A Journey into Russia
By Jens Mühling
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About this ebook
Unveiling a portion of the world whose contradictions, attractions, and absurdities are still largely unknown to people outside its borders, A Journey into Russia is a much-needed glimpse into one of today’s most significant regions.
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A Journey into Russia - Jens Mühling
Paradise
ICE (Kiev)
Higher up the country becomes an utter desert; not a single tribe, so far as we know, inhabits it. It always snows – less, of course, in the summer than in the wintertime. These northern regions, therefore, are uninhabitable, by reason of the severity of the winter.
Herodotus, 5th century BC
Loe thus I make an ende: none other news to thee
But that the country is too cold, the people beastly bee.
Ambassador George Turberville reporting to Elizabeth I of England, 1568
It will be very disadvantageous for us if our neighbours look more closely and carefully at us. The fact that until now they understood nothing about us was a great source of our strength.
Fyodor Dostoyevsky, 1873
The Puzzle
It was the year 2010. For most people. For some it was 7518, for others it was 50, for others still, 1010. On that winter’s evening in Moscow, however, all of this temporal dissidence was still in my future. It was to cross my path during the course of a long year which had only just begun, and for the time being, it was 2010 to me.
It was one of those Moscow nights where it is afterwards no longer possible to say when the line was crossed between casual drinking and complete inebriation. From their fourth trip to the kiosk, Sasha and Vanya had brought back a bottle purchased entirely for its name: Tri Starika said the label – ‘Three Old Men’. The three of us clinked glasses to the joys of old age. After the first sip we decided on no account to grow old in Russia.
Sasha was on top form. His toasts grew longer with each glass, more eccentric, more philosophical. When we had emptied about two of the three old men he looked at me, suddenly serious.
‘This book,’ he said. ‘If you really want to write about Russia, you have to remember one thing. Get something to write with.’
‘Sasha, I’m not that drunk, I’ll memorise it …’
‘Get something to write with!’
Something in his eyes made me obey. As I came back into the kitchen with a notepad and pencil, Sasha bent over the table and began to dictate: ‘The inscrutable Russian soul …’
I groaned. Sasha aimed a stern index finger at the notepad. ‘Write!’ Shrugging, I picked up the pencil.
‘The inscrutable Russian soul …’ he repeated, while I dutifully scrawled his words onto the page, ‘… does not exist.’
I looked up. Sasha kept a straight face. ‘Write! There’s more.’
When I discovered the notepad the next morning under a mountain of dirty dishes, Sasha and Vanya were still sleeping. I made myself coffee to get rid of my hangover, and with difficulty deciphered my scribbles:
The inscrutable Russian soul does not exist.
The Russian soul is no more inscrutable
than the headache after a night of drinking.
Russia entered my life as a lie.
It was the year 2000 (for most people). One summer day a friend, Kristina, called me; we knew each other from university. Kristina was nearing the end of her degree. She wanted to be a journalist. A notice at the university had caught her eye:
TV producer looking for interns!
A man with a heavy Slavic accent had answered the phone and invited Kristina to his apartment. He said he worked from home. Kristina sensed an opportunity but was wary of the circumstances – would I mind coming along just to be on the safe side?
A few days later we were sitting in Yuri’s living room. He was in his late twenties, good-looking in an eccentric kind of way, a lanky, haphazardly dressed type, who served us tea and Russian sweets. Yuri’s German was good but he spoke slowly, with a strong accent and long, reflective pauses, making his sentences sound unintentionally serious. We had been talking for about five minutes when he asked us to come over to his computer. He wanted to show us a film that he had produced for a German TV station.
‘Russia’s millionaires have everything money can buy,’ the sonorous voice of a speaker said, while on the TV screen business men in big cars drove past landmarks that I could vaguely connect to Moscow. ‘There is only one thing they cannot buy,’ the voice continued. ‘The unexpected!’
The camera zoomed in on a man in a necktie, mid-forties, with cold facial features. ‘Igor S., Millionaire,’ a subtitle stated, while the speaker’s voice dubbed over the man’s Russian sentences. ‘I came into money in the Nineties. It wasn’t always easy – you know what I mean.’ Igor fired an invisible gun in the direction of the camera. ‘But those times are over. And you know what? I miss the thrill of that time. The unpredictable, the adventure. I’m rich, but my life has turned grey.’
