Eight Pieces of Empire

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Authors: Lawrence Scott Sheets

Tags: #History, #Europe, #Russia & the Former Soviet Union, #Former Soviet Republics, #Essays

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More Advance Praise for Lawrence Scott Sheets’s
EIGHT PIECES OF EMPIRE

“Dean of the Moscow press corps Lawrence Scott Sheets has been everywhere and seen it all. Funny, engaged, and humane, he is a matchless guide to the tattered remnants of the Soviet empire.”

—Anna Reid, author of
Borderland
and
The Shaman’s Coat

“A smoothly written and sensitively drawn personal portrait of the people and places Lawrence Sheets meets during the roiling collapse of the Soviet Union, and the furtive, now two-decade-long struggle of the resulting fifteen states to construct something new. I have the feeling that people will be reading his account for a long time to come.”

—Steve LeVine, contributing editor at
Foreign Policy
and adjunct professor, Security Studies Program, Georgetown University

“Beautifully wrought and executed with admirable clarity, Lawrence Sheets’s gripping, intelligent, and compassionate account of the years following the Soviet empire’s end is a must-read for anyone interested in the human cost of change.”

—Vanora Bennett, journalist and author of
Portrait of an Unknown Woman
and
The Taste of Dreams

“During his almost two decades living and reporting in several countries that are former Soviet Republics, Lawrence Sheets had a front-row seat to the human casualties and political fallout of the collapse of the Soviet empire.
Eight Pieces of Empire
vividly captures the lived experiences of people caught on the sweeping waves of politics and history with intimacy and insight.”

—Robin Hessman, director/producer of
My Perestroika

Copyright © 2011 by Lawrence Scott Sheets

All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Crown Publishers, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
www.crownpublishing.com

CROWN and the Crown colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

All photographs in this work are by the author, with the exception of the following:
photograph of Leningrad on
this page
(© Steve Raymer/CORBIS);
photograph of Kelbajar helicopter field on
this page
(© Thomas Goltz).

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Sheets, Lawrence Scott.
   Eight pieces of empire : a 20-year journey through the Soviet collapse / Lawrence Scott Sheets. — 1st ed.
     p. cm.
   1. Soviet Union—History—1985–1991. 2. Russia (Federation)—History—1991. 3. Social change—Soviet Union—History. 4. Social change—Russia (Federation)—History. 5. Post-communism—Social aspects—Soviet Union—History. 6. Post-communism—Social aspects—Russia (Federation)—History. 7. Sheets, Lawrence Scott—Travel—Soviet Union. 8. Sheets, Lawrence Scott—Travel—Russia (Federation). 9. Soviet Union—Description and travel. 10. Russia (Federation)—Description and travel. I. Title.
   DK286.S44 2011
   947.085′3—dc23

                                                                     2011023849

eISBN: 978-0-307-88885-3

Map by Hadel Studio
Jacket design by Ben Gibson
Jacket photography Harald Sund/Getty Images

v3.1

Dedicated to my grandmother
Helen Elizabeth Burlingame Groh (1909–2008)
(“I’m not going to sit around waiting to age 102
to read that manuscript!”—you kept your promise on that,
but you came close)
and my mother
,
Joyce Arden Groh Sheets (1935–1985)

Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Map

Legal Note

Author’s Note

PART I

FAREWELL LENINGRAD, FAREWELL EMPIRE
(1989-1991)

A Civil War Outside My Door

Our Communal

Tears of a KGB Man

A Bigamist Bandit and a Button Maker

Sickle and Hammer Down: An Empire’s Last Hours

PART II

GEORGIA: ANARCHY IN PARADISE (1992-1996)

Nobody Started This War

Exodus

Buried Five Times: Insurgents in Flat Black Nylons

A Word About War

PART III

AZERBAIJAN AND ARMENIA AT WAR (1993-1996)

Azerbaijan: Lifesaving Carpets

Armenia: A Faded Tintype of Mount Ararat

Azerbaijan: The Shish Kebab War and Eastern Democracy

PART IV

CHECHNYA: ECHOES OF THE DEPORTATION (1993-2004)

