Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 23 – The failure of
Russians to see that what is being done to others may soon be done to them and
to rise in protest means, Vitaly Portnikov says, that “if tomorrow Putin were
to be under arrest at his dacha, it would turn out that 90 percent of those who
now back him would disown him.”
The Ukrainian commentator argues
that the Russians and especially those often identified as their cultural
leaders thus continue to fall victim to the self-justification for going along
if they personally aren’t attacked that Pastor Martin Niemoeller described so
classically in Nazi Germany (ru.krymr.com/a/28691992.html).
That of course means that no Russian
leader, including Putin, can count on unwavering support however much power he appears
to have amassed and that no real solidarity can emerge among Russians to oppose
the rise of ever more authoritarianism among leaders who simultaneously
recognize that reality and fear it.
Portnikov takes as his point of
departure the reactions of Russian intellectuals to the arrest of
Serebrennikov. Some support Putin’s decision to detain him; others don’t. But
among the latter there are two groups: the small one whose members view it as
part of a larger problem, and the far more numerous one consisting of those who
don’t connect the dots.
The latter fail to
recognize that Putin’s war against Ukraine and his arrest of independent-minded
directors are all of a piece, and they thus hope, as Pastor Niemoeller warned
against, that the wave of arrests will somehow not reach them and that they can
continue to get money for their activities from the regime.
Those who act in this way, the
Ukrainian commentator continues, do not reflect “a culture of self-awareness
and analysis of their own spirit and life situation.” Indeed, one should not
call them representatives of genuine culture at all.
Thus, “Tatyana Lioznova filmed ’17 Instants
of Spring’ about the Soviet apparats but to the end of her life didn’t understand
it. Mark Zakharov filmed ‘Kill the Dragon’” but didn’t get it either. And the
list goes on and on, an indictment of those who seek to claim the title of
independent intellectuals.
They do not appear to understand
what they are about or at least are prepared to “imitate” culture” much as “Putin
imitates political activity when his closest friends fill their pockets with
billions.” Ultimately, however, neither
imitation will be persuasive because as Pastor Niemoeller implied, there will
always be some who will see through it.
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