For people like Igor, the speaker continued, an exclusive club had now been launched in Moscow whose members, for an exorbitant membership fee, were guaranteed three unexpected experiences per year. The employees of the ‘Agency of Controlled Coincidence’, all of them former KGB agents, explored the everyday lives of their clients in detail; men with hard, grey faces appeared on the screen, bent over maps, whispering, playing with binoculars and cameras. At the appropriate time, they had seemingly random attractive women cross the paths of their victims – in the elevator, at the petrol station, in a beach café, on the golf course. Using the shaky perspective of a secret service film, the movie let the viewers witness some of these staged encounters, their erotic dénouement left to the imagination the minute the camera discreetly swivelled sideways.
Towards the end of the film Igor S. came back to speak again. The club had changed his life, he said. Because he never knew when a controlled chance encounter would pop up in his life, he basically regarded every woman he encountered as a potential agent of the club – and, therefore, experienced not three adventures a year, but dozens. Grinning, he lit a cigar. Cut. Commercial.
Yuri looked at us expectantly.
‘That’s incredible,’ I said. ‘This club – who would come up with something like that?’
Kristina didn’t say anything. She just stared mutely at the TV screen.
‘I would come up with something like that,’ Yuri said. ‘There is no club. The story is invented. The actors are friends of mine.’
Kristina remained silent. I smiled uncertainly.
‘You know,’ said Yuri, ‘the real stories in Russia are more incredible than anything I could invent. It’s just that no one in Germany will buy them from me. So I tell the stories about Russia that people here want to listen to.’
I felt as if I had been caught red-handed. The film had indeed confirmed the vague image I had of Yuri’s homeland.
Kristina cleared her throat. It had just occurred to her, she said, that she was supposed to be at an appointment that she had completely forgotten about. She urgently needed to leave.
I stayed a bit longer. Together, Yuri and I finished off the sweets. He talked about Russia, about his studies, his career in private television. It had gone well for him, but at some point he just couldn’t take Moscow anymore and had gone to Berlin. He didn’t know anyone in Germany, but he had managed to build a small studio that sold television films reasonably successfully.
I asked what had been so bad about Moscow. Yuri thought about it for a moment. ‘Russia is a pretty interesting country,’ he said. ‘And that’s really the problem. It’s too interesting. Too much happens. You don’t know in the morning how the day will end.’
He elaborated on this thought for a while. I listened in silence, while somewhere in the back of my mind a seed was planted. I tried to imagine a country where too much happened. A country where the real stories were more incredible than the invented ones.
The next day Kristina called me. She did not want to begin her journalistic career with fake television films. She had called off the internship with Yuri.
I called Yuri and accepted.
Before I met Yuri, Russia was a white speck on my internal map. More precisely: a hole.
As a child I had a large puzzle. Assembled, it revealed a map of the world. Each country had its own colour. Some colours filled many puzzle pieces, others only a few. Some countries – Liechtenstein, Malta, Andorra – were so small that they shared their puzzle piece with other countries. These were the simple countries. You knew immediately where they belonged.
There were very many olive-coloured puzzle pieces. That was the Soviet Union. It was larger than every other country, much larger. The Soviet Union was the most difficult country of all. It was more difficult than the oceans, which were of course even larger, but for those you could follow the longitude and latitude, whose helpful grid spanned all the light-blue pieces of the puzzle. There were no lines in the Soviet Union, only uniform olive-coloured puzzle pieces that all looked alike. Every time I put the puzzle together, I left the Soviet Union until the end. And at this unfinished stage the map of the world has forever etched itself onto my mind: a colourful puzzle with a big, frustrating hole on the top right.
By the time my internship began in the autumn of 2000, Yuri had lost interest in inventing stories. He was now occupied with scientific topics. He was working on a piece about a Russian mathematician for a German TV show. On my first day at work he explained to me what I needed to know.
‘The man’s name is Anatoly Fomenko, and he has figured out that we actually live in the year AD 1000, not 2000.’
‘Right,’ I said. ‘Good.’
