December 19, 2025

"Mr. and Mrs. Murderer" in Romania: Cold War Rhetoric at its best ©


 

The original plan for advertising for Radio Free Europe, written in 1949, contained the point: "To create emotion, personalized – dramatic headlines ... written in terse simple words that speak directly to the average man." 

 

One heavy-hitting early 1950s Advertising Council newspaper fund-raising advertisement for Radio Free Europe and Radio Free Asia was "Mr. and Mrs. Murderer." This ad is a perfect example of not only using emotion to rally Americans behind Radio Free Europe, but also how the American press was used to hide the CIA's sponsorship of the Radio Free Europe and Radio Free Asia. 

 

The advertisement, full of Cold War rhetoric and imagery, was carried nationwide in newspapers ranging from The New York Times to small-town newspapers. For example, in The Gettysburg Times (Pennsylvania), January 5, 1953, the text read, in part,

 

Until 10 A.M., December 27th (1951), they were simply Mr. and Mrs. Margineanu. distinguished citizens of Blaj- respected and admired by the entire community and then -- Radio Free Europe is telling all of Romania about this blood-thirsty couple and their secret torture chamber

 

This is Radio Free Europe. People of Romania, listen to this information we have received from the underground at Blaj. Among the foremost aides of the Chief of the Security Police are a young married couple named Margineanu. Together with other members of the governmental gang, the patronize blood orgies nightly

 

Those freedom-loving Romanians not in sympathy with the Communist regime are dragged before them and beaten to death. While the torture goes on, the wine bottle is passed around — there is much toasting and singing. The names of other regular participants are as follows ...

 

Slowly but surely the true fate of Communism is being exposed and the cold war is being won. But Radio Free Europe urgently needs more help from its sponsor -- You!

 

Readers in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, read an editorial in the Cedar Rapids Tribune on December 4, 1952, urging support of Radio Free Europe and Radio Free Asia. 

 

No money from any government agency or department is used by either Radio Free Asia or Radio Free Europe.

 

As distinct from the Voice of America, the official radio voice of the U. S. government, neither the Free Asia nor Free Europe operations are tied to official American foreign policy. Observers say this fact, as well as a generous use of imagination in programming and writing, makes both of the private systems more effective than the government sponsored Voice. To thinking people behind the curtain anything that smacks of government is automatically suspected.

 

The full force of Radio Free "Europe and Radio Free Asia lies in its shrewd evaluation of life under a dictatorship. Using intelligence reports and accounts of refugees to guide them, the stations can reach behind the curtain and hand out news which is as local as the front page of the home-town paper.

 

Take the case of Mr. and Mrs. Margineanu, citizens of good standing in the Romanian city of Blaj. The Margineanus were in league with the Romanian secret police and apparently enjoyed watching the Reds strong-arm information out of unwilling political prisoners. On Dec. 27,1951, the following message reached Blaj on Radio Free Europe channels: (as above).

 

The editorial concluded:

 

Using all the best weapons of psychological warfare, Radio Free Europe and Radio Free Asia are slandered daily by every media the Communists control. There couldn't be a better measure of their effectiveness or a more demanding reason for their continued operation.

.1960 “Truth” Contest ©

  

.1960 “Truth” Contest


 

The Ted Bates Agency prepared Truth Contest advertisements that were sent to newspapers nationwide. The statement contest was known as the Truth Broadcast, Truth-cast and Truth Message. The latter seems to be the term most used and will be the one used in this article.

 

The entrant was to complete the sentence: “I believe the most important thing people behind the Iron Curtain countries should know is....” The postmark deadline for the contest entry was 30 April 1960 with the entry received by 10 May1960. The 1960 Truth Message contest did not ask for one dollar per entry to be considered for one of the free trips to Munich to Lisbon, Paris, and Munich; 50 would receive a complete set of the Encyclopedia Britannica, and 200 would receive a Hallicrafter short wave radio. 

 

Crusade national Chairman W. B. Murphy was quoted as calling the Truth Message program, “One way the individual citizen can take an active part in the fight against Communist aggression. This unique contest is also an opportunity to show 76,000,000 captive people that they have not been forgotten by the free world."

 

The Advertising Council’s 1960 campaign, in cooperation with the Newspaper Advertising Executive Association, included the contest entry blank along with photographs, one showing a young girl and man standing in front of a propaganda poster in Poland as an example of how the Communist regimes especially targeted “children in Red-occupied Europe.” The advertisement went on, “There’s a desperate battle going on in the captive countries behind the Iron Curtain. It’s a battle for men’s minds, for the very survival of their hopes for the future.”

