Staunton, January 19 – Over the past
year, Ukrainians have torn down more than 500 memorials to Vladimir Lenin,
actions that reflect their revulsion at the Soviet past but ones that have had
the unintended consequence of transforming Lenin into a conservative figure for
many Russians and making the destruction of Lenin statues in their country less
likely anytime soon.
That is because, Ukrainian
commentator Pavel Kazarin argues in a Novy Region2 post today, statues and
other memorials are constantly being redefined and the Ukrainians have taken the
lead in redefining for Russians the founder of the Soviet state into a symbol
of state continuity (nr2.com.ua/column/Pavel_Kazarin/Pochemu-v-Rossii-ne-snesut-Lenina-88527.html).
Even before Putin’s “little green
men” entered Crimea, some Crimean Tatars demanded that a statue of Lenin be taken
down, Kazarin begins. Some Russians there were dumbfounded given that, as they
put it, Lenin created the autonomous republic and made Crimean Tatar an
official language. Why, they asked, should Crimean Tatars be angry at him?
“The problem,” of course, he points
out, is that “the Lenin of today” is “in the first instance” not a biography of
an historical figure but “a monument,” and “like any other symbol, it has only
those meanings” which people now and not at the time of his life “invest in it.”
Take the case of Kliment Voroshilov,
Kazarin suggests. He could be remembered as the organizer of the Bolshevik
movement in Luhansk and even viewed as a hero of the left, but today, he is
remembered because he put his signature on the lists of some 18,000 people who
were to be executed by Stalin’s secret police.
Consequently, “any
attempt to make Voroshilov an actual symbolic figure embodying the coming to
power of ‘the left’ by democratic means will be impossible” because of his
later actions and how they are viewed now.
The same thing
is true of Lenin. For Ukrainians, he is not a revolutionary and not “the
creator of national proto-states with their borders and symbols” but “as the
architect of that system which became the latest reincarnation of the Russian
empire, this time in the 20th century.”
Thus, for
Ukraine, Lenin is “ideally suited” as a symbol of the enemy that any nation building
enterprise needs. His statues are in almost every city and village, and he can
be viewed as the embodiment of empire, despite his own efforts to destroy it,
Kazarin says. But “a symbol in general
can have nothing in common with the real prototype.”
Indeed, in Ukraine
now, Kazarin argues, Lenin monuments are the two-headed tsarist eagle and the
Soviet hammer and sickle rolled into one. They are thus the perfect target for
destruction especially since “there is nothing imperial and at the same time
unnecessary in Ukraine today.”
The Russian
language, about whose destruction in Ukraine Moscow propagandists like to talk,
in fact “remains part of the daily life of the country: even the ATO forces
curse in ‘the great and powerful’” and not in Ukrainian.
“The special feature
of the situation is only that after Crimea, Russia feels itself to be an
empire, and thus each destruction of a memorial to ‘the leader’” is viewed by
both Ukrainians and Russians as “a symbolic attack” on that empire.
Kazarin suggests
that “if one conflates ‘the Russian world’ with ‘the empire,’ one should not be
surprised that Lenin has because precisely just the same part of the ‘Russian
baggage’ as the Cathedral of Christ the Savior.”
And that in
turn means every time Ukrainians take down a statue of Lenin that “prolongs the
life of his Russian analogues for several years” because “the present-day Lenin
is a conservative and defensive symbol without any revolutionary content. The
ideal resident of the central square of the average Russian city,” the perfect combination
of two contradictory ideas: “The Russian Which We Have Lost” and “The Soviet
Union as the Kingdom of Social Justice.”
Any symbol, Kazarin concludes, means only
what people are programmed to see in it. “The only irony here is that Lenin for
Russia has been reprogrammed by the Ukrainians.”
No comments:
Post a Comment