to Stalin, April 3, 1952) after she had completed the fourth section, which summarized her research plans. The last section was written not just after the trial had begun (May 8), but after it resumed following a recess (May 12–22), although apparently before Shtern herself testified (June 6 and 28).Footnote 44
The essay's second draft, written in the form of a letter to Abakumov (“To USSR Minister of State Security Viktor Semёnovich Abakumov. Explanatory memorandum on the manuscript by L. Shtern”Footnote 45), is organized more carefully, and opens with the most important postulate of Shtern's anti-cancer concept: “In essence, this treatment consists of introducing the medicinal substance not into the general circulatory system by subcutaneous or intravenous injection as is commonly done, but as close as possible to the diseased area, preferably into the extracellular [interstitial] fluid of the diseased organ or tissue.”Footnote 46
Shtern explains the failures of her predecessors: “The usual way of introducing drugs into the patient has not always resulted in contact between the drug and the diseased area. . . . [W]ithout such contact, we cannot expect the treatment to be successful.”Footnote 47 She emphasizes that this is a novel treatment, with applications beyond oncology: “What I propose is not a new medication, but a new approach, the result of many years of experimental research, which after thorough laboratory study has been found clinically effective. I am convinced that cancer treatment can be brought out of its current dead end, and that my treatment method will be successfully used for other conditions hitherto considered incurable.”Footnote 48
This draft repeats the rhetoric of the first one, though its arguments are structured far more carefully. Shtern's previous discoveries are cited as corroborating the new method; she also warns that she has enemies in the medical world who, if asked to review this essay, might mock her work; finally, she insists that her professional experience would enable her to see this discovery through to its practical application. The second draft lays out the same plan as the first, but adds a significant provision: that collaboration between scientists from different fields would result in a method for directly introducing a drug into an organ's inner nutritional environment. We might assume that this letter was written in the spring of 1952, based on fragments from the first draft; but the date provided by the author on the cover of the manuscript and the letter to Abakumov precludes this assumption.
The third draft is significantly different: it is not addressed to the minister, and includes no autobiographical statements, mention of the trial, or avowal of loyalty to the regime. It is written like a popular-science essay on cancer treatments and includes fragments from the first and second drafts. Its first few pages are written, not in ink, like other texts in the folder, but in pencil—and by an unsteady hand.
Analyzing the three drafts, we can reconstruct the circumstances of Shtern's work on the essay. In late 1951 (more precise dating would require access to Ministry of State Security archives), Shtern was allowed to work on her novel idea for cancer treatment. The first section of the first draft probably comes from this period. She then sent a letter to Abakumov (this is the second draft), probably before January 28, 1952. (Twice she mentions having spent “almost three years” in prison; Shtern was arrested January 28, 1949.Footnote 49) The interrogations of early 1952 made her doubt that her letter had been received. She kept working, and revisited fragments from her letter to Abakumov (the sections dated January 24 and 27 and March 2 in the first draft), probably intending to use them in subsequent letters to other officials, or in scientific papers. The fragments from the first draft, except for the very first, were not drafts of the letter to Abakumov, but rather explored ideas from that letter, recalled from memory and elaborated with new theories.
In fact, the letter and particular sections from the first draft did reach high-ranking officials at the Ministry of State Security (MGB)—probably including Minister Ignat΄ev—though Shtern did not know this. She kept working after the trial had begun (the May 25 fragment). In her final statement at trial, she mentioned working on three projects; regarding the first, she quoted from her letter to Abakumov: “I don't think I have the right to take this knowledge with me to my grave”; and described the second as concerning “treatment for heart disease,” the third, on “the development of effective drug treatments.”Footnote 50
“On Cancer” was returned to Shtern upon her release—possibly the only writing returned to her, which must have convinced her of the promising direction of her work and the importance of this new method. The sentence of exile rather than death drove home the value of her idea—if not for the field of medicine, at least for her own survival. She began to work on a more elaborate manuscript, now without the need to address ministers or spend words on avowals of loyalty.
