International pressure led to his dramatic expulsion from his homeland. On 26 April 1979 Vins was awakened in prison and told to change into his own clothes. Unaware of his imminent change of circumstances, he was flown to
Moscow, where he spent the night in a center for vagrants. The following day he was issued new clothes and informed that because of his anti-Soviet activity the
Presidium of the Supreme Soviet had stripped him of his Soviet citizenship. He was being expelled. Vins protested in vain that his activity was not anti-Soviet, but had to bow to the inevitable. He was told to write down the names of his close relatives so that they could leave the country with him. Realizing that he would be unlikely to see them again otherwise, he listed his wife, children, mother and niece. Vins was driven to Moscow's
Lefortovo prison and then all five expellees were taken to Moscow airport. Two American embassy officials on the plane explained that their release followed an agreement between the
White House and the Soviet embassy in
Washington, DC. It was not until the plane landed in
New York City that they learned they were being exchanged for two convicted spies, and the handover took place in an isolated hangar at
Kennedy airport. The five walked off the plane at one end while the spies walked on at the other. Joined in the United States six weeks later by the rest of his family, Vins made the town of
Elkhart, Indiana his home and learned English. He received invitations to the White House and to innumerable events around the world. At first there was competition between missions supporting persecuted churches in the Soviet Union to enlist him, but Vins kept his distance. He eventually set up the international representation of the Baptist churches in the Soviet Union that owed their allegiance to the Council of Churches, a group of tightly knit congregations that categorically rejected any compromises with the Soviet authorities and refused to register officially. Their members were suffering persecution, with hundreds in
labor camps or psychiatric hospitals. His displacement to the USA led to the rest of his extended family (siblings and their families) to travel from the
Ukrainian SSR to start a new life in a free country. Vins' work aiding Baptist victims of persecution changed dramatically in the late 1980s, when open Christian work in Russia became possible. In 1990, President
Mikhail Gorbachev revoked the decree that had stripped Vins of his Soviet citizenship, thereby allowing him to revisit his homeland. In the 1990s Vins made numerous preaching trips, especially in Russia and Ukraine. In 1995 he was allowed access, in Moscow, to his father's
KGB case file, and Vins finally learned that his father had been executed in 1937. Vins discovered in late 1997 that he had a malignant inoperable brain tumor, from which he died in 1998. His sister-in-law
Maria Glukhoman died in Arvada, CO in 2014. Georgi's son, Peter Vins, returned to Russia in the 1990s, and founded a shipping firm. ==See also==