 

Another ad began with the question: “What is our best weapon against Communism? The answer was, “Our best weapon is the truth. The Communists fear the truth because they know it could destroy them. Now you can hit them where it hurts—with the truth! With your own truth!

 

The Advertising Council’s Gordon Kinney, the radio director, put out a fact sheet on the Crusade for Freedom – Radio Free Europe for use by radio stations.  In part, the fact sheet read:

 

SUMMARY -- WHAT TO TELL YOUR AUDIENCE 

 

1. Describe the continuing propaganda assault of Communism against the free world and recall that Radio Free Europe, a private, non-profit, citizen sponsored organization has for 10 years been bringing the truth to the nations behind the Iron Curtain. 

 

2. Explain the importance of preventing the 76,000,000 people of these nations from becoming robots of Soviet aggression. 

 

3. Urge every American to support the Crusade for Freedom and point out that Truth Dollars sent to CRUSADE for FREEDOM c/o their local postmaster are essential to keeping RFE on the air. Radio Free Europe is dependent upon the contributions of the American people for its continued operation.

 

Hotels for Freedom

 

The American Hotel Association (AHA) had mailed 68,000 entry blanks and other written materials (weighing over two tons) about Radio Free Europe to approximately 5,800 hotels of the Association. Vernon Herndon, president of the AHA, earlier had been on a “study tour” of Radio Free Europe and the Iron Curtain, said “The Truth Broadcast program is supported by people of the greatest integrity and is aimed at bringing the truth about the American way of life to people behind the Iron Curtain. I thoroughly subscribe to its objectives.”

 

Reader’s Digest

 

The March 1960 issue of Reader’s Digest carried an advertisement that included a photograph of Nikita Khrushchev, with the message:

 

         IF YOU DISAGREE WITH MR. KHRUSHCHEV ...

 

·   Capitalism is a worn-out old mare while Socialism is new, young and full of energy

·   The so-called free world constitutes the cruel exploitation of millions ... for the enrichment of a handful...

·   Now it is American imperialism which is forcing its way ... to world domination 

·   Your grandchildren will live under Socialism in America.

 

         Here’s how to put your beliefs to work

 

         If you lived behind the Iron Curtain, you would have to “eat” words like those above          about the United States. But you can help give people throughout Europe a better diet   of truth and freedom-in your own words.

         And you may go to Europe to broadcast them personally.

 

         Enter the 1960 RADIO FREE EUROPE Truth Message Contest. Just write what you           think people in Communist countries should know about America or freedom. Winning       messages will be beamed over Radio Free Europe to millions who want to hear what     you, as an American, have to say

The writers of the six best messages would win free trips to Europe for two persons. Other prizes include 50 complete sets of the Encyclopedia Britannica and 200 Hallicrafters Short-Wave Radios. 

 

December 18, 2025

Dropping Leaflets on America: Freedom Sky Drop on Freedom Day 1955 ©

 


Thousands of propaganda leaflets were not only lofted behind the Iron Curtain in the Cold War, but also were dropped over American cities and towns in support of Radio Free Europe. Below, we will take a brief look at the Freedom Sky Drop in 1955.


The Civil Air Patrol, American Heritage Foundation, and the American Legion sponsored a nation-wide Freedom Sky Drop project jointly on "Freedom Day," Washington’s Birthday, February 22, 1955, as part of the Crusade for Freedom fund-raising campaign for Radio Free Europe. One thousand small airplanes flew over 200 American cities and towns and dropped the following package:  


  • Replicas of the Freedom Bell medallions sent to countries behind the Iron Curtain
  • Freedom scrolls for the signatures of 41 persons
  • Envelopes in which “Truth Dollar” contributions to the Crusade could be mailed
  • Leaflet on Questions and Answers about Radio Free Europe
  • Booklet entitled Your Crusade
  • Reprints of the January 1955 Reader’s Digest article “Balloons Over the Iron Curtain” 


How this was played out at the local level is exemplified by the proclamation signed by mayor James E. Neleigh of Las Cruces, New Mexico, which in part read,

WHEREAS one of the most effective media now known for accomplishing this vital task and combating the Communist lie technique is Radio Free Europe supported by the American people.

