The fund was formed on the initiative of writer and
political prisoner Alexander Ginzburg. Families of arrested
dissidents often suffered repercussions such as the loss of jobs and opportunities to study. During his time in
labor camps, Ginzburg managed to coordinate relatives and friends to help other inmates and their families. This included support such as donating household goods for those in exile, helping relatives who faced expulsion from work, or offering places to stay in Moscow for wives who journeyed to visit their husbands in remote Siberian camps. After his release in 1972, Ginzburg consulted with Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn on how to continue this informal support. Solzhenitsyn offered a quarter of his
Nobel Prize award for the cause. After Solzhenitsyn was expelled from the USSR in 1974 following the publication of
The Gulag Archipelago, he set up a fund in Switzerland, donating all present and future international royalties for the book to it. The funds were from then on brought into the USSR and distributed through a network of volunteers. == Activities ==