Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 28 – Russian
officials say there are 17,000 homeless people in Moscow. The real number is
likely much higher, experts suggest, noting that hundreds of homeless across
the country die every day “from illness, trauma, cold, slavish work conditions
or from the hands of maniac ‘cleansers’” who see it as their duty to liquidate
such people, Eva Merkacheva says.
The Moskovsky komsomolets journalist was asked to get behind the
stereotypes these characteristics have given rise to, something she did by
interviewing a number of the homeless and those who are trying to help them in
one way or another (mk.ru/social/2019/04/28/ugonyayut-v-rabstvo-travyat-priglashayut-tamadoy-taynaya-zhizn-moskovskikh-bomzhey.html).
Perhaps
the most unusual was a homeless man who was trained as a biologist at Moscow
State and then shifted to the study of Oriental cultures. He writes poetry and
even posts it online. But his partner is a young woman who gave birth at 12 and
whose child has done the same and who is clearly mentally retarded as shown by
her treatment of a plastic doll as a real child.
The two of them
have managed to live not badly although they do not have a home of their own,
Merkacheva says, adding that “it was a revelation to find out that a Moscow
homeless man judging by his food basket lives no worse than I do.” But
“nonetheless, his life is extremely unusual,” involving 10 to 15 kilometers of
walking every day in search of what the two need.
Another homeless
man works as an entertainer at private parties, but when he leaves these, he
returns to his world without a place of his own. He could likely get out of the homeless life,
the journalist says; but he has no desire to, a common reaction of many who are
in this social category.
Those who work
with the homeless say that it often the case because many homeless people in
Russia have come up with their own imagined life stories which validate who
they are in their eyes and that would likely collapse if they were forced to
live a more normal and settled existence.
But the risks to
the homeless in Moscow are increasing. On the one hand, many are being forced
into virtual slavery by criminal elements. And on the other, there has arisen a
group of people committed to the killing off of homeless people and who are
prepared to leave food that the homeless may pick up that has been poisoned so
that these unfortunates will die.
These “cleansers,”
those who work with the homeless say, “have an entire philosophy according to
which no one needs the homeless and consequently simply no one will notice
their disappearance but will only benefit if they are removed from the scene,
possibly the result of the growing cult of violence in some parts of Russian
society.
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