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THE RUSSIAN EXILE.

DR. BORANOFF.

Lately arrived in New Zealand is Dr. Boranoff, not only a prominent personage because he is a Russian exile, who escaped three times fropi imprisonment in Siberia, where he was incarcerated and suffered all the tortures heaped upon every political prisoner because of his opinions, but also because Dr. Boranoff has just completed a highly successful tour of England, delivering brilliant discourses of his appalling experience in Siberia, and has arrived direct from London in the “Taionui” to tour New Zealand. Dr. Boranoff will appear for one night only in Foxton on Tuesday, June 22nd. It may be interesting to know that there is no capital punishment in Russia excepting for political prisoners, who are also brutally tortured. Dr. Boranoff who is a graduate in science and medicine at the universities of St. Petersburg, Dorpat, and Berlin, speaks English with a beautiful grace and fluency, and his dramatic and thrilling discourses are of absorbing interest. In an interview in the New Zealand Times, Dr. Boranoff said he was first arrested and sent to Siberia for being concerned in the production of a newspaper advocating the education of the masses. He had then just started to practice his calling. He was lodged in gaol. There was no trial; only a maximum of salt food, a minimum of water, and continual questioning about his associates. Then came the lash, and Dr- Boranoff showed the red cicatrices running down the spine. He rolled back his shirt cuff and revealed an arm into which deep furrows had eaten. ‘ ‘The chains,” he said with simple directness. By night and day he was chained by his arms and legs to a barrow. Finding him unresponsive to betray his friends, he goes on to explain, they tried another plan, the crudest of all. He was ruthlessly chained to the wall and a Woman was brought in and stripped to the waist. When she turned her face he knew her. She was a friend of his, and they had apprehended her —poor gentle girl—-on suspicion. They fastened her to the wall, and on that bare back the Cossack knout was set to work.- She implored him not to speak nor betray his friends, and her courage only kept him from doing so. She enjoined him not to utter a word. “It was brutal terrible beyond words,” says Uf. Boranoff. There is a special concession for ladies. Colleges and schools may also arrange for concessions.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19090619.2.10

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXI, Issue 462, 19 June 1909, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
411

THE RUSSIAN EXILE. Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXI, Issue 462, 19 June 1909, Page 2

THE RUSSIAN EXILE. Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXI, Issue 462, 19 June 1909, Page 2

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