I DO HEREBY PROCLAIM Tuesday, February Twenty Second, nineteen hundred and fifty-five, as FREEDOM DAY and do recommend to each citizen that he sign the Freedom Scroll, which is being distributed and contribute Truth Dollars within his means to the support of Crusade for Freedom and the cause of peace and freedom in the world.


In the state of Nevada, the Crusade for Freedom campaign began with a formal dinner in Reno and the lofting of nine balloons with a personal message from Governor Charles Russell, who attended the launching ceremonies. On Saturday, eight Nevada cities were "bombed“ with leaflets, according to one newspaper account: 


Eight western Nevada communities were "bombed" with leaflets Friday as the Nevada Crusade for Freedom Drive got underway...

The Civil Air Patrol took over the duty of spreading leaflets over Sparks, Carson City, Minden, Virginia City, Fern1ey, Wadsworth, Lovelock, and Winnemucca. About 20,000 pieces of literature describing the Crusade were dropped and CAP pilots said that they had been successful in hitting their targets.


In Massachusetts, the newspaper The North Adams Transcript published a photograph with the caption “Ready for Freedom Sky Drop Mission.” The photograph showed North Adams’ mayor James M. Lilly looking at the leaflet package as Civil Air Patrol Captain, Robert C. Sprague, Jr., and two of his aides in front of the airplane that was used to drop the leaflets over North Adams and Pittsfield, Massachusetts, “to shower communities with literature … to dramatize work of Crusade for Freedom in penetrating Iron Curtain with voice of Truth.”


Not all cities approved of the Freedom Sky Drop. For example, in New Hampshire plans to scatter 150,000 leaflets from airplanes were canceled in Manchester, Concord, Nashua, and Portsmouth, when police chiefs objected that fluttering paper would be a menace to motorists.


The city of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, also declined to be involved with the Freedom Sky Drop: "The office of Milwaukee Major Frank Zeidler ruled Milwaukee out of the American Legion sponsored sky drop because of the anti-liter ordinance. Police also expressed concern over possible injury to children chasing the leaflets."


The Freedom Sky Drop became a subject of communications research at the University of Colorado, Message Diffusion Under Uncontrolled Conditions, after the dropping of 9,000 leaflet packages over Boulder, Colorado.


University researchers placed an advertisement in the local newspaper The Boulder Daily Camera with the headline


You can contribute to National Defense ... We are trying to help the Crusade for Freedom by evaluating the effectiveness of this leaflet drop. YOU CAN HELP by filing out this questionnaire and mailing it to us. PLEASE DO THIS IMMEDIATELY.


The Freedom Sky Drop over Boulder, Colorado, was nor much of a success: of 428 persons in Boulder, who were interviewed after the airdrop, only 24 actually had a leaflet in their possession at the time of the interviews. Of that number, 12 found a leaflet on the ground and 12 were given a leaflet from another person. 244 of the 428 respondents stated that they knew of the leaflet-drop through “all the available mass media of communications,” but 184 did not know about the Freedom Sky Drop operation.


The researchers concluded, in part:


Conceptually, the total leaflet message may be restated as follows 

1.   A struggle is going on between the democratic and the communist nations.

2.   In this struggle, Crusade for Freedom is playing a vital role, principally through its Radio Free Europe broadcasting system

3.   The Crusade is supported by voluntary contributions from American citizens.

4.   Their support is justified because the Crusade has been successful.

5.   It is likewise justified because prominent Americans, such as the President, also promote the Crusade program.

The message is, consequently, one both of information and propaganda.


The report Message Diffusion under Uncontrolled Conditions, by Judson B. Pearson, Jiri Nehnevasja, and Rodney D. Elliott, was reviewed by Dr. Anatol Rapoport, Journal of the American Statistical Association, Vol. 53, No. 281 (Mar., 1958), pp. 254-256. 

Ferdinand Ďurčanský and Radio Barcelona: The Vice of Free Slovakia ©

Radio Barcelona, The Voice of Free Slovakia

 

Ferdinand Ďurčanský

 

Ferdinand Ďurčanský was born in 1906 near Zilina, Slovakia, then a part of the A.ustro-Hungarian Empire. He graduated from the Law School of Komenskeho University in Bratislava. He also studied law in Paris and returned to Bratislava to conclude his studies for a Doctorate of Laws degree and practiced law in Bratislava. In 1936 he founded the magazine Nastup (The Attack), described as a fascist, anti-Semitic. In February 1938, he participated in the agreement between Slovakia, Hungary, and Sudeten-Germans on a joint action plan against the Czech government in Prague. Czechoslovakia was divided as federal state with autonomous regional governments in Slovakia and Ruthenia. On March 12, 1939, Ďurčanský and Monsignor Josef Tiso traveled to Berlin to meet with Hitler. 2 days later, German troops invaded Bohemia and Slovakia was declared an independent nation. 

