Read The Last Man in Russia: The Struggle to Save a Dying Nation Online
Authors: Oliver Bullough
supporting his own cause.
And police harassed the protest
leaders too. Ksenia Sobchak, a
socialite and television personality
who morphed into an opposition
activist despite her father having
been Putin’s boss in the 1990s, had
her flat raided in June 2012, her safe
opened
and
all
her
money
‘confiscated’.
Anti-corruption
blogger Alexei Navalny was charged
with defrauding a state timber
company, with a potential sentence
of a decade in jail.
The faces of this wave of
repression were, however, Nadezhda
Tolokonnikova, Maria Alekhina and
Yekaterina
Samutsevich,
three
young women accused of being part
of a formless punk collective called
Pussy Riot. Their music, in truth, is
not likely to win them many fans,
but that did not matter. It was the
bold nature of their protests that
made them stand out. They had
already swarmed on to Red Square
with their guitars and trademark
brightly coloured balaclavas. Then,
on 21 February, after Patriarch Kirill
of the Orthodox Church had directly
intervened in politics by praising
Putin as a ‘miracle’, they decided to
go further. They ran into the
Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in
central Moscow (which was rebuilt
after 1991, having been demolished
by Stalin). There, they donned their
balaclavas and jumped around in
front of the icon screen. Set to
music, the video featured the lyric
‘Mother of God, drive out Putin’.
On the internet, it was a sensation.
Officials decided that this was a
case they could make an example of.
The
women
had
insulted
the
Orthodox Church and could thus be
presented as non-patriotic. Arrested,
they were charged with ‘hooliganism
motivated by religious hatred’ and
held in detention awaiting trial for
five months. The charges carried a
potential sentence of seven years.
Putin, stung by the outcry abroad,
appealed to the court to be merciful,
and their final sentence was two
years (though Samutsevich was later
released on appeal). Two of them are
young mothers, but were barred
from seeing their children.
‘Gera thinks it’s like a Russian
fairy-tale: her mother is a princess
who has been captured by an evil
villain and put in a cage . . . Which,
of course, is basically true,’ Pyotr
Verzilov, Tolokonnikova’s husband,
told a British journalist during the
trial. Gera is their four-year-old
daughter.
The trial was the blackest of
farces. The judge blocked any
petition from the defence, while
allowing prosecutors any liberties
they asked for. Lawyers for the girls
said the case was worse even than
those in Soviet times, while, for
many observers, it was quite simply
the 1960s all over again. The raft of
restrictive laws was equivalent to
1967’s Article 190, which banned
‘knowingly false fabrications that
defame the Soviet state and social
system’.
The young women themselves
made the parallel complete with
dignified closing speeches that could
have been lifted from the darkest
pages of the 1970s.
‘Katya, Masha and I are in jail
but I don’t consider that we’ve been
defeated, just as the dissidents
weren’t
defeated.
When
they
disappeared
into
psychiatric
hospitals and prisons, they passed
judgement on the country,’ said
Tolokonnikova.
That made the women from
Pussy Riot the new Sinyavsky and
Daniel, the writers jailed in 1966 for
publishing their works abroad. That
trial too had been intended to
demonstrate strength and firmness. It
succeeded only in creating the
dissident
movement. This
new
protest movement was armed, not
with
carbon-copied
statements
passed from hand to hand, but with
the whole internet. Its followers
numbered
not
hundreds
but
hundreds of thousands.
‘The Pussy Riot trial damages
Russia’s reputation no less than the
trial of Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli
Daniel damaged the Soviet Union’s
reputation almost 50 years ago. The
Sinyavsky–Daniel trial created a rift
between the political leadership and
the cultural and intellectual segments
of society, one that lasted until the
collapse of the Soviet Union,’ wrote
Konstantin Sonin, a professor and
vice president of the New Economic
School, in his column in a Moscow
daily. ‘The Pussy Riot case has been
a major blow to Russian society by
effectively excluding this country
from the list of civilized nations.
Whatever shocking words the female
punk rockers might have yelled in
Moscow’s main cathedral, how can
that
justify
putting
them
in
handcuffs, escorting them with
police Rottweillers and jailing them
before the trial as if they were
dangerous criminals?’
I was not sure how Yakunin
would react to Pussy Riot, given that
they had behaved disrespectfully in
an Orthodox church. Inevitably,
however, he had an explanation all
of his own, and looked deep into the
Russian past to find it. In medieval
times, the Russian people had few
means to resist its government, he
said. Perhaps the only one, in fact,
was the Holy Fools – in Russian,
Yurodivie
– who claimed divine
inspiration and spoke the truth
fearlessly to their all-powerful rulers.
