Paul Goble
Staunton, February 3 – Debates about
differences between the Soviet and fascist variants of totalitarianism have been
around for decades, but they are usually cast in the form of discussions as to whether
one was “better” or more precisely “less evil” than the other rather than in
close examinations of just where they were among all their similarities different.
Russian commentator Yevgeny Ikhlov
makes a useful contribution to the latter effort by pointing out that “Soviet
totalitarianism was distinguished from German or Italian kinds … by the fact
that its practice completely contradicted the values it propagandized” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5A748FCB29918).
What that meant, he says, is that the
model Soviet citizen had to learn to understand what those in power really
wanted from him in an intuitive fashion rather than by listening to what they
said publicly and the regime in turn had to impose a harsh censorship lest its
population use that skill to intuit what the authors of Aesopian materials wanted
them to take away.
Those Russians who acquired such
skills have not forgotten them: they continue to try to read between the lines
on all things on the assumption that what they are told directly is not what is
most important for them to understand and to at upon. But the generation that has arisen since 1991
doesn’t approach things in the same way.
That difference helps to explain why
today some older Russians conclude that even if the authorities do decide to
permit in words certain things such as the Aleksey Navalny demonstrations,
these things in reality are prohibited either because they violate the law or
constitute a revolt against the authorities. They feel that even participants “’should
know this.’”
“More than that,” Ikhlov continues, “every
‘sovok’ [as people with a Soviet past that lives on are often called] is firmly
convinced (1937 was done to achieve exactly this) that the powers have the most
complete right to short or send to the camps anyone and that only as a result
of their greatest indulgence do they not do so with everyone.”
This
view of the world also explains why such Russians had no problem when “the
Putin minister prohibited an anti-Stalinist film two-and-a-half months after Putin
declared Stalinist crimes unforgiveable” just as they had no problem when
Solzhenitsyn’s story, “One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich” was followed by
Khrushchev’s attack on the creative intelligentsia.
But
such an approach comes into conflict with those who “devote particular attention
to formalities” and who believe that the state must follow the law and do what
it says. That division which in many
cases follows generational lines, Ikhlov suggests, is Russia’s inheritance from
its different kind of totalitarianism.
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