Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 25 – Many have been
surprised or even shocked by the increasingly positive views Russians express
about Stalin, Vitaly Shlyarov says. But they shouldn’t be because nothing else
could have emerged in a country which under Vladimir Putin has been “supporting
and propagandizing a cult of violence and a cult of war.”
Such cults are far broader in their
implications, and Russians today, “catching the signals from above consider
that great goals in general fully justify human victims and masochistically are
beginning to dream about ‘a strong hand’ having forgotten that they will be
among the first to fall victim to it” (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2019/04/25/80351-ot-kulta-lichnosti-k-kultu-sily).
The Levada Center
results reflect the fact that Russians react to Stalin not as a historical
figure but as an idealized myth that the current regime has promoted. That has
not been difficult for the Kremlin given that those who lived under the Soviet
dictator are dying out, and most young Russians “do not have any interest in
history.”
That
explains the responses Russians gave to the sociologists’ first question about
whether they have a positive view of Stalin.
But more worrisome than this generalized set of views is the rise of
what are clearly “more conscious Stalinists and those close to them” who view
Stalin’s approaches inn an entirely positive way.
Four times as many
Russians view Stalin as an exalted figure than did two decades ago, and the
share having a negative view of him fell from 43 percent in 2001 to 14 percent
now. “It is difficult to say,” the
political technologist continues, “where here is the role of myth and where the
factor of the departure from life of the witnesses of those events.”
It’s
possible, he says, that these answers too may be “abstractions.” It is also
possible that those holding these views do not have any family members who
suffered under Stalin. And it is possible that they may even see themselves as
beneficiaries of Stalin’s policies from winning the war to building Soviet
industry, regardless of the costs.
But
almost certainly, this positive view of Stalin reflects something older and
more general, a tendency among Russians from time immemorial to view the ruler
as more important than law and the state as more important than the
individual. Many had thought this vision
of reality had ended with Soviet times, but it was only submerged and has now
come back.
Despite
his commitment to doing away with the system on which this attitude was based,
Boris Yeltsin reflected many aspects of that system because he was part of it.
And in 2000, Vladimir Putin simply built on it, exacerbating its return by his
shift in the direction of the promotion of a national idea and imperial
reconquest in 2010.
“In the
existing circumstances,” Shklyarov says, “the traditional cult of force not
simply has flourished but has gone hand in hand with the cult of war. And now
Russia again is surrounded by enemies and can “repeat” what it did before.”
These cults have been strengthened by a declining standard of living, and
uncertainty about tomorrow.
Tragically,
this cult of violence is spreading like “a fluid” throughout Russian society,
contributing to the rise of radical and violent youth subcultures and the
state’s own Young Army. As a result, pollsters register a cult of Stalin but in
reality that cult is a derivative of these even more disturbing cults of
unfocused violence and war.
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