Yuri had met Fomenko in Moscow. He showed me filmed excerpts from the interview: in a small cubicle sat a lean man in his sixties, whose face was hard to make out behind a pair of giant glasses. On the walls hung pictures that Fomenko, Yuri explained, had painted himself. I could vaguely make out black and white surrealist landscapes, with mountains made of skulls, melting watches, dancing columns of numbers.
We got to work. Yuri translated Fomenko’s Russian sentences into German; I revised them and wrote a synchronised text. Sentence by sentence we went through the interview. Only towards the end did I begin to understand the mathematician’s weird theory.
Fomenko’s world consisted of numbers. They were everywhere, you only had to ferret them out. Sometimes they hid behind other, incorrect numbers, but Fomenko would not let himself be fooled. He treated historical numbers with particular suspicion – almost all conventional dating of historical events he deemed incorrect. To discover the real numbers, he had developed a method which he used to evaluate historical chronicles. He freed such texts first from their non-mathematical ballast. In essence, for Fomenko a documented history was just a succession of political rulers: King A is replaced after four years by King B, who is followed after thirteen years by C, C after two years by D, after whose seven-year reign the chronicle ends. Thus Fomenko reduced texts that filled hundreds of pages to short formulas:
He had done this with a great many texts. Herodotus, Tacitus, Cicero, Thucydides, the Bible, the Torah, the Vedas, the Quran; the entire treasure chest of historical narratives of the world melted away under Fomenko’s hands into short sequences of numbers. The amazing thing was this: it was always the same sequences of numbers. In chronicles that described historically widely separated events, Fomenko discovered identical patterns in the successions of rulers:
Fomenko drew a bold conclusion from these similarities: in reality the chronicles described the same events, the same rulers, the same era. It was only later that they had been reinterpreted as descriptions of different eras. ‘The complete historical chronology that we are taught in school,’ Fomenko said in the interview with Yuri, ‘is based on errors, falsifications, lies and manipulations.’
When I had jotted down this last sentence, I looked doubtfully at Yuri. ‘Do you believe this stuff?’
He focused on the question and thought about it for some time. ‘I don’t consider it to be a question of faith,’ he then said. ‘From a logical point of view, I can’t find any error in the theory.’
I nodded silently. As I remembered at that moment, Yuri had mentioned at our first meeting that he had studied cybernetics in Moscow. I didn’t even know exactly what cyberneticists do. What did I know about logic?
In order to illustrate Fomenko’s methods, Yuri had designed a computer animation. A timeline appeared on the screen, divided into fields of different length, which were labelled with the names of great dynasties. Initially the timeline was motionless; then the great Fomenko-dance began: individual fields broke away from their historical mooring and wandered homelessly up and down the timeline until they found fields with an identical structure, with which they then merged in an uncanny fashion. The Habsburgs joined with the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation; the Romanov dynasty turned into the Carolingians; Charlemagne became Ivan the Terrible. Watches melted, columns of numbers danced, 2000 years of history cast off their malignant tumours, 1000 years remained.
Hesitantly I looked at Yuri. He grinned. It was at that moment that I began to grasp the meaning of his assertions about fiction and reality. Russia being populated by crazy millionaires appeared pretty plausible to me. Anatoly Fomenko, on the other hand, seemed like a character from a contrived science fiction film.
The day ended again with tea and sticky sweets. While Yuri talked about Russia, my eyes wandered back and forth between him and the screen, where the history of the world was still performing its confusing dance in an endless loop. I caught myself adding a new puzzle piece to my image of Yuri’s homeland. I tried to imagine a country where history could be chopped into pieces and reassembled anew.
Years of puzzles followed. Shortly after my internship with Yuri I went to Russia for the first time. I wanted to get to know the country. On one of my first nights in Moscow I got caught in a fist fight between an Orthodox monk and his clandestine lover. I decided to come back at all costs.
I learned the language. Over the course of one long, ice-cold winter I took a class at Moscow’s Pushkin Institute, where an ageing Pushkin enthusiast let loose the six-headed monster of Russian declension on me: ‘Puuushkin! Puuushkin-a! Puuushkin-u! Puuushkin-a! Puuushkin-ym! Puuushkin-e!’
