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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, March 15, 2019
Why Russia Is Making Stalin Great Again
For Russian youngsters these days, Stalin is a figure from the distant past. His appearance in this kind of setting doesn’t shock anyone.
The hipster precincts of Moscow these days have plenty in common with
their Brooklyn cousins, Williamsburg and Bushwick: an all-too-familiar
ecosystem based on coffee bars, techno clubs, bike repair shops and
ample facial hair. So young visitors to one trendy barbershop perhaps
can be forgiven for not recognizing the handsome, young bearded man with
a fashionable black-and-white scarf depicted in a mural on one wall:
Josef Stalin.
For Russian youngsters these days, Stalin is a figure from the distant
past. His appearance in this kind of setting doesn’t shock anyone. Nor
do many young people see this marketing trick as an insult to the memory
of the millions of innocent people repressed, imprisoned and killed
during Stalin’s long tenure as dictator of the Soviet Union.
That represents a small victory for Russian President Vladimir Putin and
his political allies who are waging another one of the wars that have
raged periodically in Russia for decades. Opposing them is what remains
of Russian civil society, which seeks to preserve the memory of victims
of repression as a way of fighting today’s authoritarian political
regime.
Just as a photo of the mural was making the rounds on social media, the
Moscow mayor’s office banned this year’s installment of “Returning the
Names,” an event with extraordinary emotional power in which people line
up opposite the headquarters of the KGB (now FSB) to read aloud the
names of those who were shot or who perished in the Gulag. In the end,
the mayor’s office gave in, which perhaps helps explain why even more
people than usual stood in the bitter cold for four hours to take their
turn.
One of the paradoxes of Putin’s Russia is that the harsher the stance of
the current regime, the higher the level of Stalin’s popularity within
Putin’s electoral base and the more likely these Russians are to make
excuses for the Soviet dictator. This pattern became more noticeable
following Russia’s annexation of Crimea in March 2014. According to data
from the Levada Center, an independent pollster, 17 to 20 percent of
respondents in 2014 had a negative view of Stalin. This figure dipped to
12 percent in 2018.
Meanwhile, acceptance of the view that Stalin is guilty of killing
millions of innocent people dropped from 62 percent in 2016 to 44
percent in 2018. The percentage of respondents who declined to answer
that question also increased significantly, from 16 percent to 29
percent. These changes reveal only one attitude to be stable:
Recognition of Stalin’s role in the Soviet Union’s victory in World War
II barely budged during this period.
Even Putin’s closest allies readily admit that Stalin was a cruel
tyrant. But thanks to the Kremlin’s well-crafted propaganda efforts, the
dictator is once again becoming a symbol of Russian pride and military
and industrial glory. For average Russians, Stalin is seen as an
“effective manager” (as one history teachers’ handbook described him) or
as a symbol of a glorious Soviet past whose image is routinely
burnished in pop culture thanks to things like the popular television
serials that present positive and romantic images of Stalin’s feared
secret police, the NKVD.
Russia, of course, is no stranger to these kinds of history wars.
Stalinists and anti-Stalinists fought it out following the Khrushchev
Thaw in the mid-1960s and Gorbachev’s perestroika in the 1980s. In the
absence of any national agreement on Stalin’s crimes, there is still
plenty of room for the mythology of the Russian state to be framed
around an official policy of simplifying the past and whitewashing the
darkest pages of Russian history.
Increasingly, this war over memory is spilling over into a war over
monuments. A new wave of “people’s initiatives” to commemorate Stalin
has appeared in recent years. In the latest incident, a public hearing
was held in Novosibirsk, Russia’s third-biggest city, over whether to
put up a bust of Stalin in the city. Imagine a similar debate somewhere
in Stuttgart on whether to erect a bust of Hitler.
Russian civil society is still capable of exchanging blows with the
Stalinists. At the Kommunarka former NKVD shooting range on the
outskirts of Moscow, where 6,609 people were shot, a Wall of Remembrance
listing the names of the victims was opened on Oct. 27 last year.
Completion of the memorial was complicated by a debate on whether to
include the names of executioners, who were themselves later repressed.
Still, this is another important step in memorializing victims of the
regime.
Another battle is being waged over a building on Moscow’s historic
Nikolskaya Street, just a few hundred meters from the Kremlin. People
were shot en masse in the basement of the building when it housed the
dreaded military division of the Supreme Court. Now the owner of the
building intends to open an upscale perfume store over the bones of
those slaughtered there. Memorial finds itself not only doing combat
with the state but also with the avant-garde of Russia’s glamorous
consumer culture, who see nothing terrible in Stalin, and whose
historical memory has been wiped out entirely.
It’s worth remembering that civil society in the Soviet Union was itself
born from anti-Stalinism, and it continues to develop in modern Russia
on precisely the same grounds. Another ambitious project, titled “the
Last Address,” encourages people to remember Stalin’s victims by
erecting memorial plaques on apartment buildings to which arrested
victims never returned. The project reveals not only the scale of
Stalin’s crimes but also the scale of resistance to the new Stalinists
in today’s Russia. And this is one more flank of the history war:
Recently in St. Petersburg, local authorities supported a denunciation.
It had been stated that the Last Address violates … the law on
advertisements.
I myself put up a plaque on a building right in the center of Moscow
from which my grandfather was taken away; he died in the Gulag in 1946.
In the building where he and our family lived until 1965 — one Moscow
building alone — six people were arrested during the Great Terror. The
plaque is my personal victory in my personal war of memory with the
Stalinists.
In 1987, at the height of Gorbachev’s perestroika, the rock musician
Boris Grebenshchikov recorded the song “This Train Is on Fire,” which
includes the line “The people who shot our fathers are now making plans
for our children.” Back then, more than 30 years ago, a return to
Stalinism seemed unthinkable.
Now the grandchildren of those who shot our grandfathers at Kommunarka
and across the gigantic empire of the Gulag are making plans for our
children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren — fighting for their
minds and souls. The war over historical memory for the minds and souls
of the next generations is arguably Russia’s greatest battle.
Andrei Kolesnikov is a senior associate and the chair of the Russian
Domestic Politics and Political Institutions Program at the Carnegie
Moscow Center.
Andrei Kolesnikov is an author at OZY where this piece originally published