By the time she was sent into exile, she had probably heard of Abakumov's arrest. The notes in pencil on the third draft could indicate that she was writing on the train to Kazakhstan, or during her first days in Dzhambul, before purchasing stationary. But she clearly had access to the previous drafts. All three drafts emphasize that Shtern's previous work can serve as a foundation for future breakthroughs in Soviet medicine. Each subsequent draft adds detail to descriptions of earlier findings—the blood-tissue (especially blood-brain) barrier—while the description of the novel cancer treatment keeps getting shorter, in the third draft occupying a mere typewritten page. This would explain why Shtern's colleague Iakov Rapoport's recollection of her return from exile with manuscripts “begun at Lubyanka” includes no mention of oncology, only the topic of “blood-tissue barriers.”Footnote 51 Malkin, who studied the manuscript, likewise saw this well-familiar topic as its focus. The essay's third draft, likely written in exile, was clearly meant not just for high-ranking officials, but also scientists whose opinion would determine the fate of Shtern's project. Shtern had never published anything on cancer research before her arrest, and did not feel confident writing about it, so she scaled back her initial (prison-devised) hypothesis, suggesting a direction of study rather than a treatment method.
Immediate and Long-term Consequences of the Sentence
The leniency of Shtern's sentence was hardly accidental. Those responsible for it knew that an academic in her seventies would not survive the Gulag. The ten-year exile proposed by Ignat΄ev would likewise have been fraught. As mentioned, the final version was still more lenient.
Who was behind it? Without access to Politburo discussions of the trial, we can only hypothesize. After Abakumov's arrest, Shtern's letter would have ended up with MGB personnel, perhaps eventually on the desk of new Minister Ignat΄ev or his deputy Riumin. But neither was authorized to decide her fate.Footnote 52 As for Shtern, she did not know who granted her the right to work in prison, and addressed her plea to Abakumov.
We know that Ignat΄ev was a protegee of Georgii Malenkov, and that his initial draft sentence proposal to Stalin (April 3, 1952) was also sent to Malenkov and Lavrentii Beriia. Presumably, one of these two Politburo members reported that Shtern was working on a novel cancer treatment, and lobbied for her life to be spared. Both Malenkov and Beriia had been in charge of strategic military issues since the Second World War, and as Nikolai Krementsov has demonstrated, the Soviet government made cancer treatment a strategic priority. Shtern would be unable to start working for months after the trial, but it must have been deemed important enough to spare her life, so that she could return to her research once the passions around the JAC trial had subsided.
During her brief period in Kazakhstan, Shtern seemed convinced that she and her work would be in demand soon. Rapoport recalls that in the winter of 1952–53, a few months after arriving in Dzhambul, Shtern wrote to colleagues in Moscow, requesting that someone join her in Kazakhstan to assist with her project. “Eventually, after an exchange of opinions (very cautious, given the situation in 1952), O.P. Skvortsova, Shtern's devoted old secretary, took the risk of heading to Dzhambul.”Footnote 53 Skvortsova probably typed all three drafts of “On Cancer.”
Shtern was released from exile under the famous USSR Supreme Council amnesty of March 27, 1953.Footnote 54 She described the circumstances of her return in an August 1953 letter to Malenkov:
I returned to Moscow on May 19, 1953, and several days later, on May 22 or 23, I was summoned to the Ministry of the Interior, where I was interviewed by an official in a general's uniform in the presence of several other people. I do not know his name or rank. He told me something along these lines: “Of course, you know that you should not have been arrested. Everything has changed now. We ask that you tell us how you have been treated. You would help us a lot by doing so.”
