Chekhov could have rested on his laurels as a famous writer but he was a man with a social conscience, who built schools, exposed the injustices of the Tsarist penal system after an arduous journey to Siberia, promoted medical care in the community, planted trees, and even helped sufferers from tuberculosis in Yalta while dying of the disease himself. The White Dacha is worth protecting as a symbol of the cultural values he stood for, which are in danger of being forgotten in the part of the world he came from.
Chekhov biographer and translator Rosamund Bartlett is director of the Anton Chekhov Foundation, set up to preserve Chekhov's house in Yalta: www.yaltachekhov.org. From 26-31 May, she leads a Chekhov Anniversary Tour to Yalta, details of which can be found at www.exeterinternational.co.uk/chekhov.html, or by phoning 020 8956 2756.