Read The Last Man in Russia: The Struggle to Save a Dying Nation Online
Authors: Oliver Bullough
ending, winter is ending,’ they sang,
and once again the horns blasted out
their glorious crescendo.
The night before, my tent had
been one of hundreds by the river in
a field noisy with music, laughter
and singing. Beneath all those
sounds though, from the other tents,
from all directions, had come the
muffled but unmistakable sounds of
young Russians getting busy making
a new generation.
It was 28 June, the anniversary of
Father Dmitry’s death, and I went
looking for his grave in Moscow’s
Friday Cemetery.
I cut left and right, trending
downhill
along
paths
pushed
through the mass of granite. Graves
were piled together in vast numbers.
It looked impossible that there could
be room for as many people below
the ground as were commemorated
above it. Fifty-year-old graves were
wedged up against ones from last
week.
Close to the ragged wall that
separated the cemetery from, by the
sound of it, a major highway, a
crowd of fifty or so people were
already gathered. A young woman,
seeing my camera, showed me
through and pointed out Dudko’s
grave – 24 February 1922 to 28
June 2004. His life had coincided,
more or less, with that of the Soviet
Union.
Here was a mixed crowd: women
in headscarves, young and old; men
in open-necked shirts, some bearded,
most not. There was Father Mikhail
Dudko, Father Alexander and Father
Vladimir, all in the sweeping robes
of their office. They donned pectoral
crosses. Father Mikhail slipped a
golden cloth around his neck, and
the service began.
The light-blue fences placed
around
many
of
the
graves
interrupted
the
unity
of
the
congregation, which was forced to
cram itself in where it could. But the
Orthodox chant was glorious for all
that. Father Mikhail’s cracked voice
led the chant in a strained falsetto;
then the lovely many-level response
mingled itself with the wind in the
trees.
The Old Slavonic chanting had
its
usual
lulling
effect.
The
antiquated language made it easy to
concentrate on the purity of the
sound, not the meaning of the
sentences, rather like going to see the
opera in a language you do not
speak. Father Alexander took over
after a while, his nostrils were flared
slightly and his bushy beard did not
obscure the pure good looks that
Russian soldiers have in World War
Two newsreels.
‘Dear
fathers,
brothers
and
sisters. Today, we honour the
memory of Father Dmitry. Today,
we have made a pilgrimage to this
holy place where Father Dmitry, his
body is buried. His soul is always
with us, because he did a lot for us,
he strengthened us, he united us. Is
this not true? In the hardest
conditions
of
persecution,
he
supported us. And thanks be to God
that we are once more together,’ the
priest said, warming to his theme.
‘He was a true father, he worried
about his children. That’s how he
was, and this affected us also. He
gathered us in, and treated our
spiritual diseases. He had a particular
faith, a particular spirit. We honour
him with kind memories, bright
memories, we pray for him.’
A mutter of prayer passed
through the worshippers, whose
attention was completely fixed on
the priest. He passed the gold cloth
to Father Vladimir, and the chant
renewed itself. White incense smoke
swirled among the gravestones. The
crowd begged with their sweet
voices for forgiveness from God in
the manner that Russians have
prayed for centuries, ever since the
first king in long-ago Kiev adopted
the faith of the Greeks.
The wind sighed in the trees, and
the
sunlight
danced
on
the
gravestones. The horrible heat of the
day did not penetrate down here.
The chanting lulled me again as it
faded in and out. Today’s Moscow
might be a bustling city of banks and
billboards and Bentley showrooms,
but this felt like the Russia that had
endured for centuries before banks
were even thought of.
When the ceremony was over, a
small group of women came over to
quiz me gently on who I was and
what I was doing. I explained my
interest in Father Dmitry, and my
concern over the falling population,
and they began to tell me about how
they had met him and what he meant
for them and how much he had
cared about the dying Russian
nation.
‘When I first went to his house, I
was amazed, just by what it looked
like at first. There was this terrible
mess, but that was just on the
surface. His whole family, well, they
paid no attention to these domestic
things.
I
completely
did
not
understand. If you had something,
you had it; if not, not; for me it was
really strange. They lived in a sort of
non-material way. That was the first
thing,’ one woman called Ksenia
told me.
A second woman chipped in:
‘When you entered their family, you
entered a different world.’
Ksenia again: ‘That’s where it all
started.’
And
the
second
woman
interrupted: ‘It was like the earth
opened.’
Ksenia confirmed that: ‘Yes, it
opened, and I began to, I’m talking
about myself, I began to grow.
There were all these discussions, that
went deeper, deeper, deeper.’