I read. Cities and rulers added themselves to my puzzle: Kiev, Moscow, Saint Petersburg. Yaroslav the Wise, Dmitry the False, Ivan the Terrible, Peter the Great. Tsar, tsarya, tsaryu, tsarya, tsarem, tsare. Nicholas I, Alexander II, Alexander III, Nicholas II. Revolutsiya, revolutsiyi, revolutsiyi, revolutsiyu, revolutsiey, revolutsiyi. Lenin, Stalin, Khrushchev. Sotsializm, sotsializma, sotsializmu, sotsializm, sotsializmom, sotsializme. General Secretary D is replaced after 18 years by General Secretary E, who is followed after 15 months by F, F after 13 months by G, after whose six-year reign the Soviet Union ends. Perestroika, perestroiki, perestroike, perestroiku, perestroikoy, perestroike.
I travelled. From one jigsaw puzzle piece to the next. I saw the peaks of the Caucasus, the forests of Siberia, the volcanoes of Kamchatka. I swam in the Moscva and the Volga rivers, in the Black Sea and in Lake Baikal. I experienced the chaos in Chechnya, the revolution in Kiev, the war in Ossetia.
Ten years after my encounter with Yuri I was working as a journalist for a daily newspaper in Berlin. My main focus was Russia. When anything happened there, the editor-in-chief called me into the morning conference and said: ‘Now Mühling will explain the Russian soul to us.’ I would explain. With a little guilt. Because at heart I still considered this Russia to be the old riddle from my childhood: a stack of olive-green jigsaw puzzle pieces next to a large, frustrating hole. The stack grew, but the pieces did not come together as a whole. The country was too large, too contradictory; you hardly knew where to begin. And what the newspapers said, including what I wrote myself, all too often resembled my tables of declension: Putin, Putina, Putinu, Putina, Putinym, Putinye.
In a large, unsorted drawer of my desk I kept excerpts from the Russian press. Whenever I noticed something in the newspapers or on the Internet I cut it out and put it with the other slips of paper, so I could come back to it later. On rainy days when there was nothing else to do I sometimes skimmed through the drawer, looking for something other than the usual news stories.
SCIENTISTS DECIPHER RUSSIAN GENE
REMAINS OF ANCIENT SETTLEMENT DISCOVERED IN THE SOUTHERN URALS
DON COSSACKS DEMAND NATIONAL INDEPENDENCE
PETERSBURG PRIEST CONSECRATES STALIN ICON
Over the years the drawer, with its inscription ‘Russia, Ideas’, grew fuller and fuller. I lost track of some stories long before I got my hands on them again. Such discoveries were the most profitable, because with the passing of time they sometimes appeared to me in a completely different light. So it was with the story of Agafya Lykova, which I pulled out of the clutter of newspaper clippings one rainy day.
OLD BELIEVER HERMIT REFUSES TO LEAVE THE TAIGA
It was a short account about a religious hermit. Agafya Lykova lived alone in the forests of southern Siberia, more than 200 kilometres away from the nearest settlement. She was one of the so-called ‘Old Believers’, a splinter group of the Russian Orthodox Church. Her parents had fled to the Taiga shortly before the Second World War, to escape the Red Terror of the Bolsheviks. They had started their journey with two small children; another two, including Agafya, were born in the wilderness. For more than 40 years the family had lived there without any contact with the outside world. It was only in 1978 that Soviet geologists had accidentally encountered the Old Believer hermits.
Agafya, the youngest daughter, was by now the only survivor of the family. People had repeatedly urged her to abandon her hut in the Taiga and move to civilisation. She refused.
A few years must have passed since I had cut out the article. I could still remember that I had thought of Yuri while I tucked the slip of paper into the drawer – it was one of those Russian stories that sound so unbelievable they can only be true. At that time, however, I had no idea what Old Believers were. Now I knew. And that gave a whole new meaning to Agafya Lykova’s story.