Ďurčanský became Minister of Foreign Affairs. He concluded an agreement in August 1939 with Germany that established a military zone in Slovakia, which helped the German invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939. Ďurčanský also signed an agreement with Germany to send forced labor to Germany and permitted the German army to occupy important Slovak factories.

Ďurčanský lost his cabinet posts in July 1940 for not fully explained reasons. For the next four years he practiced law in Bratislava and managed a chemical faction. In April 1945 as the Soviet army moved in Slovakia, he and others escaped to Austria. Reportedly, he escaped with 150 kilograms of morphine. 

In the Spring of 1945, Ferdinand Ďurčanský escaped frin Austria to Rome, with his wife and two children. When Karel Sidor of the Slovak League of America (SLA) declined to share with him funds that were collected from Slovak nationals abroad,  Ďurčanský organized the Slovak Action Committee (SAC) to work for an independent Slovakia. He also lived in a Jesuit monastery in Frascati near Rome, then in Grottaferrata in the College of Oriental Priests and in the Vatican.

In 1946, the United Nations War Crimes Commission listed Ďurčanský as a war criminal, but extradition requests by the Czechoslovak government under President Benes was refused by Italy on the grounds that the Treaty of 1921 between the two countries did not apply to political criminals. In December 1946, a trial against Ďurčanský was opened in Prague, and on April 15, 1947, he was sentenced to death in absentia as a war criminal.  There was apparently a failed attempt to kidnap him in Rome in August and bring him back to Czechoslovakia for trial.

In November 1946, Ďurčanský began his attempts to enter the USA when he registered him-self and his family with the American Consulate in Naples, Italy on the Czech quota waiing list. He applied for a visa in January 1947 but it was declined.

He sailed from Naples, Italy to Buenos Aires, Argentina, under the pseudonym Nandor Vilcek.[1] Ďurčanskýmoved to Argentina, supposedly as the invitation of Evita Peron. and in 1948 Argentina refused his extradition to Czechoslovakia.

               Slovak refugees Dezider Murgaš and Eduard Moščovič, reportedly on the initiative of Ferdinand Ďurčanský, reportedly assembled a radio from parts purchased on the black market from the US Army's stock at the end of winter 1946. Another Slovak refugee R. Dilong went to Salizano, Italy about 100 km from Rome to worship in a Franciscan Monastery. A local priest and convinced anti-Communist placed the radio in the parish house; the church tower acted as an antenna. Radio Barcelona was the call sign and it only had power of 1Kw. Since the station was illegal in Italy, authorities began looking for it. [2]

               Radio Barcelona broadcast daily from 22:00 to 22:30 in Slovak and from 23:00 to 23:30 in English on 44.45m for Slovakia and on 16m band for South America and 19m band for the U.S. Czechoslovak authorities monitored and recorded the broadcasting on March 20, 1947; the last known broadcast was on April 19 1947.[3] The Czechoslovak Ministry of National Defense report in May 1947, concluded that the radio station was actually operating from a British military base near Udine, Italy, a city in north-eastern Italy. [4]

               The radio station “For Free Slovakia” began on November 27, 1948, from Braunau, Austria, operated by Jozef Čačko . It broadcast for two hours on Saturday and Sunday. The U.S. Army’s CIC reportedly confiscated the radio and “For Free Slovakia” ended. [5]

               The “Voice of the Slovak Republic” radio station was first heard on April 16, 1947, spoke on behalf of the Slovak Action Committee. The station later added, “The Voice of Slovak Republic of the Spanish Radio Nacional” to its name. It spoke in behalf of Slovak separatism and used the slogan, “This year over to the attack! Every trace of the Second Czechoslovak Republic will be erased.” Listeners were encouraged to write “SAV” in all public places in Slovakia. One broadcast said,  “Preparations for a revolt are already underway…a rising is in preparation against the Communist government…Insurgent troops are already being organized.” Ďurčanský’s voice was heard in one broadcast, in which he declared that in Slovakia, “No one knew what would happen to him the next day, where there was no religious freedom, and from where people were being deported to the USSR.”

