Read The Last Man in Russia: The Struggle to Save a Dying Nation Online
Authors: Oliver Bullough
gardens,
visible
through chinks in high metal fences.
A teenager at a bus stop pointed me
to the right towards the church. The
dust had coated my shoes light
brown by the time I got there.
I had no one to meet, and no
particular plan worked out for what I
would do here, so I sat down on a
rock in the shade and pulled out
Father Dmitry’s sermons once more.
This one was in the question-and-
answer form that he preferred, and
repeated his core message.
‘How do you relate to Jews?’
someone asked.
‘As sacred friends,’ he replied.
‘And how do you relate to
Russians?’
‘As
sacred
friends,’
he
continued.
‘And how to other ethnicities?’
‘Also as sacred friends,’ he
concluded. But that did not satisfy
his interrogator.
‘You have all sorts of friends.
But let’s be specific. Russians say
that Jews destroyed Russia, planted
atheism here. Do you agree?’
‘We all destroyed Russia and
implanted atheism: one person did in
theory, and another in practice. We
are all people before God, and you
should not divide us up or blame
someone for it.’
Father Dmitry would not be
drawn into prejudice, into the
language of blame used by the state.
He preached tolerance and trust. It
was his weapon against the misery
and distress he saw around him. The
Soviet government’s strategy for
controlling its population – and one
it
inherited
from
its
imperial
predecessor and all other empires
since the beginning of time – was
divide and rule. The fact that he was
asked such questions shows how
divided Soviet citizens had become.
Russians distrusted Jews, and vice
versa. Armenians distrusted Azeris,
and vice versa. Uzbeks distrusted
Tajiks, and so on. Father Dmitry’s
response was the opposite: unite and
resist.
When I looked up from the
sermon, two puppies were observing
me. They barked and scurried
behind a bush. When I read on, they
emerged. When I stopped again,
they vanished. We played the game
for a while, until I became distracted
by a particularly itchy mosquito bite
on my index finger which had
swelled my whole left hand like a
rubber glove filled with water.
A light beige Lada car pulled up
outside the church. It was old but
well cared for. The driver gathered
his belongings. He was aged around
sixty, wore thick spectacles with
cheap frames and a pocketed
waistcoat full of screwdrivers and
tools. He was carrying a bag with a
pair of aluminium valves that
appeared to be part of a heating unit.
I asked if he was local, and he
nodded.
We chatted about the village, and
life there, about jobs (none), the
collective farm (closed), children
(few) and old people who might
remember Father Dmitry.
He shook his head: ‘The people
who knew him are all dead now. I
was a student then so I did not know
him but people still remember him,
and talk about how he was
investigated.’
He was going into the priest’s
quarters to drop off the valves, he
said, and offered to show me
around. Father Dmitry’s room had
been subdivided into two smaller
rooms since he lived here, with the
partition between them decorated
with teddy-bear wallpaper. I tried to
imagine
Ogorodnikov
and
his
friends eating their communal meals
here and discussing their faith.
Father Dmitry might still have
been under suspicion in Moscow,
but he received a warm welcome
from the locals. ‘When the upper
hierarchy threw me and my children
to the mercy of fate and attempted to
make me admit my supposed
slanders, when all these rumours
spread around, the people helped
me. They fed me and did not let me
despair, and did not condemn me.
When people close to the hierarchy
tried to accuse me, saying I had not
obeyed them, that I had broken some
law,
the
people
sympathized.
Sympathy and love, that is what you
need.’
I followed the handyman out of
the room, and he unlocked the door
into the church itself – a simple
structure of brick and tin that had
been rebuilt since Father Dmitry’s
day – then we crossed the road to the
church’s
schoolroom,
with
its
garden full of potatoes.
‘You should not leave land
empty,’
the
handyman
said,
squinting at me for approval through
his lenses.
‘They appear to be doing well,’ I
ventured, although in truth the plants
looked spindly.
‘Ah, how are they doing well?
Our soil is just sand.’
He offered me a lift to the station
and I accepted with pleasure. It was
not as hot as Moscow out here, but it
would still be uncomfortable to walk
far. He had, he said, previously lived
in one of the more remote villages,
but the bus service was cancelled
and he had been forced to move into
Kabanovo. He could not afford to
run his car all the time, but liked to
drive on occasion.
Back on the platform we stood
for a while in silence, watching a
crow, its hands behind its back,
balancing along one of the rails, then
jumping nimbly round and stepping
back.
‘Do you think’, he asked me at
last, ‘someone like me, with the
experience I have, could find a job
in Britain?’
