San Antonio Express-News

DOROTHY LOUISE GROTHUES

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FEBRUARY 29, 1924 - DECEMBER 6, 2018

Dorothy Louise Grothues entered eternal rest on Thursday, December 6, 2018 at the blessed age of 94. She was born February 29, 1924 in Kansas City, Missouri to Jerome and Alice Fraeyman. She was preceded in death by her husband, Alphonse B. Grothues; son, Timothy Grothues; daughter in law, Kay Anderson Grothues; granddaugh­ter, Kara Grothues; grandson, Christophe­r Grothues; and sister, Marguerite Van De Walle. She is survived by her sons, William (Yvonne), Andrew (Lanell), Stephen; daughter, Karen (Ron); 13 grandchild­ren; 20 great grandchild­ren; and numerous nieces and nephews. Dorothy was a member of St. Luke’s Catholic Church for over 50 years. She served her parish in numerous ways including, member of the Regina Guild and the Altar Society. She enjoyed many activities in her life - bowling, playing bunco, bingo, traveling, member of the Belgium American Club of San Antonio. A Rosary will be recited on Thursday, December 13, at 10:00 A.M. followed by the Funeral Mass at 10:30 A.M. at St. Luke’s Catholic Church. Following a reception, Graveside Services will be held at 1:30 P.M. at San Fernando Archdioces­an Cemetery # 2. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to SemperMax Support Fund, P.O. Box 54, Rural Retreat, VA 24368 www.sempermax.org; The Brigidine Sisters, 5118 Loma Linda Dr, San Antonio, TX 78201; or to the charity of your choice.

Lyudmila M. Alexeyeva, a leader of the Russian human rights movement in the Soviet Union and in the era of President Vladimir Putin, died Saturday in a Moscow hospital. She was 91.

Alexeyeva had been Russia’s most prominent surviving Soviet-era dissident, harking from the same generation as physicist Andrei Sakharov and novelist Alexander Solzhenits­yn. Though frail, she took part in street protests until about eight years ago.

She spent about 50 years in the Russian opposition, starting as a typist for a samizdat journal in the 1960s and continuing as an observer of politicize­d court hearings against street protesters under Putin.

“She was clearly one of the giants,” Tanya Lokshina, an associate director for Europe and Central Asia at Human Rights Watch, said in a telephone interview. “She called herself the grandmothe­r of the Russian human rights movement, and that is what she was.”

Alexeyeva was a founder of the Moscow Helsinki Group, a pioneering human rights organizati­on, for which Soviet authoritie­s exiled her from the country. She then served as the organizati­on’s chairwoman after returning to Russia in the post-Soviet period.

Though she spent a lifetime challengin­g abusive leaders, her approach was never shrill, acquaintan­ces said. Also, she saved some of her criticism not for the abusive men in power, but for the people who let them get away with it.

In her analysis of the causes of repression in her society, Alexeyeva consistent­ly disputed any neat apposition of Russian despots and Western democratic leaders. Russia was not merely unlucky with its leaders, she maintained.

What separated the Soviet Union and Russia from the West, she said, were not enlightene­d leaders but systems of checks and balances. With the Helsinki Group, for example, she tried to monitor authoritie­s in the Soviet Union by holding them to their own stated commitment­s rights.

Her views were also a critique of the vilificati­on of Putin as personally responsibl­e for rolling back Russian democracy and the idea, sometimes heard among his opponents, that if he were to step down Russia might be ruled differentl­y. Only by building civil society could Russians achieve better results from their leaders, she maintained.

“She kept pushing that point,” Lokshina of Human Rights Watch said. “There could be different leaders, but if there is a healthy system of checks and balances, it is much more difficult to do serious damage. Unfortunat­ely, in Russia, that is not the case.”

She is survived by two sons, five grandchild­ren and three great-grandchild­ren.

Born in Crimea on July 20, 1927, Alexeyeva became a dissident as a member of what she called the “thaw generation” under the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, who introduced a period of relaxed censorship.

When the screws tightened again in Leonid Brezhnev’s Soviet Union, she and other Moscow intellectu­als risked their lives to keep pressing for freedom and human rights. Alexeyeva typed a samizdat journal, called the Chronicle of Current Events.

She and other dissidents saw an opening when the to human Soviet Union signed a treaty in Helsinki that required it to uphold certain rights at home, though apparently it had little intention of doing so. In 1976, she co-founded the Helsinki Group to monitor compliance.

Though the treaty’s text was published in Pravda, the newspaper of the Communist Party, Soviet authoritie­s were not amused. They broke up the Helsinki Group less than a year after its founding and offered Alexeyeva a choice of prison or exile.

Her husband pressed her to take the second option, and she left with her family for the United States, not returning until 16 years later after the Soviet breakup. In the United States, she wrote two books: “The Thaw Generation: Coming of Age in the Post-Stalin Era” and a scholarly study called “Soviet Dissent.”

When Putin came to power in 1999, Alexeyeva quickly became critical of his government and in particular rights abuses by Russian soldiers during the second war in Chechnya. Despite this, she engaged with Putin’s government and is credited with persuading him to shelve a plan to force people who had fled the war in Chechnya to return before the fighting had stopped.

As Putin rolled back democratic rights, Alexeyeva lent her name to a range of causes, including a protest group that gathered on the 31st day of months with 31 days, in reference to the 31st article of the Russian Constituti­on guaranteei­ng freedom of assembly. It was at one such protest that she was arrested in 2010.

Still, she remained optimistic about Russia’s prospects, telling interviewe­rs that, as bad as conditions were under Putin, the Soviet Union had been worse: “When people say to me, ‘It is like Soviet times,’ I say, ‘No, it is much, much better. It is moving slowly, slowly, but in the right direction.’ ”

If the government’s aim was to stage show trials to discourage street protests, she said in 2012, it would backfire in the looser society of post-Soviet Russia. “It is not working,” she said. “They have to reckon with the fact that people are not afraid. This is the 21st century, not the Soviet Union.”

But the soft authoritar­ianism under Putin also took its toll. After Russia passed a law restrictin­g foreign funding for nongovernm­ental organizati­ons, Alexeyeva was compelled to lay off employees at the Helsinki Group.

Nonetheles­s, Putin paid a visit to Alexeyeva on her 90th birthday that was both a gesture of respect and, apparently, a sly effort to coopt support from Russia’s most prominent dissident for the annexation of Crimea. Putin, as a gift, offered Alexeyeva a painting of her native Crimea. She accepted.

 ?? Yuri Kochetkov / Associated Press ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin congratula­tes Lyudmila Alexeyeva, an activist who had criticized his government, during an awards ceremony in 2017.
Yuri Kochetkov / Associated Press Russian President Vladimir Putin congratula­tes Lyudmila Alexeyeva, an activist who had criticized his government, during an awards ceremony in 2017.
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