Paul Goble
Staunton, April 1 – In an essay for Novaya Gazeta Europe, journalist Irina Khalip says that “Lukashenka loves it when he is demonized and called ‘a bloody dictator’ but he hates it when people laugh at him,” something the Belarusian people have been doing with increasing frequency during his long but often absurd reign.
It would be truly “strange,” however, she continues, “if Belarusians didn’t come up with jokes about Lukashenka.” They began even before he came to power and have continued despite repression for the 30 years since, often being only lightly modified or updated (novayagazeta.eu/articles/2026/04/01/luka-mudishchev-prezident-i-drugie-neofitsialnye-litsa).
Khalip offers the following classics:
· Lukashenko and his sons are flying in a helicopter over Belarusian. Down in the fields, collective farmers are toiling away. Lukashenko’s eldest son throws a banknote down: "Let one person have something to be happy about." The middle son throws down two: "Let two people be happy." The youngest throws five: "Let five people be happy." Then, the pilot—unable to hold back any longer—shouts: "Why don't you just throw that guy with the mustache overboard? Then ten million people could be happy!"
· God summons Trump, Putin, and Lukashenko to His presence and says: "The world is coming to an end tomorrow, so go warn your respective nations." In his address to the American people, Trump says: "I have two pieces of news for you—one good, and one bad. The good news: God exists. The bad news: the world is ending tomorrow." Putin says: "I have two pieces of bad news for you. The first: God exists." "The second: tomorrow is the end of the world." Lukashenko says: "I have two pieces of good news for you! The first: I paid an official visit to God. The second: I will be your president until the end of time."
· Lukashenko sits by the phone, speaking slowly and with pauses into the receiver: "Good... Bad... Good... Bad..." Then, turning to his aide: "What kind of people have I ended up with? They can't even sort through their own potatoes!"
· OMON officers grab a passerby during a protest, drag him into a paddy wagon, and begin beating him. He screams: "Why are you doing this to me? I actually voted for Lukashenko!" The OMON officers, beating him even harder, then say: "You're lying, you bastard! Nobody voted for him!"
There are of course many more and some have even been catalogued on the Internet (e.g., maximonline.ru/entertainment/luchshie-anekdoty-pro-aleksandra-lukashenko-id516760/), but the full range of these, which perhaps reached a highpoint in 2020 but continues to this day can be seen in numerous internet portals where they are featured.
That shouldn’t surprise anyone, Khalip argues. “In Belarus, reality is shuffled together with absurdity—not only in satirical Telegram channels but in real life as well. Yet there are things that remain unshakable. One of them is laughter. A tyrant can banish a person from the country. Or half a million people.”
“He can throw them in prison,” she writes. “He can even kill them. But he is powerless to destroy their capacity to laugh. And as long as Belarusians laugh at the tyrant, they remain immortal—unlike him, even if he has been ruling for more than 30 years.”