Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 22 – Russians are
erecting ever more and ever higher walls around where they live, where they
work and even where they are buried, Vadim Zhartun says, a reflection of the
sacred character they give to such fencing off of themselves from others and of
the fences and walls they have in their minds.
Other nations have erected fences
and walls, but they have done so to block a particular threat, the Russian
blogger says; but Russians view them as a universal necessity and even status
symbol, suggesting both a distinction from others and a danger to Russians
themselves (zhartun.me/2019/04/fence.html reposted at newizv.ru/article/general/22-04-2019/vadim-zhartun-vlast-v-strane-olitsetvoryaet-zabor).
People put them up around their
houses and dachas, ministries and firms put them around industrial zones even
if there is nothing behind the walls but rusting metal, and military units have
them around them both where they might be useful and, in many places, where it
is difficult or impossible to imagine that they are, Zhartun continues.
The barriers are “an indicator of
status. The higher the position of an individual, the higher will be the fence
or wall separating him from others. Remember the 9-meter fence surrounding
Medvedev’s dacha? That is true happiness Russian style.
“All our lives, we live behind
walls, go to work along fences, work behind walls, but even after death walls
continue to follow us: I was horrified by a cemetery where each grave was
separated by boundaries. The dead aren’t
going to be running off anywhere,” the commentator continues.
“The fences around us are only a
reflection of the fences we have in our heads and whatever we do and whatever
we are involved with, in the final analysis, we always end up doing one and the
same thing – putting up fences and walls,” Zhartun says.
According to him, “the Berlin Wall
became the symbol of the Soviet era;” but a true wall supports something and so
it would be better to call that “grandiose” construction the Berlin “fence.”
Unfortunately, then there existed “fences in several dimensions at once –
political, economic, social and cultural.”
And although some came down, many more are going up.
Indeed, he continues, “now we are
again at shock rates putting up fences and walls” for the country as a whole so
far “virtual” against the Internet. But there is one difference now: in Soviet
times, the fences and walls restricted everyone. Now, they restrict the
population but not those who want to put their money in the West.
But however that may be, one thing
is clear: walls are the symbol or even the embodiment of Russia. The Kremlin
after all is “a fortress” surrounded by a high stone wall with little
towers.” And both Russians and those who
deal with them often suggest that the Kremlin does this or that, something
other nations typically do not do about themselves.
In short, walls now are taking the
place of people and institutions, a development that must be reversed if Russia
is to have a future.
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