Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 25 – The just-concluded
eight-part Moscow television series based on Guzel Yakhina’s novel Zuleyka Opens
Her Eyes (in English: Zuleika (London, 2019)) has sparked enormous
controversy with criticism coming from Tatars, Muslims, Russian rights
activists, and communists and ranging from demands that it be corrected to it
be banned outright.
The novel which tells the story of a
young Tatar woman who is de-kulakized and sent to Siberia and then has an
affair with a Russian guard reflects the complexities of a time when people
often had few good choices and thus made compromises which current generations
have not been forced to make and often don’t forgive.
For many in Russia and not just
there, the past must conform to their ideas of what is right and wrong and the
only people worthy of being remembered and respected are those who choose
martyrdom rather than finding a way to live in what were often inhuman and even
barbaric conditions.
Moreover, the critics of this television
serial want the world simplified in another way: they do not want to accept
that the world is more complicated than their vision of it. Tatars have
retained many pre-Islamic traditions, and they remain Tatars even if they have
been forced by circumstances to speak Russian or intermarry with Russians.
Demanding that every work of art, be
it a film, a television program or a novel, conform to their understandings is
tragically a mirror-image of the Procrustean bed that Soviet ideologists
imposed when they were in control. Life
is more complicated than the Soviets imagined or than those who do what they
did for different purposes think now.
That is not to say there aren’t
shortcomings in the film. As its director has acknowledged, the list of Muslim
leaders exiled was inaccurate. But the very complexity of life that Yakhina showed
in the novel and that remains in TV film is the message and the best way to remember
and condemn what was done to Zuleyka, Tatars, Muslims, and peasants in Soviet
times.
(For a summary of the criticism of the
television series, see nazaccent.ru/content/32936-skandalnaya-zulejha.html;
for the television series itself, see the programs at youtube.com/results?search_query=%D0%B7%D1%83%D0%BB%D0%B5%D0%B9%D1%85%D0%B0+%D0%BE%D1%82%D0%BA%D1%80%D1%8B%D0%B2%D0%B0%D0%B5%D1%82+%D0%B3%D0%BB%D0%B0%D0%B7%D0%B0+1+%D1%81%D0%B5%D1%80%D0%B8%D1%8F+.)
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