The Road to Freedom (newspaper)

[5] Over the subsequent months, the newspaper published a proclamation that denounced the rebel leader Nykyfor Hryhoriv[6] and Arshinov was joined on the editorial board by members of the Nabat, including Volin[7] and Aron Baron.

[9] The reconstituted Military Revolutionary Council resumed publication of The Road to Freedom in Katerynoslav,[10] where it published issues 4 to 42 of the newspaper,[3] printed the movement's Draft Declaration.

[17] When it was relaunched on 5 July 1920,[17] it published an article which declared that the Insurgent Army was not specifically anarchist, but merely reflected the aspirations of the peasant masses, which it swore to defend from both the Reds and the Whites.

[20] Even after the ratification of the Starobilsk agreement between the Makhnovists and Bolsheviks, which Makhno defended as militarily necessary, he also published declarations in The Road to Freedom refusing to recognise the authority of the Soviet government.

[21] Following the siege of Perekop in November 1920, the Red Army attacked the Makhnovshchina, bringing an end to the publication of The Road to Freedom after 50 issues.