Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 11 – Yuliya Aug,
an actress in Russia who has been denied roles in recent years because she has
called the absorption of Crimea by the Russian Federation an annexation, says
that in her view, “all the signs of the formation of a totalitarian state are
now present in Russia.”
“I have the complete sense that we
are somewhere within a system which is frming a totalitarian state. All the signs
of this are present,” the outspoken actress tells Deutsche Welle (dw.com/ru/юлия-ауг-в-россии-налицо-все-признаки-формирования-тоталитарного-государства/a-51943814).
Despite this, Aug continues, she
feels a certain reason for optimism because “there have now appeared more
people who understand that it is necessary to seek a path for creating [films
and television programs] bypassing state financing. And there have arisen very
many new platforms for creating really interesting film and television products.”
One of the first actresses to appear
nude on screen, Aug rejects the idea that Russia is “a puritanical state.”
Instead, she says, “in Russia there is such a cocktail of all-possible
prohibitions including paternalistic ones that to call it puritanical would be
much too simple.” Instead, there are elements of domostroy, the
patriarchal family, and religion.
In addition, Aug says, the state has
played a role because in Soviet times, “in an absolutely non-religious country,
the [communist] party replaced religion.”
Aug says that she does not have “a
drop of Russian blood” in here. She was born in Leningrad too a half-Swedish,
half-Estonian father and a Jewish mother, and she grew up in Estonia a place
she feels strongly attracted to, often visits but does not speak the language
of fluently.
It is wrong to say that the Russians
and the Estonians are in a dispute with one another: their relations are
different, those of “an aggressor and his victims. This must not be called a dispute. And
therefore, I understand very well Estonians who do not like Russians. But, by the way, another generation has grown
up” there.
Unlike their parents, the actress
concludes, they neither like nor dislike Russians. Instead, they focus on
Europe. “Historically, they know about the relations of Estonia and Russia, but
they already do not have such a trauma in the literal sense of the word.”
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