In the not exactly bloodless history of Russia, the 17th century was one of the bloodiest. A bizarre religious controversy divided the country: people argued over the question of whether to make the sign of the cross with two fingers or with three. The Moscow Patriarch, who advocated for the three-finger cross, persecuted the followers of the two-finger cross viciously; he had unruly believers’ hands chopped off, and their priests’ tongues ripped out. Many rendered the mutilations unnecessary by simply chopping off their own thumbs in order not to have to blaspheme God with three fingers. Whole communities barricaded themselves in their churches, set their altars on fire and watched as the flames ate away at their hands, two fingers outstretched to the very end.
The conflict had been sparked by one man who exerted all of his dubious ambition to rectify the course of history. Around the middle of the century Patriarch Nikon, head of the Russian Orthodoxy, introduced a church reform. He invoked the origins of the Orthodox faith: the Russians had adopted Christianity from Byzantium in 988, when the Grand Duke of Kiev baptised his subjects according to the Greek rites. Over the centuries the inevitable happened: little by little, the Russian Orthodoxy developed its own, non-Greek traits, arising partly as a result of incorrect translations of Greek liturgical texts, but more often through the everyday practice of the faith. No Russians considered these characteristics to be a betrayal of their Orthodox roots. Patriarch Nikon alone was embarrassed when he received Greek dignitaries in the Kremlin, whose astonishment at the customs of the Russians did not escape him.
With his reforms, Nikon attempted to rectify the most obvious deviations of the Russian liturgy from the Greek. At first glance, they were trifles: the Trinity was no longer praised with two hallelujahs but with three; one letter was to be added to the name of the Lord, ‘Iisus’ instead of ‘Isus’; there should be not seven loaves but only one on the altar during the Eucharist; finally, the sign of the cross would no longer be made with two fingers but with three, the way the Greeks did it.
These interventions might have been accepted without complaint if at the same time much more drastic changes had not been overtaking Russia. The long isolated country was opening up to the West. Things appeared that had never been in Russia before; tobacco, tea and coffee; trimmed beards; sacred images with saints barely recognisable, so outlandishly were they depicted; foreigners, summoned by the Tsar to modernise the country, brought foreign manners to Russia, foreign languages and foreign gadgets. On the main tower of the Kremlin wall a huge mechanical clock from England appeared, the first in all of Russia. Its message was unmistakable: the times were changing.
All of these upheavals had one thing in common with Nikon’s reforms: they made Russia look bad. Many Russians did not want to admit that the traditions of their fathers should suddenly be worth less than the inventions of foreigners, be it English clocks, Dutch paintings, German books or Greek church rules. The Old Believers, as the opponents of reform were soon called, rejected Nikon’s heresies as vehemently as the ever-advancing West. Their two-fingered cross became a gesture of resistance against a Russia that was betraying its roots in every respect.
The times were changing. And perhaps, as the Old Believers in fact suspected, the world was actually approaching its prophesied end. There was evidence. As the religious controversy reached its bloody climax, people in Russia wrote the year as 7174 – their calendar started with the creation of the world. But in the West, where the years were numbered from the birth of Christ, a different number appeared on the calendar, a terrible one: 1666. There could be no doubt: the foreigners were messengers of the apocalypse.
While Russia drifted towards the west, the Old Believers fled towards the east. Persecuted by the Patriarch’s henchmen, they withdrew to the sparsely populated, peripheral regions of the Russian Empire. They founded communities where time stood still, where nothing diluted the spirit of old Russia, no tobacco and no coffee, no razor and no clockworks, not one hallelujah too many, not one altar loaf too few.
Centuries passed. Whenever the Old Believers came under pressure they simply withdrew a bit deeper into the Siberian forests. The strategy succeeded until 1917, when revolution broke out in distant Saint Petersburg, plunging Russia into a new bloodbath. The missionaries who now appeared in the villages of the Old Believers neither made the cross with two fingers, nor with three; they did not cross themselves at all. Instead, they preached truths that a German philosopher had put into their heads: religion is an opiate; there is no God.
The Old Believers did what they had always done: they fled deeper into the wilderness. In the Thirties, however, as Soviet agriculture was forcibly collectivised, planning squads invaded even the most remote settlements. In one small community in Southern Siberia they encountered resistance. A shot was fired; an Old Believer died. Horrified, the brother of the murdered man decided to turn his back on the world for good. Taking his wife and two small children, Karp Lykov wandered into the wilderness. When his youngest daughter Agafya was born a few years later, the old Russia had withdrawn to a tiny corner of the Taiga.
