Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 21 –Russian poet
Fyodor Tyutchev writing in French first used the term “Russophobia” on October 20, 1867, to
describe the hostility some Russians feel toward their own country and its
problems and their willingness to overlook any difficulties in other states,
Russian blogger Sergey Tsvetkov says.
This week thus marks the 150th
anniversary of that event and, as a round date, should become “Russophobia Day,”
a holiday that is unlikely to catch on in Putin’s Russia despite the ever greater
frequency with which the Kremlin leader and other Russians to denounce the
criticism by Russians and others of Russia (sergeytsvetkov.livejournal.com/652946.html).
But Tsvetkov did express pleasure in
the fact that this year on this anniversary, even Vladimir Putin made use of
the term in a public speech, albeit using it to attack not primarily other
Russians as Tyutchev had but foreign critics of Russia and the Russian people,
two categories both inevitably bracket together as one.
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