               Ďurčanský arranged for renewal of radio station in Austria on December 5, 1950 that broadcast on Tuesdays and Fridays on 12:45 AM on the short-wave band of 40 meters.

The program began and ended with the playing of the Slovak Republic’s national anthem in World War II and included the statement: “By fighting Communism we are fighting for the restoration of the Slovak Republic.” The first program was not jammed.[6] Anton Maly was the operator of the station “Voice of the Slovak Republic” and was the Austrian representative of Ďurčanský’s Slovak Liberation Committee. [7]

Ďurčanský returned to Europe on or about May 20, 1952, from Argentina and proceed to Innsbruck, Austria. He requested a visa for Germany, but it was refused by the Combined Travel Board (German and American intelligence services). He then proceeded to Paris, where he received a 3-month French visa, before returning to Germany.

A Free Europe Committee memorandum in May 1952 gave some details about Ďurčanský;

 

Our continuing study of the various attacks on PEROUTKA (head of the Czech Desk of RFE) indicates that they are inspired by agents of two political adventurers and agitators, namely General PRCHALA and Dr. Ferdinand DURCANSKY . . . DURCANSKY’S fulminations and vilifications of many prominent Czechs regularly appear in obscure newspapers published in the Czech or Slovak language in various centers of Czech emigration. [8]

 

In the Slovak émigré newspaper in the United States in 1952, SLOVÁK V AMERIKE, there was a notice announcing the broadcasting of a short-wave radio transmitter on 45 meters daily at 1900 hours, Central European Time. The notice named John Kutasovic as trustee, and urged readers to contribute funds for the radio station. The alleged new transmitter called itself the Voice of the Slovak Republic, and said itself to be the sole defender of Slovak rights. A CIA memorandum dated June 14, 1952, concluded:

 

We strongly believe that direct or indirect American help for Ďurčanský is not only unsound politically and morally, but also will greatly complicate our problems here … [A]nd, in the case of DYCLEAN (CIA)– are in strong opposition to Ďurčanský and will wish to divert their strength to sabotaging and penetrating him, if permitted to do. Psychological warfare operations will be rendered almost useless, as too much conflicting material will be poured into a small target.

 

We respectfully submit…that it will serve no substantial interest of DYCLAIM (OSO) to support Ďurčanský through indirect subsidizations paid to ZIPPER (Gehlen Organization-ORG) for the purpose.

 

With respect to the solicitation of funds in SLOVAK V AMERIKE, if in fact the alleged radio is a hoax, solicitors might be urged to sue the paper for fraud. Hrobek might write an article demanding proof, or some other less indirect but equally effective method used to kill the fund-raising, [9]

 

               In 1953, Ďurčanský was living in Munich, Germany, and tried to set up another radio station in Augsburg, Germany, with the assistance of the German Intelligence organization (Gehlen organization--ORG). 

               Ďurčanský sent a letter dated February 18, 1953, to William (Bill) Griffith, Political Advisor of RFE in Munich, in which he wrote in part:

 

Because it is generally in the interest of every follower of the principles of Freedom and Democracy that resistance against Communism and Moscow’s imperialism be strengthened, and because the realization of these principles behind the Iron Curtain is a pre-condition for peace may I be allowed to remind you that a successful achievement of these aims requires to organize a special Slovak section-desk-in the radio station of the National Committee for a Free Europe in Munich, which would in no way be dependent on the Czechs but would have the same working capacity as the Czech desk.

 

The Slovak Liberation Committee would gladly cooperate with the National Committee for a Free Europe if we would be given the democratic opportunity of broadcasting those ideals of which the Independence of the United States was born and which alone can form the basis of progress, happiness and peace in the World. [10]

 

A copy of his letter was sent to the United States Hight Commissioner in Bonn, James B. Conan.

From 1952 to 1958 Ďurčanský’s acted in an advisory capacity to the Gehlen Organization (ORG), supplying them with information on Czechoslovakia. In March 1953, ORG told CIA that the illegal radio broadcasts would not be made but they would continue working with Ďurčanský—he had the code name “Professor” with ORG. The Gehlen Organization explained to CIA field office that, “Other than a basic discussion with members of the Sudenten German group (Landsmannschaft) three months ago about a joint anti-Communist transmissions to Czechoslovakia, there has been no preparation in this direction. The discussion has to be recognized as having failed. This involved private negotiations of the PROFESSOR without any direct or indirect involvement of the ORG.” [11]

Dr. Ferdinand Ďurčanský died in Munich on March 21, 1974.