‘These fools used to go around
naked and they would piss in
church, and demonstrate that priests
were acting wrongly. They did it to
the tsars too,’ said Yakunin.
The most famous of all the Holy
Fools was St Basil, who is said to
have once upbraided Tsar Ivan the
Terrible for not paying attention in
church. He also offered the tsar meat
during Lent, saying it did not matter
whether he kept the religious fast or
not, since he had committed so many
murders. This public expression of
the nation’s private anger at its king
won him the love of Muscovites.
The great multi-coloured tulip-
domed cathedral on Red Square, the
most famous church in Russia, still
bears his name. When he died, the
tsar himself helped carry his coffin.
‘This is what these girls were
doing. They were telling the truth in
the name of the people. They did not
disrespect the church. They crossed
themselves
correctly,
they
did
everything right. If they had sung
“Praise Putin, give him a long reign”
they would have been rewarded. But
they did not do so. They told the
truth.’
We had finally returned from the
shop, and were sitting and drinking
our tea and eating our biscuits.
Yakunin holds his own religious
services in the basement we were
sitting in, as he tries to keep alive the
spirit of challenge that the dissident
priests of the 1970s represented.
With Father Dmitry dead and
compromised, and Father Alexander
Men murdered, only Yakunin is left.
His movement is ever more
distant from the official Orthodox
Church. Under Putin, the Church has
moved
close
to
top
officials.
Patriarch
Kirill
lives
in
great
splendour and regularly meets the
president. That has inevitably made
him a target for criticism, not least
when a photo of him was digitally
altered to remove his Breguet watch,
worth many thousands of pounds.
The watch was still visible in a
reflection in the polished table.
Putin and the patriarch are
undaunted, however. They have
used the Church to harness the
religious feelings of Russia’s citizens
behind the government. This was
most obvious in October 2011 when
one
of
Putin’s
oldest
friends
arranged for a piece of the Virgin
Mary’s belt to tour Russia. It was of
course no coincidence that the relic
should have arrived during the
election campaign.
The man who arranged for the
belt to visit Russia was Vladimir
Yakunin (no relation of Father
Gleb’s), head of the huge Russian
Railways company. He is also head
of a shadowy religious organization
called the St Andrew the First-Called
Foundation,
whose
supervisory
council includes leading figures
from state television, the interior
ministry, the railways company and
the presidential administration.
The Virgin Mary’s belt normally
lives on Mount Athos, a rocky
Greek
peninsula
studded
with
monasteries, with which the Russian
Church has had close relations for
centuries. The belt is said to aid
fertility in women who gaze upon it,
although it is hard to know how it
gained this reputation as no women
are allowed on Mount Athos. Even
female animals are banned (except
for chickens and, some say, cats).
Putin travelled to Vnukovo
airport on 20 October 2011, to
welcome the belt and its escorting
monks, and met them again at the
end of their fifteen-city tour.
Archimandrite Ephraim, one of the
belt’s escorts, praised the faith of the
3 million people who had come to
see
the
relic,
and
took
the
opportunity to ask for Putin to help
Greece, which was still in the depths
of economic crisis.
Putin sidestepped the request,
and focused instead on the belt’s
miraculous properties for barren
women. Ephraim confirmed that
miracles had taken place: ‘We are
permanently
receiving
telephone
calls, in which people say that a
miracle has happened: “I have been
married for ten years, and now I
have a child.” Twenty examples of
such miracles have been recorded
already. And there is already an
agreement that, after the Virgin’s
Belt’s trip around Russia, a book
will be published about the miracles
that have taken place.’
Such births would indeed be
miraculous. The belt had arrived in
the country just thirty-eight days
previously and children had already
been born. It is a testament to the
new parents’ faith that they were
pleased, rather than traumatized, by
the
experience.
Putin
sounded
suitably impressed.
‘If this helps to solve our
demographic issue, it would come in
handy. In any case, I hope it will,’
he said.
Gleb Yakunin, however, said the
government
had
completely
miscalculated the belt’s powers. He
pointed out that the belt had been
making its progress around the
country when Putin was booed at the
martial-arts bout. According to him,
Putin’s
humiliation
before
his
supporters was the true miracle
wrought by the Virgin Mary.
‘Everything began when they
brought the belt here. That was when
the spirit of freedom was unleashed,’
he said.
The ability to cure infertility is
only one of the belt’s minor
qualities, he said. Far more important
is its ability to protect a nation from
its enemies. Yakunin said that, in
bringing in the belt, Putin had
undermined himself. He had not
realized that he is in fact his own
nation’s enemy.