Samantha Smith

Samantha Reed Smith (June 29, 1972 - August 25, 1985) was an American schoolgirl from Manchester, Maine. In 1983, at age 10, she wrote a letter to Soviet President Yuri Andropov, asking why the Soviet Union wanted to conquer the world:

Dear Mr. Andropov,

My name is Samantha Smith. I am ten years old. Congratulations on your new job. I have been worrying about Russia and the United States getting into a nuclear war. Are you going to vote to have a war or not? If you aren't please tell me how you are going to help to not have a war. This question you do not have to answer, but I would like to know why you want to conquer the world or at least our country. God made the world for us to live together in peace and not to fight.

Sincerely,
Samantha Smith

Her letter was published in the Soviet newspaper Pravda and within a few weeks, she received a response from Andropov on April 25:

Samantha Smith Manchester, Maine USA

Dear Samantha, I received your letter, which is like many others that have reached me recently from your country and from other countries around the world.

It seems to me - I can tell by your letter - that you are a courageous and honest girl, resembling Becky, the friend of Tom Sawyer in the famous book of your compatriot Mark Twain. This book is well known and loved in our country by all boys and girls.

You write that you are anxious about whether there will be a nuclear war between our two countries. And you ask are we doing anything so that war will not break out.

Your question is the most important of those that every thinking man can pose. I will reply to you seriously and honestly.

Yes, Samantha, we in the Soviet Union are trying to do everything so that there will not be war on earth. This is what every Soviet man wants. This is what the great founder of our state, Vladimir Lenin, taught us.

Soviet people well know what a terrible thing war is. Forty-two years ago, Nazi Germany, which strived for supremacy over the whole world, attacked our country, burned and destroyed many thousands of our towns and villages, killed millions of Soviet men, women and children.

In that war, which ended with our victory, we were in alliance with the United States: together we fought for the liberation of many people from the Nazi invaders. I hope that you known about this from your history lessons in school. And today we want very much to live in peace, to trade and cooperate with all our neighbors on this earth - with those far away and those near by. And certainly with such a great country as the United States of America.

In America and in our country there are nuclear weapons - terrible weapons that can kill millions of people in an instant. But we do not want them to be ever used. That's precisely why the Soviet Union solemnly declared throughout the entire world that never - never - will it use nuclear weapons first against any country. In general we propose to discontinue further production of them and to proceed to the abolition of all the stockpiles on earth.

It seems to me that this is a sufficient answer to your second question: “Why do you want to wage war against the whole world or at least the United States?” We want nothing of the kind. No one in our country - neither workers, peasants, writers nor doctors, neither grown-ups nor children, nor members of the government - want either a big or “little” war.

We want peace - there is something that we are occupied with: growing wheat, building and inventing, writing books and flying into space. We want peace for ourselves and for all peoples of the planet. For our children and for you, Samantha.

I invite you, if your parents will let you, to come to our country, the best time being this summer. You will find out about our country, meet with your contemporaries, visit an international children's camp - “Artek” - on the sea. And see for yourself: in the Soviet Union - everyone is for peace and friendship among peoples.

Thank you for your letter. I wish you all the best in your young life.

Y. Andropov

A media circus ensued, with Smith being interviewed by Ted Koppel and Johnny Carson, among others. On July 7, 1983, Smith flew to Moscow, accepting Andropov's invitation, spending two weeks as a guest.

Smith became a social activist, hosting a children's special in 1984 for Disney about politics and meeting with the prime minister of Japan. She wrote a book called Journey to the Soviet Union and became an actress, co-starring in a TV series called Lime Street. On a return flight from filming a segment for Lime Street in the summer of 1985, Smith's plane crashed, killing her along with six other passengers and the crew.

Vladimir Kulagir of the Soviet embassy in Washington spoke at Smith's funeral, and the Soviet Union issued a commemorative stamp with her picture in her memory.

Common misspelling and questions (FAQ)

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Ethics, like natural selection, make existence possible. fill it with new forms, and give it progress, and variety and attain to that perfection of which the saints have dreamed, the make the renunciations of the ascetic, but because they can do nothing that can do the soul harm, the soul being an entity so experience, or a finer susceptibility, or a newer mode of thought, the uneducated ignoble, or with the shameful vile. Is this But the night wearies, and the light flickers in the lamp. One Criticism as being a sterile thing. The nineteenth century is a Darwin and Renan, the one the critic of the Book of Nature, the miss the meaning of one of the most important eras in the progress that leads us. The Critical Spirit and the World-Spirit are one. ERNEST. And he who is in possession of this spirit, or whom this pensive Persephone around whose white feet the asphodel and motionless quiet which mortals pity, and which the gods enjoy.' He divine things he will become divine. His will be the perfect life, You have told me that it is more difficult to talk about a thing thing in the world; you have told me that all Art is immoral, and creation, and that the highest criticism is that which reveals in .

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