 

 



[1] Summary of available Personality Information, November 2, 1954, DURCANSKY, FERDINAND VOL. 2_0028, https://www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/document/519a6b26993294098d5110ae.

[2] Petr Kubik, “Slovenský exil v Itálii 1945-49,” Securitas imperii Studie, No.21 (02/2012) p.40, https://www.ustrcr.cz/data/pdf/publikace/securitas-imperii/no21/026-047.pdf.

[3] Ibid.

[4] Ibid.

[5] Ibid.

[6] Information from Foreign Documents or Radio Broadcasts, December 5, 1950, Slovak Clandestine Station, https://www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/document/cia-rdp78-04864a000200010002-6,

[7] Foreign Service Dispatch, American Embassy Vienna, to the Department of State, Washington, Subject: Activities of Czech and Slovak Refugees Political Groups in Austria, March 26, 1952, DURCANSKY, FERDINAND VOL.1_0073, https://www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/document/519a6b27993294098d5110f5,

[8] DURCANSKY, FERDINAND VOL. 2_0028, Op cit.

[9] Report on the Slovak Committee for Liberation and the Slovakian National Council, June 2, 1951, DURCANSKY, FERDINAND VOL.1_0058, https://www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/document/519a6b27993294098d5110ef,

[10] Foreign Service Dispatch, From Hight Commissioner, Germany to Department of State, Washington, March 10, 1953, , DURCANSKY, Ferdinand VOL.2_0017, https://www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/document/519a6b26993294098d511088,

[11] March 30, 1953, Report of Gehlen Organization, DURCANSKY, FERDINAND VOL.2_0020, https://www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/document/519a6b26993294098d5110a2,

December 17, 2025

Radio Liberty and Cold War Jazz ©

 Radio Liberty and Cold War Jazz

 

The “Jazz Ambassadors” program  was created by the US State Department in 1956: the US State Department decided to send a group of popular American jazz musicians to countries in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union to play Western jazz music and, by extension, to present a visual challenge to Soviet propaganda about racial tensions in the United States. Some of the musicians included Louis Armstrong, Dizzy Gillespie, Ella Fitzgerald, Phil Woods, Oscar Peterson, and Benny Goodman.

 

In the late 1950s, jazz great Louis Armstrong visited Radio Liberty’s New York studio. He agreed to an interview and introduced the program in carefully rehearsed Russian. He then played his trumpet to the accompaniment of a popular Soviet song "Five Minutes." 

 

The Benny Goodman band toured the USSR in 1962. Goodman became the first jazz musician to tour the Soviet Union for the State Department, when he made thirty appearances in six cities in five weeks. Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev attended the band’s opening night in Moscow. Goodman opened the show with "Let’s Dance" and "Greetings Moscow," a number based on a Russian folk song. Khrushchev later sent Goodman a note reporting that he had been “very pleased and delighted to be at the concert.” 

 

Goodman gave an impromptu solo clarinet performance in Red Square. The New York Times noted that he became a visiting “Pied Piper” for curious children who swarmed around him in the shadow of the Kremlin.

 

Since Russian officials had banned the American musicians from fraternizing with ordinary citizens, reportedly band members Phil Woods and Zoot Sims made contact with jazz fans, who called out to them from behind trees and bushes as they walked through Moscow parks.

 

Original compositions of "Soviet" jazz musicians were "smuggled" out of the USSR by members of the Goodman band, who had surreptitiously met with the local musicians. In June 1963, Radio Liberty introduced a new weekly half-hour program produced in New York that was called This is Jazz (eto dzhaz). 

 

The first broadcast was that of eight musicians who played the smuggled jazz compositions: Bill Crow, bass, and alto saxophonist Phil Woods, tenor saxophonist Zoot Sims, pianist John Bunch, trumpeter Art Farmer (using mostly the fluegelhorn) trombonist Bob Brookmeyer, baritone saxophonist Nick Brignola and drummer Walter Perkins. 

 

The jazz session broadcast was recorded but not released. A CD entitled The Liberty of Jazz with nine of the songs was recently reproduced by Soyyd Records in a limited edition. The CD jacket includes a photograph of the Radio’s transmitter site in Spain and the famous jazz performers. The songs can be previewed for purchase, including the Louis Armstrong recording of "Five Minutes" with him speaking Russian.

