Paul Goble
Staunton, January 12 – In order to
reinforce the idea that there will never be any change in the future, the
Kremlin is seeking to freeze the image of the Great Fatherland War into a
single approved form, prohibiting all honest recollection and discussion of
that conflict and forcing all its aspects into a single cult-like phenomenon,
Ivan Davydov says.
But in doing so, the Kremlin leaders
are repeating the serious mistake of their Soviet predecessors who forgot that the
quickest way to make people “hate everything connected with the history of the war”
is to reduce it to ritualized incantations that deprive it of all its human
complexity, the commentator continues (newtimes.ru/articles/detail/189675?fcc).
That is what the
Soviet leaders did toward the end, Davydov continues; “and our bureaucrats are
showing the very same ability to reproduce with surprising zeal the most
pathetic aspect of the Soviet experience,” behaving as the saying has it like
the Bourbons who showed they had learned nothing and forgotten nothing.
The year ahead, because it
corresponds to the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II,
promises to be especially fateful in that regard. Vladimir Putin has already
called for Russians to come up with ways to mark “the great victory.” Officials have hurried to comply, and their
responses range from the ridiculous to the absurd.
The enlightenment minister – even the
title is appropriate – wants to require all references to veterans to
capitalize the word “Veteran.” Some are certain to go beyond that and decide
that all the letters in that word should be capitalized so that it will read “VETERAN,”
the New Times writer says
Others, including the leaders of
schools in Chelyabinsk, have suggested talking about the 100th
anniversary of the victory not because that will happen anytime soon but
because such discussions will suggest that “the current order of things is
forever,” exactly the message the Putin regime wants to send in order to
preclude discussions about the future as well as the past.
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