I understood these words as proof of my exoneration and did not request any written documents attesting to it. Thus, I have no way to prove my exoneration; the only document in my possession is the record of my release, which I was given along with my passport in Dzhambul.Footnote 55
Shtern was clearly on edge: had she not been brought back to Moscow and summoned to Beriia's office so that she could continue her work? But she was left idle for months; hence her request of the Council of Ministers chair for official exoneration: “I want to do my duty and work, but all I have is the head on my shoulders. The tools for my research have been destroyed: the laboratory no longer exists, my manuscripts and published works have been confiscated, even my name has been, everywhere, crossed out. It is impossible to recommence work under these circumstances.”Footnote 56
From Shtern's letter to Malenkov and letters to acquaintances in Dzhambul in this period, it is clear that her preoccupation with cancer research endured after her return to Moscow—not only as a key to her exoneration, but as indeed potentially leading to effective treatment via breaching the blood-tissue barrier.Footnote 57
Shtern's letter to Malenkov bore some fruit. Five months later, Shtern wrote him again, informing him that in September 1953, her “academic credentials and rights were reinstated.”Footnote 58 In October 1953, the Academy of Sciences’ biology division lobbied its presidium for the establishment of “a laboratory at the Institute of Biophysics to be led by Acad. L.S. Shtern, dedicated to her proposed topic.”Footnote 59 But Shtern would never be granted more than a single room, barely staffed and equipped, at the Institute of Biophysics. She appealed to Malenkov, Dmitrii Shepilov, Nikita Khrushchev, and to the secretary of the Academy of Sciences’ biology section Vladimir Engel΄gardt and President Aleksandr Nesmeianov—to no avail.
Tasked with researching the permeability of blood-tissue barriers, mainly under the influence of radiation,Footnote 60 Shtern's miniscule laboratory may have seemed unconnected to the study of potential cancer treatments. But from her notebooks, it is clear that she continued to be inspired by the idea that cancers could be treated by bypassing blood-tissue barriers.Footnote 61 Shtern probably sought support among oncologists and radiologists, but without success. Her published work from 1954–68 includes nothing related to cancer treatment.Footnote 62
How does this jibe with her apparently cancer-based near-pardon? The likeliest explanation is that the political and scientific context had completely changed since the deciding of Shtern's fate in 1952. If the figure behind Shtern's sentencing was Beriia, we can easily explain her quick return to Moscow in May 1953, and the sluggishness of her exoneration and reintegration: from March–May 1953, Beriia was extraordinarily busy; then in late June, he was arrested and of no use. If, however, it was Malenkov who decided Shtern's sentencing, then, by summer 1953, he was likely preoccupied with a whole new set of issues: the post-Stalin triumvirate, and the intensifying development of Soviet industry and agriculture.Footnote 63 Absent any documentary evidence as to which Soviet leader had been decisive, we might rather focus on the questions we can substantiate. As Shtern well knew, in 1951–52, effective cancer treatments constituted a top Soviet priority. This political context was the background for her essay.
The Kliueva-Roskin Project and the “KR case”: Lina Shtern as an Interested Observer
N. Krementsov has reconstructed the late-1940s political significance of cancer research, in particular, the Soviet leadership's focus—especially before the first Soviet A-bomb test (August 1949), when it seemed imperative to counter the American atomic monopoly with superiority in the field of medicine—on a treatment developed by Grigorii Roskin and Nina Kliueva.Footnote 64 The choice of direction had less to do with increasing cancer prevalence than with American pharmacology's foregrounding of cancer treatment.Footnote 65 The priority was not to implement a life-saving drug, but to announce the USSR as its discoverer. With Soviet prestige on the line, Kliueva and Roskin became, in June 1947, the first defendants to appear before an “honor court,” an assembly of representatives of scientific institutions tasked with censuring particular researchers for political-ideological misdeeds—in this case, Kliueva and Roskin's sharing of their manuscript “Biotherapy for Malignant Tumors” with foreign scientists. (Who were, in fact, previously approved as partners of the Soviet project.)
