Paul Goble
Staunton,
December 18 – “Imperial schizophrenia,” the editors of Censoru.Net write,” is
an extremely interesting illness but unfortunately has up to now been little studied,”
despite ever more manifestations of it in Russian life, including the transformation
of New Year’s trees into Victory trees celebrating the Soviet triumph in the Great
Fatherland War.
“Any
ideology is based not on truth but on myths and stories,” the portal says; and
its myths have a tendency to spread throughout society. That is what is
happening with the mythology around the Great Victory of 1945 – and in unexpected
and even disturbing ways (censoru.net/31852-malo-by-rossii-bed-tak-prishla-novaja-elka-pobedy.html).
One way is to have the myth
penetrate into holidays unconnected one would think with it. And that is
happening with New Year’s celebrations as young people are being encouraged to
link New Year’s trees with the victory by decorating them appropriately and
using the decorations as occasions to talk not about the future but about the
past.
Moscow’s Museum of Victory started
this process last year by using its New Year’s tree to train guides and youth
group leaders about 1945. Now, they are fanning out into society and
encouraging young Pioneers and others to decorate their trees accordingly and
think about events long before they were born and of which few survivors
remain.
The New Year’s tree is to become a
Victory Tree, and those who hear such appeals are intended to fall into “a
patriotic ecstasy.” Whether that happens
or whether such ideological overreach will have just the opposite effect, of
course, depends on the individual and thus remains to be seen.
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