Later, he worked as an editor of radio news broadcasts at a locomotive factory. In 1932, as a correspondent, Kopelev witnessed the
NKVD's forced grain requisitioning and the
dekulakization. Later, he described the
Holodomor in his memoir
The Education of a True Believer.
Robert Conquest's
The Harvest of Sorrow later quoted him directly (see also
Collectivisation in the USSR). He graduated from the Moscow State Institute of Foreign Languages in 1935 in the German language faculty, and, after 1938, he taught at the where he earned a PhD. When the
German–Soviet War broke out in June 1941, he volunteered for the
Red Army and used his knowledge of German to serve as a propaganda officer and an interpreter. He was tasked with subverting and indoctrinating Germans, and on one occasion persuaded the German garrison of
Graudenz (Grudziądz) to mutiny. When he entered
East Prussia with the Red Army throughout the
East Prussian Offensive, he sharply criticized the
atrocities against the German civilian population and was arrested in 1945 and sentenced to a ten-year term in the
Gulag for fostering "
bourgeois humanism" and for "compassion towards the enemy". In the
sharashka Marfino he met
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Kopelev became a prototype for Rubin from
The First Circle. He was released in 1954 and in 1956 was rehabilitated. Still an optimist and believer in the ideals of communism, during the
Khrushchev Thaw he restored his
Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) membership. From 1957 to 1969 he taught in the Moscow Institute of Polygraphy and the Institute of History of Arts. It was Kopelev who approached
Aleksandr Tvardovsky, editor of the top Soviet literary journal, the
Novy Mir (New World) to urge publication of Solzhenitsyn's
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. From 1968 onward Kopelev actively participated in the human rights and dissident movement. In 1968 he was fired from his job and expelled from the CPSU and the Writers' Union for signing protest letters against the persecution of dissidents, publicly supporting
Andrei Sinyavsky and
Yuli Daniel and actively denouncing the
Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. He also protested Solzhenitsyn's expulsion from the Writers' Union and wrote in defense of dissenting General
Pyotr Grigorenko,
imprisoned at a
psikhushka. Kopelev's books were distributed via
samizdat (underground publishing), smuggled out of Russia and published in the West. For his political activism and contacts with the West, he was deprived of the right to teach or be published in 1977. ==Germany==