Kliueva and Roskin were not arrested or barred from research; on the contrary, the Academy of Medical Sciences organized a secret, unprecedentedly funded and staffed laboratory dedicated to their proposed drug. But Academy of Sciences Secretary Vasilii Parin was accused of spying for the US and sentenced to twenty-five years in the camps as an “enemy of the Soviet state.” Soviet Health Minister Georgii Miterёv also lost his position. Interestingly, Kliueva, Roskin, and Parin were all accused of being in contact with, and providing a manuscript to, two American scientists: Stuart Mudd and Robert Leslie.Footnote 66 The same names were listed in the charges against Shtern during the JAC trial:
In 1945 and 1946, she established contact with several foreigners residing in Moscow, and informed the Americans Mudd and Leslie about scientific research undertaken by Soviet scientists, and provided the press-attaché of the British embassy Tripp with information on research done by the USSR Academy of Sciences’ Institute [of Physiology], of which she was the director.Footnote 67
In 1946–47, Kliueva and Roskin's work had been celebrated in the mainstream Soviet press and specialized medical journals alike. Kliueva was nominated to the USSR Supreme Council, and hailed in Izvestiia as “a bold and innovative scientist. She has proposed a new method against cancer. Experiments have yielded positive results. This discovery will be among the greatest in the world. Not only we Soviet scientists, but the whole scientific world follows her work.”Footnote 68 In a rave review of Kliueva and Roskin's monograph for Izvestiia, Prof. Leont΄ev described their drug as uniquely capable of reaching where scalpels and radiation could not; usable in miniscule quantities; and still effective in cases where the disease had progressed.Footnote 69 These were qualities that, in 1951–52, Shtern would attribute to her own method, also adding a fourth that Kliueva and Roskin could not claim, as they had developed a drug rather than a method: the potential for detecting cancer in its earliest stages.
The June 1947 “honor” trial of Kliueva and Roskin was not widely covered, but it did inspire—on Stalin's request—the writers Aleksandr Shtein's and Konstantin Simonov's plays The Law of Honor and Someone Else's Shadow, respectively, with the former also adapted into the film Honor Court (dir. Abram Room). The Law of Honor premiered at the Moscow Drama Theater in June 1948, by autumn playing nationwide.Footnote 70
Lina Shtern had long been an interested observer of Roskin's and Kliueva's work. Roskin's first publication, on tumor treatment based on the trypanosoma toxin, was in the journal Bulletin for Experimental Biology and Medicine, founded and edited by Shtern.Footnote 71 From 1939–41, Roskin studied the blood-tissue barrier at the USSR Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Physiology, established and chaired by Shtern.Footnote 72 Shtern was present, along with other members of the Academy of Medical Sciences Presidium, at the “honor” trial of Kliueva and Roskin, and was dismayed by it. As an informant reported to Andrei Zhdanov: “Academician Shtern spoke to her colleagues in the auditorium during recess: ‘This trial is a terrible thing—the effect it could have on our scientists—they will stop publishing.’ This statement by Shtern is in line with other recent statements of hers.”Footnote 73 During her MGB interrogation, she reiterated the point: “After the honor court against Roskin and Kliueva, I unfortunately stopped most of my correspondence with foreign scientists, which is fatal for science.”Footnote 74
Shtern was apparently aware, not just of the resources lavished on Kliueva and Roskin's laboratory, but also of the fact that, by late 1948, their drug was raising doubts. That December, shortly before Shtern's arrest, the Academy of Medical Sciences Presidium tasked pathologist Iakov Rapoport (husband of Shtern's closest collaborator, Sofiia Rapoport) with assessing the laboratory clinic's diagnostic accuracy and patient mortality, as the results reported by Kliueva and Roskin were considered suspicious.Footnote 75 Thus, when Shtern decided, in prison, to take up the topic of cancer treatment, she knew that even after the fallout from the KR manuscript reaching foreign hands, the topic conferred protection on the manuscript's authors, as well as a specialized (if potentially troubled) research institute.
In his writings on what he calls the “KR drama,”Footnote 76 Krementsov emphasizes its “ambiguity”; its foregrounding of illicit “unpatriotic deeds, on the one hand, and the government's pardon of unpatriotic mistakes, on the other.”Footnote 77 This ambivalence is reflected in the case's resolution: Parin was sentenced to twenty-five years for espionage, while Roskin and Kliueva were subjected to moral condemnation by the “honor court,” but allowed to continue working. The same ambivalence is seen in Shtein's The Law of Honor, and Room's adaptation thereof, in the pairing of the two main characters: the villainous professor Losev, who, craving acclaim and profit, shares information on a novel analgesic with a US company; and the idealistic professor Dobrotvorsky, who trusts Losev, and believes that science knows no borders, that discoveries serve all humankind—and that contacts with foreign scientists only promote this universality. Dobrotvorsky's idealism eventually proves dangerously naive, leading to the theft of Soviet scientists’ discoveries. Still, like Kliueva and Roskin in real life, he is subjected only to moral condemnation, and bitterly regrets his mistake; criminal charges are reserved for the avaricious Losev.