I said I did not know, but before
he left I asked him his name. He told
me: Father Nikolai. I looked after
him. He was the village priest, and I
had had no idea.
Father Dmitry did not last long at
Kabanovo. The local authorities had
no appetite for groups of bearded
Muscovites
turning
up
and
perverting the locals’ minds with
dangerous
talk
of
trust
and
community and the deficiencies of
the state. All the same, he continued
his single-minded campaign against
alcohol,
abortion,
despair
and
degradation, noting down the talks
as he had before.
A woman came to Father Dmitry
to confess.
‘Do you have any particular
sins?’
‘Yes, abortions.’
‘How many?’
‘Many.’
‘Well, how many?’
‘Thirty,’ she said, and cried.
By 1991, the average Russian
woman had had 3.4 abortions over
the course of her life. Stalin banned
abortions but, after they were
legalized in 1955, they became the
dominant form of birth control.
There were 8.3 million in the Soviet
Union in 1965. In 1992, Russian
women
terminated
3.3
million
pregnancies. The number has fallen
since then, perhaps because the
contraceptive pill is now widely
available, but there are still more
abortions than live births in many
Russian regions, including Komi
(where
Father
Dmitry
was
imprisoned) and Bryansk (where he
was born), and the overall rate is
four times the European average.
Other dissidents did not have
Father Dmitry’s insight into the
health
concerns
of
ordinary
Russians, since they did not really
encounter them. Sakharov, although
a brave and humane man, was still
calling for Russians to have fewer
children in the late 1960s to combat
global over-population.
‘Mankind can develop smoothly
only if it looks upon itself in a
demographic sense as a unit, a single
family without divisions into nations
other than in matters of history and
traditions. Therefore, government
policy, legislation on the family and
marriage, and propaganda should
not encourage an increase in the
birth rates of advanced countries
while demanding that it be curtailed
in underdeveloped countries,’ the
great dissident wrote, in his typically
lofty style. His calls for intellectual
freedom and peaceful coexistence
were very powerful, but they were
also very irrelevant to the kind of
people Father Dmitry was dealing
with.
In 1970, Russia’s homicide rate
was eight times the European
average, but such numbers – with
their
implicit
rebuke
to
the
government – were increasingly
hard to find. In 1972, Brezhnev’s
government stopped publishing life-
expectancy statistics. That same
decade, infant mortality figures
dropped out of the data too, having
risen sharply from 22.9 per thousand
in 1970 to 31.4 in 1976. The
government instead boasted of
having
one
of
the
highest
proportions of doctors in the world,
but hid how little effect they were
having.
Healthcare spending dropped
from 6 per cent of national wealth
when Brezhnev took power to half
of that by the mid-1980s. Over the
same
period,
the
number
of
cigarettes imported doubled to more
than 73 billion a year: that means the
Soviet Union imported a packet of
cigarettes a month for every man,
woman and child in the country. It
made its own cigarettes too.
In
December
1975,
Father
Dmitry was sacked once more. A
letter from his bishop accused him of
the ‘systematic inclusion in his
discussions and sermons of political
material of an anti-social character,
including tendentious criticism of the
life of our state’. The bishop went on
to criticize him for having used the
church buildings for preaching to
groups of people who had gathered
to hear him preach, although it might
be supposed that such was a priest’s
job, before attacking the Western
media that had spoken out in his
defence.
‘I consider it unacceptable that
on some internal question in Church
life, including in relation to Church
discipline, which is regulated by the
canons, laws and traditions of our
Church, anyone at all from abroad
should put pressure on us, in this
case in defence of Father Dmitry, in
the aim of furthering their own
interests,’ he concluded.
That was a nod to the kind of
conspiracy
theorizing
that
was
already consuming the K G B, who
established a special Fifth Directorate
in
1968
to
crack
down
on
intellectuals, students, nationalists,
religious believers, Jews and anyone
else suspected of serving foreign
powers. Even before Father Dmitry
came to Kabanovo, the K G B were
trying to break dissidents through
long interrogation and the planting
of sympathetic agents in their cells as
fake detainees. If they succeeded, the
dissidents were paraded before
Western
journalists.
Foreign
reporters were showing increasing
interest in the dissident story, and
were beginning to write about Father
Dmitry. His sacking from Kabanovo
in December 1975 made the news in
papers across the world.
‘Reds admit ban of rebel priest,’
said the headline in the
Baltimore
Sun
. ‘Soviet priest draws anger of
government’, read the headline on
an Associated Press report picked up
by other U S newspapers. And he
was not the only famous religious
dissident. His friends Gleb Yakunin