 

December 16, 2025

Radio Free Europe and Cold War Jazz @

 Radios Free Europe and Cold War Jazz


 

Czech disc jockey Eva Stankova was once described in a newspaper article as a “lovely and vivacious refugee.“ She lived in New York and taped her music programs at the New York RFE office. Her program was called “Date with Eva” that was described in 1951 as, "a disk jockey program, brings once again into the enslaved land the native folk music and western jazz banned by the Reds." She traveled throughout the United States giving interviews over domestic radio stations, which played excerpts from her broadcasts and interviews with jazz greats. 

 

In the 1950s, Radio Free Europe broadcast pre-written scripts, using phonetics, read by famous jazz musicians Duke Ellington, Gene Krupa, Woody Herman, Oscar Peterson, Earl Hines and Stan Kenton. Newspapers in 1957 carried her photograph with the caption: "Checkin' in Czech -- Roy (Little Jazz) Eldridge says a few words in Czechoslovakia in the Czech language. Helping the famed trumpeter overcome the language barrier is pretty Eva Stankova of Radio Free Europe." The programs were then made available to U.S. audiences through the Crusade for Freedom

 

The Billboard magazine in 1958 proudly proclaimed itself in its sixty-fourth year to be “The Amusement Industry’s Leading Newsweekly.”  The March 3, 1958, issue had a full-page article entitled “A Report to the Music Industry” that dealt with Radio Free Europe and the Crusade for Freedom A photograph of the Munich RFE headquarters and a graphic of the RFE transmitter sites and how programs were broadcast from Germany and Portugal to East Europe.  The article focused on music: “The youth in these countries want to know about and hear the latest American pop, dance and jazz records.  And music of all kinds comprises some 15% of broadcast time to each country behind the Iron Curtain.”

 

For the 1959 campaign, the Advertising Council also sent out a two-record set to radio stations: one was entitled “But not for me—Freedom is not free” that contained brief personal appeals in support Radio Free Europe, from musicians and entertainers, Duke Ellington, Arthur Godfrey, Hy Gardner, Judy Holliday, Robert Preston and Dorothy Collins. It was distributed with a second record “This Guitar Chose Freedom” that told the story of Hungarian jazz guitarist Gabor Szabo and his escape to freedom in 1956. Television personality Steve Allen was the speaker and Szabo is heard on the record playing songs “I remember you,” ‘Berklee’s Delight,” “You go to my head” and “Chinatown my Chinatown.” The theme of the recording was “How American jazz – stifled behind the Iron Curtain – sounds in a free land.”

Dr. Zhivago and CIA

 Doctor Zhivago

“No single man makes history. History cannot be seen, just as one cannot see grass growing. Wars and revolutions, kings and Robespierres, are history's organic agents, its yeast. But revolutions are made by fanatical men of action with one-track mind, geniuses in their ability to confine themselves to a limited field. They overturn the old order in a few hours or days, the whole upheaval takes a few weeks or at most years, but the fanatical spirit that inspired the upheavals is worshiped for decades thereafter, for centuries. ”

- Boris Leonidovich Pasternak, Doctor Zhivago

 

CIA Publishes Doctor Zhivago in Russian and Exposes Life in USSR under Communism

The CIA has declassified 99 documents describing the CIA’s role publishing Boris Leonidovich Pasternak’s epic novel, Doctor Zhivago, for the first time in Russian in 1958 after it had been banned from being published in the Soviet Union. 

The Zhivago project was one of many CIA-supported covert publishing programs that involved distributing banned books, periodicals, pamphlets, and other materials to intellectuals in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. This collection provides a glimpse into a thoughtful plan to accomplish fast turn-around results without doing harm to foreign partners or Pasternak. 

Following the publication of Doctor Zhivago in Russian in 1958, Pasternak won the Nobel Prize for Literature, the popularity of the book skyrocketed, and the plight of Pasternak in the Soviet Union received global media attention. Moscow had hoped to avoid these precipitous outcomes by initially refusing to publish the novel two years earlier. There is no indication in this collection that having Pasternak win the Nobel Prize was part of the Agency’s original plan; however, it contributed to appeals to Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, and it was a blow to those who insisted that the Soviets in 1958 enjoyed internal freedom. 

Of note, the documents in this collection show how effective “soft power” can influence events and drive foreign policy.

The CIA documents can be found at  

https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/collection/doctor-zhivago