Perhaps unsurprisingly, it wasn’t long until news of the couple’s activities reached the ears of the all-powerful KGB, which sent officers to search their home and confiscate Neverovsky’s writing in 1982.
Having fallen afoul of the Soviet intelligence apparatus, Kotlyar was soon fired from her job at a prestigious scientific research institute and was forced to travel large distances each day from her home town of Obninsk, in central Russia’s Kaluga region, to teach in a remote school until Mikhail Gorbachev’s reforms began to get underway in earnest.
It was during those years that Kotlyar became a committed pro-democracy activist, however, organising rallies in support of one Boris Yeltsin, who, following comments he made criticising both Gorbachev’s leadership and the slow pace of reform, had just been fired from his job running Moscow.