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Russian writer Solzhenitsyn laid to rest in Moscow-2

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The body of Russian writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn was laid to rest at Moscow's Donskoi monastery on Wednesday in a ceremony attended by hundreds of people.
(Adds patriarch message in para 8, Medvedev decree in last but one para)

MOSCOW, August 6 (RIA Novosti) - The body of Russian writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn was laid to rest at Moscow's Donskoi monastery on Wednesday in a ceremony attended by hundreds of people.

The Nobel laureate and former dissident was buried at the monastery, which is the final resting place of many writers, poets and historians, after a night-long vigil and a morning funeral service at the monastery's cathedral.

President Dmitry Medvedev, who attended the service, offered condolences to Solzhenitsyn's widow, Natalia, his three sons and their families.

Other top officials, cultural figures, scientists and hundreds of ordinary people came to say their farewells to the writer, who died of heart failure late Sunday at the age of 89.

In scenes reminiscent of a state funeral, a military band played and three salvoes were fired at the end of the burial ceremony. The grave was covered with flowers and wreaths from well-wishers.

Thousands paid their last tribute to the writer on Tuesday as his body lay in state in the Russian Academy of Sciences. A military guard of honor stood by his open casket before a Russian flag and a large portrait of him.

Best known as the author of The Gulag Archipelago and One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, dreadful accounts of Stalinist prison life, Solzhenitsyn fought in WWII, spent eight years in labor camps, survived cancer while still in prison, and lived abroad in forced exile for 20 years.

The Russian Orthodox Church leader, Patriarch Alexy II, said in a message read out at the funeral service that Solzhenitsyn "had done his outmost to tell people the truth about the tragic and yet heroic past of our country, testifying the truth and suffering for it."

Solzhenitsyn returned to Russia in 1994 several years after the collapse of the Soviet Union. He died at his home near Moscow.

The Kremlin announced later Wednesday that the president had ordered a street in Moscow be named after the writer and scholarships in his name be paid to university students as of 2009 "as a token of Alexander Solzhenitsyn's considerable contribution to Russian culture and an imperishable effect of his oeuvre."

The governor's office in Solzhenitsyn's hometown of Kislovodsk in southern Russia said local authorities would open a museum dedicated to the writer.

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