Treatment in a psychiatric hospital

Moika River Embankment, 126, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190121

"...exhibits psychopathic personality traits, but does not suffer from a mental illness and, according to the state of their neuro-psychological health, is capable of working."

According to the court decision dated February 18, 1964, Joseph Brodsky was taken to City Psychiatric Hospital No. 2 on Pryazhka. Forced forensic psychiatric examination was a common method used by the Soviet authorities to suppress those they deemed undesirable. Many figures from science and culture protested against the persecution of the young poet; they composed a letter to the First Secretary of the Leningrad Regional Committee of the CPSU, Tolstikov, in defense of Joseph Brodsky.

"February 19-20, 1964

Leningrad. Smolny. Regional Committee. To Comrade Tolstikov

Dear Vasily Sergeyevich!

We are writing to you deeply concerned that a young talented Leningrad poet is being subjected to unjust and illegal persecution. We are people of various professions who know and highly value Brodsky’s work, particularly his published poetic translations of Spanish and Polish authors. We know that he is considered a very gifted poet by the luminaries of our literature: Chukovsky, Marshak, Akhmatova. Therefore, we were especially shocked to learn that on February 18, at the Dzerzhinsky District Court, Brodsky was charged with parasitism, after which he was forcibly sent under escort to a psychiatric hospital. He is twenty-three years old, a nervously fragile young man, and staying in a psychiatric hospital threatens him with irreparable harm. The persecution of Brodsky is, in our memory, the first recurrence in many years of the notorious methods of arbitrariness. It is bitter to realize that this is happening in your glorious city. We earnestly ask for your decisive intervention. Delay is extremely dangerous.

Members of the Writers' Union: Lidia Chukovskaya, Raisa Orlova, Lev Kopelev, Alexander Ivich, Candidate of Philological Sciences Vyacheslav Ivanov, Candidate of Physical and Mathematical Sciences Ivan Rozansky, Candidate of Geological Sciences Natalia Kind, Candidate of Physical and Mathematical Sciences Mikhail Polivanov."

This petition was granted to a greater extent than expected. Instead of being released from custody and undergoing outpatient examination, as the defense requested, Brodsky was locked up for three weeks “on Pryazhka,” that is, in Psychiatric Hospital No. 2 on the embankment of the Pryazhka River, spending the first three days in a ward for the violent. There, they immediately began to “treat” him. In 1987, when asked which moment in his Soviet life was the hardest, Brodsky unhesitatingly named the torment he endured on Pryazhka. “They gave me terrible tranquilizer injections. Deep at night, they woke me, plunged me into an ice bath, wrapped me in a wet sheet, and placed me next to a radiator. The heat from the radiator dried the sheet, which then stuck to my body,” the poet recalled as “the worst time in my life.”

The doctors identified “psychopathic traits” in Brodsky but declared him sane and capable of work. The poet himself said that what drove him mad in the hospital was the “distortion of proportions”: “either the windows were slightly smaller than usual, or the ceilings too low, or the beds too large.” It is unclear why Brodsky was subjected to medieval torture. After all, the punitive authorities did not seek any information from him and, apparently, did not require repentance or admission of his errors (except for the episode with Investigator Sh., mentioned above in the first chapter, but that may have been on his own initiative). Only one of two possibilities remains — either they truly considered him mentally ill and wanted to cure him by their methods to make him fit for trial and condemnation, or there was sadism on the part of the medical staff, which the world later learned about from dissidents subjected to Soviet psychiatric terror. In Leningrad, there were no doctors favorably disposed toward Brodsky, and the psychiatrists at Pryazhka gave a conclusion that was probably objective but, under the circumstances, fatal: “...displays psychopathic character traits but does not suffer from a mental illness and, according to his neuro-psychic health condition, is capable of work.”

Sources:

https://biography.wikireading.ru/62823

https://www.fontanka.ru/2020/09/04/69454967/

https://vpitergo.ru/psihiatricheskie-bolnitsy-peterburga-i-ih-izvestnye-patsienty/

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More stories from Great Writers: Joseph Brodsky (Petersburg and the Whole World)

The Case of the Parasite Brodsky - First Hearing

36 Vosstaniya Street, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191014

On February 13, 1964, Brodsky was arrested on charges of parasitism. The next day, he suffered his first heart attack in the cell. A few days later, the first court hearing took place. Journalist and writer Frida Vigdorova took notes during the two sessions, which were periodically attempted to be confiscated.

Trial of the Parasite Brodsky - Finale

Fontanka River Embankment, 22, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191028

Brodsky systematically fails to fulfill the duties of a Soviet citizen in producing material goods and personal provision, as evidenced by his frequent job changes.

Childhood and Youth of Brodsky. One and a Half Rooms.

Liteyny Ave., 24, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191028

The aesthetic views of Brodsky were formed in Leningrad during the 1940s–1950s. Neoclassical architecture, heavily damaged during the bombings, the endless perspectives of Leningrad’s outskirts, water, the multiplicity of reflections — motifs connected with these impressions from his childhood and youth are invariably present in his work.

Jewish cemetery

Stachek Square, 4, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 198095

Jewish cemetery near Leningrad. A crooked fence made of rotten plywood. Behind the crooked fence lie side by side lawyers, merchants, musicians, revolutionaries.

Beloved of Joseph Brodsky

15 Glinki St., Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068

The poet dedicated many poems to M.B. — it is by these very first letters of the name and surname that they can be found in Brodsky’s collections.

Memorial plaque to Joseph Brodsky

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The idea of installing a monument to Iosif Alexandrovich Brodsky on Malaya Okhta originated among local residents, it is believed, in the late 1990s. However, more than ten years passed before their own "Brodsky point" appeared on the map. The commemorative sign to the outstanding poet was solemnly unveiled near house No. 19 on Stakhanovtsev Street on December 1, 2011.

Monument "Brodsky Has Arrived"

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The first monument in Russia to a poet, essayist, playwright, translator, and Nobel Prize laureate in Literature was unveiled on November 16, 2005, on Vasilievsky Island, in the courtyard of the Faculty of Philology at Saint Petersburg State University.

Monument "Portrait of Joseph Brodsky" or THIS IS NOT HIM!

Bering Street, 27k6, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199397

Granite Joseph Alexandrovich materialized unexpectedly and suddenly. The sculpture was installed in December 2016. There was no opening ceremony. The monument was unloaded from the trailer of an old "Gazelle" and placed on the ground... It turned out unpoetic.

First Hotel Reisen, Stockholm (Joseph Brodsky)

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Joseph Brodsky often visited Sweden, even calling it his ecological niche. For six years, from 1988 to 1994, he spent several months almost every summer living at the First Hotel Reisen in Stockholm.

The grave of Joseph Brodsky

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In January 1996, Joseph Brodsky passed away. He was buried in one of his favorite cities — Venice, in the old cemetery on the island of San Michele. The epitaph on Brodsky's grave reads: "Not all ends with death" (from Propertius' elegy *Letum non omnia finit*).