Grenade, Lightly Tossed

Grozny

Three Libertine Sabotage Women

A Disappearance

Three Boys Seeking Martyrdom

PART V

RESURRECTIONS: THE ABDICATION OF ATHEISM (1998-2005)

A Nameless Bunch of Bones

A KGB Church and Latter-day Saints

PART VI

CENTRAL ASIA: RISE OF THE RED SULTANS (2001-2002)

Uzbekistan: I Cannot Answer That Question

An Afghan Interlude

The Island of Dr. Moreau

PART VII

REVOLUTIONS, REINDEER, AND RADIATION (2003-2011)

The Flaming Recliner

Last Song of the Ultas

Home, Sweet Chernobyl

The Road to the Schoolhouse

PART VIII

AN EMPIRE EPILOGUE

Acknowledgments

Selected Bibliography

About the Author

LEGAL NOTE

I
n writing this book
, I have relied chiefly on the nearly two thousand print and radio stories I filed over this period, as well as full notes and audio recordings taken over the roughly two decades of the book’s narrative. In a few cases, namely the first part of the book (
part I
), I also relied on reconstructed memory, often with the help of people such as the former exiles Viktor and Mila; Pavel-the-once-Leningrad-button-maker; Ivan the journalist from Chechnya; Irina Mikhailova, formerly my producer at NPR Moscow; Zhorra Vardzelashvili, now a ghostwriter of novels in Georgia; and others to ensure accuracy.

The vast majority of the names of the individuals described are their actual legal names. In a few cases, however, I have omitted surnames at the request of my subjects. I have used pseudonyms for some first names at the specific requests of the persons in question and in reponse to their concerns for their own personal or family safety in some of the more insecure areas of the former USSR. I have not, however, employed pseudonyms to replace legal surnames. Nor have any persons of any major political or public profile been given a pseudonym; their names, surnames, and political or other profiles are stated as correct.

In a few other cases, I have made the decision to omit surnames or change the first names of my subjects; in these cases, the reasons are because I am no longer in touch with the individuals described and my efforts to find them have not borne fruit. In the event that any of these
individuals are still alive, I wish to protect their identities, wherever they are today.

As for a few nicknames employed, most often these were not people I would have been asking for political information or other quotable advice, and in almost all these cases our interaction was fleeting. For example, the Preacher Man in
part II
was someone I found wandering around Abkhazia, and that is how we (journalists there at the time) referred to him, rather than by his given name.

Of the many colleagues or acquaintances whose fates sadly ended prematurely, I have not changed any first names or surnames. Included among these are: my friend and colleague the late journalist Adil Bunyatov in
part III
; and Galina Nizhelskaya, my friend who disappeared in Chechnya, in
part IV
.

AUTHOR’S NOTE

T
hose who read parts
of this book before publication had vastly different feelings about its essential message. One friend described it as a book about
outcasts
. Existences were tossed upside down—in ways bad and good—by the Soviet collapse. Far-flung parts of the Soviet Empire struggled to find their own identities. Another reader called it a book about
death
.

I think both are correct—this is, of course, a book about an empire’s death.

It is also about many of those who died as it fragmented violently in an extended, continuing process. I deliberately describe a variety of vignettes: a Russian acquaintance slipping into the world of extortion as the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics dissolved; a dissident poet locked away for years in prison in Uzbekistan; some of the flamboyant personalities involved in Georgia’s armed conflicts of the early 1990s.

One might wonder how these various stories are related. The answer is that empires do not break down along nice clean lines. They fragment, and the dissolution of the USSR and of the personal lives and explosive situations affected by its fragmentation is the very subject of this book. The demise of such a monolith comes along with extraordinary rarity and produces completely unpredictable consequences. The Soviet Union was like an ill-fitting stained-glass mosaic, unsustainable and destined to shatter. Picking up and examining a few of those fragments is—for me—the only way to tell this story.

I observed the USSR’s disintegration and its aftermath over roughly two decades. I was a student of the Russian language (in now again St. Petersburg) in 1987. I spent months in 1989 and 1990 as an interpreter and independent student in that city. In 1991, I arrived in Moscow as the empire entered the last months of its existence.

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