The lonely death of a jailed Russian pianist who opposed war
While the US and Russia were finalizing their largest prisoner exchange since the Cold War, a talented but obscure Russian pianist was quietly dying in jail.
Pavel Kushnir, who had persistently protested Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, began a hunger strike shortly after his arrest in May, eventually refusing water as well. He passed away in silence on July 28—four days before a high-profile exchange involving well-known dissidents and Kremlin agents.
Kushnir died alone at a pre-trial detention center in Birobidzhan, Russia’s Far East, with only 11 people present at his cremation. Svetlana Kaverzina, an independent politician in Siberia, lamented that no one could intervene or provide legal assistance because they were unaware of his plight. “We couldn’t chip in and send him a lawyer—nobody knew,” she wrote on Telegram. “He was alone.”
The YouTube channel where Kushnir shared four anti-war videos had just five subscribers at the time of his arrest. His “Foreign Agent Mulder” posts, a nod to the 1990s US TV show The X-Files and a Russian law targeting political dissidents, included one video where he even appeared with a hand-drawn FBI badge. His final film, released in January, addressed the 2022 Bucha massacre, where Russian troops killed civilians in a Kyiv suburb.
1 comment
It is indeed sad to see a young man died just because he didn’t support war but believe in peace. May his soul rest in peace