Shtern probably did not manage to see Room's film, released early January 1949, before her arrest later that month, but she must have at least heard about the play, widely discussed in Soviet newspapers the previous year. In any case, Shtern seems to have perceived the ambivalence noted by Krementsov, the sense that, in the USSR of the late 1940s–early 1950s, a scientist making a unique medical discovery had special status, and merited pardon, suspicious foreign contacts notwithstanding, unlike a condemnable scientific administrator or public official (director of an Academy of Sciences institute, for example, or member of the JAC Presidium—Shtern—or Academy of Medical Sciences secretary—Parin). Thus, Shtern saw her task—in her testimony, and her prison writings—as representing herself, not as an administrator or official, but a working scientist, eager to return to her lab and formulate new research plans even while incarcerated.
To substantiate the strategic significance of studying blood-tissue barriers, Shtern connected this topic to the quest for effective cancer treatments—the most pressing, and politicized, direction in Soviet medical research. She sought to be seen as no more than a scientist devoted to her (strategically crucial) work; hence her self-portrayal, in statements at trial, as a starry-eyed believer in science's borderlessness—too much of an idealist to spot foreign perfidy. In other words, just like the character Dobrotvorsky. If we compare her statements in court to his lines in the play and movie, we find striking similarities.
Accounts of Shtern's behavior during the investigation are contradictory. The actress Tat΄iana Okunevskaia, who shared a cell with Shtern in 1949, recalled that she “defended herself in a cowardly and nasty manner,” betraying many acquaintances under questioning;Footnote 86 whereas Aleksandr Borshchagovsky finds the interrogation minutes marked by “honesty and truth,” with Shtern remaining “true to herself.”Footnote 87 Diametrically opposite in their evaluations, both nevertheless consider her guileless. Alice Nakhimovsky, on the other hand, sees Shtern's ostensible naiveté as a carefully planned tactic—one she had used before.Footnote 88 The comparison of the JAC trial transcripts with Shtein's play supports Nachimovsky's conclusions. The role of the “naive scientist” had a very memorable recent prototype.
Shtern took care to emphasize her naiveté, shortsightedness, and inability to understand political matters: “I am not an investigating officer, I am a scientific researcher. . . . I am not qualified to make any judgments on these matters. . . . I don't consider myself knowledgeable in these matters. . . . If I weren't so trusting, I would not be sitting here, but I do not regret being trusting.”Footnote 89 Shtern thus framed her “cosmopolitanism” as simply a matter of innocently following her natural inclinations.Footnote 90
The final link between the KR drug and Shtern's fate was a circumstance unknown to Shtern at the time, but certainly known to whichever MGB leaders were consulted in deciding whether she should be allowed to write. On October 22, 1951, the Politburo approved the draft decree “On organizing a scientific research institute for experimental pathology and cancer therapy at the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences,” which stated, among other things, that the anticancer properties of the KR drug were not confirmed by experiments, and that the Kliueva-Roskin laboratory would be closed.Footnote 91 As described above, it was specifically in late 1951 that, after multiple requests, Shtern was allowed to write a summary of her research ideas.
The KR case would have been the best-known example of pardon-via-research, and we know of Shtern's biographical connection to both scientists; but there were other precedents. There was the distinguished (and thrice-arrested) physician Lev Zilber (1894–1966), who discovered, while interned in a camp, a cure for pellagra, a nutrient-deficiency disease common in besieged Leningrad. After this discovery, Zilber was first made head of a camp medical-research lab, then transferred to Moscow to the “special-assignment prison institute.” Released on March 25, 1944, he was able to publish an article—on cancer—in Izvestia.Footnote 92 Another prominent physician, Pavel Zdrodovsky (1890–1976), twice imprisoned (1938–1944), conducted research under NKVD supervision: first, while a Gulag internee, he was sent to combat a brucellosis outbreak in Kazakhstan, then worked in a prison laboratory to study typhus (whose spread among servicemen greatly concerned Soviet leaders), which earned his release in 1944.Footnote 93
Shtern must have known the stories of Zilber and Zdrodovsky, as both joined the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences in 1945, soon after its founding; Shtern herself had been among the academicians first elected in November 1944. Thus, she knew of at least two prominent medical scientists who worked on topics of strategic significance while incarcerated, and were then released; and one of these cases also involved cancer research. During the JAC investigation, Shtern chose a topic crucial to the scientific competition of the emerging Cold War.
