Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 30 – In 1882, Lady
Victoria Fullerton wrote a remarkable book entitled Too Strange Not to Be True in which she described lands and peoples
“not our own.” Her book and its title
certainly could be updated to cover the strange things that continue to go on
in the Russian Federation of Vladimir Putin.
Today, as on many days, a number of such
stories surfaced. They are offered here as facets of the Russian condition,
small vignettes of life in a country very much “not our own.”
·
Russia’s Senators Vote
to Insure Themselves Against a Popular Uprising. Parliamentarians
in many countries go to great lengths to provide themselves with far better
insurance than their electorates have, but Russia’s senators have taken this to
new lengths: they’ve voted to insure themselves against losses in the event of
a popular uprising (politsovet.ru/59132-rossiyskih-senatorov-zastrahuyut-na-sluchay-narodnyh-volneniy.html).
·
Russian Actress
Advises Reading Dostoyevsky But Favors Rex Stout and Ellery Queen. Yuliya Mikhalkova, a Russian actress, said on Russian
television today that everyone should read the complete works of Fyodor
Dostoyevsky, arguably Russia’s greatest novelist. But in making her pitch, she held up a book
which she appeared to be reading, containing not his works but rather those of
American detective novelists Rex Stout and Ellery Queen (politsovet.ru/59123-yuliya-mihalkova-sputala-dostoevskogo-s-amerikanskimi-detektivschikami.html).
·
An African Student
is Expelled from Russia for Singing in Church. An African student in Russia has
been expelled, officials have told her, for singing in church, something that
they say her student visa doesn’t allow (interfax-religion.ru/?act=print&div=20587).
·
When There are No
Painkillers, Vodka is Best. People in
Russia’s regions are currently suffering from severe even “catastrophic”
shortages of painkillers (life.ru/t/здоровье/1121358/bolnaia_tiema_v_rieghionakh_katastrofichieski_nie_khvataiet_obiezbolivaiushchikh).
As a result, ever more people there suffering from extreme pain even when they
are in hospitals are turning to vodka (lenta.ru/articles/2018/05/28/vrachiodekriminalizacii/).
·
A Putin Statue
Goes Up But without Putin in It. A village in Kurgan oblast wanted to put
up a statue of Vladimir Putin. They had all the attributes of Russian power and
clearly intended for a full-size figure of the Kremlin leader to be in the
middle of things. But a call came from the Kremlin, and so one of the very
first statues honoring Putin has gone up without Putin in it (afterempire.info/2018/05/30/putin-without-putin/).
·
Russian Orthodox Church
Doesn’t Want Toilets in Churches but Officials Insist. Some 700,000
Russian faithful have signed a petition opposing the building of toilets in Orthodox
churches, but government officials are insisting that they do so and appear set
to override the views of the parishioners and the priesthood (ruskline.ru/news_rl/2018/05/30/zachem_nuzhny_tualety_v_hramah/).
·
Moscow Patriarchate
Says Majority Religious Group is Most Oppressed One. Stung by US criticism of Russia’s treatment
of religious minorities, a senior churchman for the Moscow Patriarchate says that
some people pay too much attention to the rights of minorities such as the
hard-pressed Jehovah’s Witnesses, and too little to the rights of majorities,
in this case, the Russian Orthodox (interfax-religion.ru/?act=dujour&div=130).
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