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Review: Never Alone

There is a seam of self-justification running through the book as Sharansky seeks to explain his political decisions

October 15, 2020 11:14
NATAN SHARANSKY
2 min read

Never Alone by Natan Sharansky and Gil Troy (Public Affairs, £25)

Natan comes home declared the front page of the Jewish Chronicle on February 7 1986. It also carried three images, two of Natan Sharansky himself (in one, he is giving thanks at the Kotel) and the third, of the former refusenik’s mother, hand anxiously covering her face. In a way, despite the millions of words written about the Natan Sharansky phenomenon before and since he “came home”, the pictures were almost all that were needed.

During nine years in prison while his wife of one day, Avital, toured the offices of world leaders to beg for pressure on the Soviet Union, Sharansky became the world’s best-known Jewish dissident. And, once in Israel, he was not content to slip under the radar but, instead, pursued a long and active public career, from politics to chairing the Jewish Agency.

Sharansky has not been shy about adding to the millions of words himself. Never Alone, co-written with Canadian history professor Gil Troy, is his fourth book, and he is the author of countless essays and polemics. He also, with considerable good humour, offered hints for spending time in isolation as lockdown began. I imagine nine years of political imprisonment makes him something of an expert in that regard.