The American Context and the Birth of Chemotherapy
Shtern's treatise, and the Soviet foregrounding of Kliueva and Roskin's project, directly pertained to concurrent developments in US cancer research. Given the inadequacies of surgery and radiotherapy, both the US and USSR were experimenting with anticancer drugs. In 1935–53, at what would later become the National Cancer Institute, Murray Shear and his research team tested the efficacy of various compounds. When results proved elusive, skepticism about chemotherapy set in, later overcome as, for instance, Charles Heidelberger and his University of Wisconsin colleagues developed a drug effective on solid tumors.Footnote 94
The cancer treatment Shtern theorized in her prison cell, without access to medical literature or laboratory experimentation, was in essence the method of chemotherapy, with two advantages over methods being developed in the US: 1) perhaps owing to her own sparse knowledge of oncology at the time, and her post-arrest isolation from recent scientific developments, Shtern intentionally left the active substance unspecified, in effect positing that different organs and tumor types would respond to different compounds; and 2) her method foregrounded the specific internal environment of organs where cancerous growth occurs. Shtern hypothesized that each organ would require a different method for breaching the blood-tissue barrier to introduce these various medicinal compounds.
The Political Environment of the Cold War
When Lina Shtern was in prison, drafting her manuscript and, perhaps, reflecting on the implications of the KR case, she was following the new Cold War rules. By 1945, Soviet and US political elites understood that competition would henceforth depend on science and technology, including in the civilian sphere. International prestige became nearly as important as developing more powerful bombs. This is why, in the late 1940s–early 1950s, cancer treatment was a Soviet national priority, far beyond the sphere of healthcare.
The link between Shtern's “On Cancer” and her sentencing has been missed due to insufficient consideration of two aspects of her case: 1) the Cold War's well-known basis in scientific-technical, and not just military, competition; 2) Shtern's own unfolding understanding of these new rules.Footnote 95 To a reader well-versed in Shtern's work, the essay seems to cover little new ground; thus does Malkin describe her prison writings as “popular-science” articles, and Rapoport, as elaboration on the blood-tissue barrier. But in the nascent Cold War context, this non-novelty was corroborative: Shtern's previous discoveries pointed in a new, strategically critical direction. Her first readers—security personnel with no background in medicine or biology—received a clear explanation of how her scientific work from the last thirty years could lead directly to a cancer breakthrough. And her persuasiveness only increased as she played the part of the naive, trusting scholar, so devoted to science that international intrigue eluded her.
Shtern's colleagues read the essay as a simplified explanation of long-established theories. But to the readers deciding her fate, these same explanations vested her future research with great promise. And then, another plot twist: Stalin's death, the H-bomb tests, and the new turn in foreign policy—and cancer treatment was relegated from the national-strategic to the medical sphere. In the mid-1950s, Shtern's room-lab was tasked with a different project for the military: studying the effects of radiation (nuclear war fallout) on the blood-brain barrier and bodily homeostasis. Shtern did not publish a single article on cancer treatment after her release, having never conducted research on it, and presumably unwilling to present work based on general speculation. Shtern's research-related trial defense receded with time. The condemned JAC members were posthumously exonerated in 1958, and in the early 1960s, both the Soviet Jewish underground and American Jewish historiography began to formulate the tidy myth of the martyred Jewish nonconformists.Footnote 96 Within that context, you could well be the lucky sole survivor, but telling how you survived could be quite awkward. Now that the JAC proceedings have been published, we know that Shtern was not the only maneuverer; scholars have begun discussing particular defendants’ strategies.Footnote 97 The story of Shtern's de facto pardon clarifies the politics of Soviet science in the late 1940s and 1950s: a scientist could try to play by its rules, ultimately altering the course of her own prosecution with nothing more than pen, paper, and her own previous renown.