Another woman, with a drawn
middle-aged face, a few strands of
hair falling out of her headscarf,
stepped towards me. It was not easy
to approach because of the narrow
paths between the graves, but she
was determined. She wanted, she
said, to tell me her story.
She had been married, she said,
only a short time when her husband
began to drink. He drank vodka
every
day,
and
came
home
staggering and violent. All her
attempts to stop him had come to
nothing, and her life was horrible.
That was when she met Father
Dmitry.
‘I saw him, and, how to say, he
was like, he shone, he glowed with
light, you could shut your eyes and
see him; this was love, he glowed
with love. He was white-haired, his
hair was all like this,’ she said,
waving her hands around above her
head with a broad smile. She had
met him, she said, in the late 1980s
when Father Dmitry was holding
prayer meetings at which he made
lists of the people present and made
them promise not to drink. It was the
dam he erected against the vodka
engulfing the country and the misery
engulfing himself.
‘I want to tell you what
happened with me,’ she said. ‘So
listen. When I went to him, I wrote
down my question, and he used to
answer all the questions that we
wrote down. I used to go there, and
it became winter, and it was dark and
my son said he could not let me go
alone, and would come with me to
escort me. I said to him that he
needed to relax, that he was always
working, that he came home late,
that he could not come, but he said
he wanted to come with me. And he
started to come too, and I said to the
priest: “I don’t drink but my
husband drinks and I have come for
him. I want you to write him down
on your list.”’
Father Dmitry refused, saying
that her husband had to come
himself to pledge sobriety. She went
home and begged and begged her
husband, but he refused and refused.
‘Until one beautiful day I asked
him and he agreed. This was like a
miracle. We get to the train station,
he doesn’t turn back. We get to the
bus stop, he doesn’t turn back. He
gets to the library and he doesn’t
turn back,’ she said, her eyes
gleaming.
They had sat at the back of the
library where Father Dmitry held his
meetings, and she had gripped her
husband’s hand. He was distrustful
of the gathering, as if it was some
kind of cult.
‘He swore at everyone, using all
these swear words. Do you know
these words in Russian? Yes? Well,
he was using them all. The believers
understood it was not him speaking,
that evil was speaking. He swore, he
was swearing, and he said he could
not stand it. He said that he had had
it up to here. And I’m being quiet,
and not saying anything – let him
swear.’
Father Dmitry came up to her
husband and looked at him: ‘I will
give you five years. Five years. Five
years not to drink.’
Her husband said: ‘I can’t
survive.’
‘You will survive.’
‘I won’t survive.’
‘You will survive.’
‘Father,’ he said, ‘I will drink.’
‘No, you won’t.’
‘I have drunk for twenty years.
What have I not drunk? Anything
that burns I’ve drunk. I will drink.’
‘No, you won’t.’
She laughed a beautiful musical
laugh, and her face had dropped a
decade or more. She looked young:
‘The priest was like this, and my
husband was like that.’
Two times Father Dmitry said
with such certainty: ‘No, you
won’t.’
They went home, and her
husband calmed down and no more
was said about it.
‘Then the next day my husband
left to go to work, and to think that
my husband after twenty years could
come home from work sober. What
a thought. The time comes. It’s four,
five,
and
I’m
waiting,
and
everything’s shaking inside, could it
be possible? I wasn’t worried that he
would drink, of course he would
drink, he always drank, but that he
would go against God. This was
very important to me, it was like a
sin. I was thinking about how I had
forced him to commit a sin. Five
o’clock, six o’clock, seven o’clock.
And he appears,’ she paused for
dramatic effect, loving her story.
‘And I look at him. And he’s
sober. Sober!’
Her husband had told her an
incredible story: ‘The bus broke
down, we stopped on a bridge, the
lads ran off and bought some wine,
and said, “Seryoga, pour it out,” and
I said, “I do not drink.” And they
said, “What?” And I said, “I do not
drink. I went to a priest, and the
priest gave me five years of no
drinking.” They gave me a glass, but
I said no.’
The woman laughed with joy.
‘He said no. No! And he’s been
like this ever since. Ever since. It
was a miracle. It is a miracle. A
miracle. Father Dmitry saved him.
He wanted to save the whole Russian
people like that, one at a time. That
was what I wanted to say. God bless
you.’
For my demographic data I have
relied on the website of Russia’s
Federal Service of State Statistics
which
publishes
figures at fascinating levels of detail.
I have used the monthly figures
(which tend to show a lower total),
rather than the census data, mainly
because they allowed me to follow
changes over small periods of time
in very specific places, which is
crucial to how I came up with my