I read the newspaper clipping over and over. Outside, drops of rain beat against the windowpane. Inside, my puzzle started moving.
It seemed to me that chance had dealt me a tiny, at first glance incidental, detail, on which in some cryptic way half the puzzle hung. At the crucial crossroads of Russian history, the Lykovs and their ancestors had consistently taken a step in the opposite direction. Along historical side-paths Agafya Lykova had ended up in the Taiga, and according to the newspaper article she was still living there. She was the last inhabitant of a Russia that would cease to exist after her death.
I read through the notes that I had scribbled on the edges of the newspaper article: Kiev 988, Moscow 1666, Petersburg 1917, Siberia 1978. It read like stations along a journey.
I asked my editor-in-chief for a year’s leave and said goodbye to my friends. One winter’s morning I boarded an overheated night train at Berlin’s Zoo station. In the next compartment sat a young Polish couple whose sweet nothings whispered through the deserted corridor while the train car began to move in ghostly silence. It wasn’t until the Tiergarten flashed past the windows that the sounds of their romance were drowned out by the beating wheels.
Russia is not a Country
Poland started with the shimmering purple ice floes of the Oder and culminated in a crescendo of barbed wire and uniforms. A sign with the inscription ‘Dorohusk’ pushed against the windows of my compartment as the train slowed. Military boots had left dance-step patterns in the snow. A few hastily renovated administrative buildings seemed overwhelmed by the historic task that was expected of them in their old age: suddenly, the horizon of a continent had moved to under their windows. Taken by surprise, they kept watch over it.
On my journey, the Polish-Ukrainian border was the first of many more or less arbitrary dividing lines between Europe and that nameless, unstructured hinterland that did not, or no longer, or not yet, or not entirely, belong to Europe, or did not want to, or was not permitted to, or should, or could, or must belong to Europe – God only knows. The only thing that can be said with clarity about such borders is that behind them is where the ambiguities begin.
The train was more carefully prepared for the changeover than the passengers. When we reached the no-man’s land between the barriers, workers in overalls decoupled the train cars and rolled them onto hydraulic lifts. In turn, the wheel frames were replaced, to prepare the train for the wider rail tracks which begin behind the border and extend to the Pacific Coast. The distance between the Russian tracks, as one of the workers explained to me, is 85 millimetres wider than the European ones; replacing the chassis can take up to three hours, depending on the train. I wrote down the numbers with the feeling that the complicated differences between Europe and Russia had to be hidden somewhere in this simple formula.
On the Ukrainian side of the border a young female customs officer examined our passports. She was barely out of earshot when the Russian fellow traveller in my compartment burst into laughter. ‘Did you hear that?’ He chuckled with delight.
‘What?’
‘That language!’ Chuckling, he raised his voice two octaves and imitated the customs officer: ‘Dokumenty, bud lasko!’ For a moment he let the soft twitter of the Ukrainian sounds reverberate, before he changed back to his native Russian language. ‘They speak like children! Ah, these sweet Ukrainians!’ His fat cheeks quivered with laughter.
Oleg came from Moscow; he worked as a sales representative for a former state-owned company and had been travelling the Moscow-Warsaw train route for almost three decades. He had crossed the Ukraine almost as often as his living room, but it had only become evident to him at a late stage that the residents of this neighbouring republic had their own language. It was the year Oleg’s firm and the Ukraine decided, at the same time, to no longer be Soviet state property. Oleg had never grown accustomed to either. The privatisation of his company had cut deep lines of stress across his forehead. The independence of the Ukraine, however, amused him no end.
‘In the beginning, they were still ashamed. On the train they just quietly whispered to each other, like children who have gotten into some kind of mischief. It was only when the customs officers started to speak Ukrainian that the passengers also slowly dared to. And today … today …’ A fit of laughter left him momentarily speechless. ‘… Today they sometimes act as if they don’t understand my Russian! Like children who have invented a secret language!’
With my right foot I discreetly pushed the compartment door shut. Oleg spoke so loudly that the entire carriage had to listen to his chauvinistic giggling, and when it comes to their national honour, Ukrainians understand Russian very