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ByAnonymous, Anonymous

Opinion

Natan Sharansky — competitive, defiant and nobody’s pawn

January 12, 2014 12:54
2 min read

‘Don’t disturb me, I’m playing chess”.

Natan Sharansky’s jailers took that as powerful evidence that he was going — or had already become — quite mad. After all, in his punishment cell there was no bed, chair or table, let alone a chess board and pieces. In fact, it was chess that kept him sane.

A human-rights activist campaigning for the rights of Jews to emigrate to Israel, Sharansky was sentenced in 1977 on a fabricated charge of spying for the Americans. He spent nine years in a Siberian prison. Half of that was in solitary confinement and for more than 400 days he was locked in a punishment cell, given barely any food and wore clothes so thin that, in the winter, it amounted to a form of torture.

As a child, he had been a chess prodigy and, at the age of 14, he became champion of his native Ukrainian town, Donetsk.
He could play several games simultaneously in his head (without looking at a board). A flashy but useless skill, he’d always thought. “But, in prison,” he recalled, “it became clear why I needed this”. In his dark, freezing cell, with no one to talk to, where he was forbidden to read or write, he played games in his head, obviously having to move for both sides, white and black — “thousands of games; I won them all”.