Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 10 – Discussions
about restoring the Soviet-era name Staliningrad or the tsarist name Tsaritsyn to
Volgograd either a few days a year or permanently are the tip of the iceberg of
a much larger phenomenon: ongoing fights about renaming not just cities but
individual streets, fights that are reopening wounds left over from 70 years of
communist rule.
Perhaps the second most intense
debates after the ones about Volgograd involve the city of Kaliningrad, the
capital of the non-contiguous portion of the Russian Federation which Stalin
added to the USSR from German territory at the end of World War II and that
most Russians continue to view as an appropriate trophy of war.
A few weeks ago, 400 residents of
the city petitioned its government to change the name back to its German
original Koenigsberg, and the local paper, “Kaliningradskaya Pravda,” published
a survey on this question in which “all respondents” supported renaming the
city, “including one veteran” of World War II (www.regnum.ru/news/polit/1620601.html).
That
veteran, one Reno Komarovsky, advanced an argument like many Soviet veterans of
the Stalingrad battle have. He said that
he “would leave the name Koenigsberg, exclusively out of respect for history,”
noting that he had “taken Koenigsberg and fought for this beautiful European city.”
He recalled that at the end of the
war, there were rumors that the city would be renamed in honor of Stalin. That
didn’t happen. Instead, “they named in honor of Kalinin, a party leader. And
what now? There was a Kaliningrad in
Podmoskovye, bu tit has been renamed. Kalinin was renamed Perm. There’s too much honor being shown to Kalinin”
and others like him.
And Koarovsky concluded that “the
name Koenigsberg does not glorify any German figure or fascism. It is a good
name.”
Aleksey Leonov, a cosmonaut who grew
up in Kaliningrad, agreed. He told the paper he had been for renaming the place
for a long time. Koenigsberg doesn’t have anything in common with Nazism.
Instead, it is “a city of science, students and peace … And how are we to
explain to young people who this Kalinin was? What did he do for the
fatherland? Sign shooting orders?”
But the Regnum news agency said, “NewsBalt”
had identified “who stands behind this initiative.” They include Mikhail
Kostyayev, an anti-nuclear activist,
Russtam Vasiliyev, a former member of the Baltic Republican Party, and Dmitry
Karpovich and Vladimmir Khodayev, organizers of the Prussian March.
Meanwhile, the PublicPpost.ru portal,
suggested a number of cities across the country that officials might choose to
rename “either temporarily [on holidays] or permanently” and specifying
precisely the holidays that such re-namings might most appropriately occur (www.publicpost.ru/theme/id/3165/chto_eshche_pereimenovat/).
Among
them, St. Petersburg could again become Leningrad at least on January 18 when
Russians mark the end of the blockade of that city, the portal suggested. Gatchina could become Trotsk [for Trotsky],
perhaps on the Day of the Defender of the Fatherland on February 23, the
Russian extension of the Day of the Red Army and Fleet.
Perm
could become Molotov once again at least when Russia commemorates the Great
Fatherland War, it added. Krasnodar could become Yekaterinodar permanently as
the Cossacks want. Novomoskovsk could
become Stalinogorsk when Russia marks Victory Day And Kaliningrad could be
called Koenigsberg, at least on April 22, the birthday of Immanuel Kant.
But
these conflicts over names of cities may not be as meaningful for many in the
Russian Federation as the increasingly intense disputes over the names of their
city streets. In Irkutsk, a large group
of historians and architects petitioned the city to stop changing names lest
people become confused as the historic face of that city is lost.
And
they pointed out that most streets there have had many names, some post-Soviet,
some Soviet, and some pre-Soviet, which have lasted more or less time and
passed into the memory of the population, and the petitioners asked, not implausiblye
“which of these is ‘the more historical?” (newsbabr.com/?IDE=112059).
In Ufa, the capital
of Bashkortostan, communist activists have re-opened the controversy from July
2008 when the city government renamed Frunze Street in honor of Zeli Velidi, a
Bashkir nationalist who in emigration had dealings with the Nazis in the 1930s
and 1940s (kyk-byre.ru/927-rossiyskiy-sud-poshel-protiv-sovesti-radi-krasnyh-vragov-bashkirskogo-naroda.html
).
And in the Tuvan
capital of Kyzyl, residents have another problem: many of their streets do not
have any names at all, sparking confusion and prompting demands that the city
arrange things so that no one will have to live on a nameless street and not be
able to tell his friends where he lives (www.centerasia.ru/issue/2013/5/4503-imena-dlya-ulic-kizila.html).
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