Read The Last Man in Russia: The Struggle to Save a Dying Nation Online
Authors: Oliver Bullough
by his actions, he must be mad. He
would respond by saying that the
early communists had done exactly
the same thing. They had risked
imprisonment for something they
believed in. The doctors would then
respond by saying he was having
delusions of grandeur, since he had
compared himself to Lenin. They
always had an answer.
‘Since all dictatorships proclaim
heaven on earth, all who refuse to
live in that paradise must be crazy –
or have been bought by agents of
foreign
intelligence,’
Plyushch
wrote.
During that time, he was treated
with haloperidol, a powerful anti-
psychotic drug that also has strong
sedative properties. It was one of the
few such drugs produced in the
Soviet
Union,
explaining
its
popularity with Soviet doctors. He
was also given insulin shots,
specifically to suck up the sugar in
his blood and plunge him into
artificial comas.
Medvedev was fortunate in
having a twin who believed in his
sanity. Roy mobilized support,
including from Sakharov, and won
release for his brother. Not all
dissidents were so lucky in their
friends and relations, however, and
some spent months inside, enduring
regular injections of sulphazin. That
was a suspension of sulphur in
peach oil, which had no medical use
beyond causing pain and inducing
fever. Plyushch saw a fellow inmate
nearly killed by an injection of
sulphazin.
For now, Father Dmitry’s friend
Fedotov avoided all that. He was
released after a few days, as was
Father Vladimir, but it was the kind
of harassment intended to make
them rethink their behaviour.
It did not work, of course.
Father Vladimir: ‘When the
police volunteers came in their red
armbands and were supposed to
keep order, we wore white armbands
and said we would keep our own
order.’
Zoya senior: ‘They asked us if
we were expecting a high-up boss or
someone, and Father Dmitry said we
were expecting the highest boss of
all. It was Easter, you see.’
Father Vladimir mused on Father
Dmitry.
‘He was not scared to sacrifice
himself, you know. In a totalitarian
state, if someone gets in trouble, then
they are avoided. This is how the
state creates order. It was not just
those who were under investigation
who were avoided, but people who
knew them as well. There was no
severe repression, like there had
been in the 1940s, but it was not
necessary because the fear survived.
That was how the state controlled the
people, by making them fear each
other. Father Dmitry did not have
this fear.
‘When I ended up in Father
Dmitry’s big family, I felt I was with
people I could trust. He did not aim
to create this separate society, it just
happened. He created a free society.
He was not God, but he was holy.
What I experienced then, it was so
bright and sharp for me. What I had
with him I remember like it was
yesterday,
I
remember
that
brightness more than’, he waved his
hand around to indicate the modern
world, ‘more than this even.’
As we walked out of the church
and back into the trees, he described
how they had lived in Grebnevo.
They ate in shifts, since there were
always at least sixty people there,
and only seventeen could fit at the
table.
‘While we ate, someone read out
a religious book while Father Dmitry
rested. Then he would come out and
the discussions started. I used to
collect the questions. That was one
of my jobs. Some people were
happy
to
ask
the
questions
themselves, but others preferred to
write them down, they were still
scared of what might happen. This
lasted all day, several hours anyway.
If the service ended at twelve or one,
then we would not leave until six or
seven in the evening. If we came on
Saturday, we would remove the table
and take these screens down off the
windows, put mattresses on them
and sleep. One morning Father
Dmitry came out and laughed, there
were so many of us. You could not
even turn over in bed.’
We walked along the uneven
ground, and through a gap in the
crumbling perimeter wall. Here
apparently was a palace complex,
which had been done up since Father
Vladimir was last here. It had been
ruinous in his day, and he was keen
to see it in its proper glory.
The first herald of the complex
was not promising. Someone had
defecated in the middle of the path,
and it lay stinking and covered in
flies, next to a smeared wedge of
toilet paper. We stepped over that
towards a tent erected by a film crew
in the courtyard. They would not be
filming
an
aristocrats’
drama,
however,
because
the
palace
complex that Father Vladimir was so
keen to see was in ruins, the bricks
exposed and the plaster peeling off
in chunks.
Father Vladimir was shocked. It
turned out that the complex had
indeed been renovated, but had then
burned down just before the opening
ceremony. He looked around at the
mess, the piles of filth and the
collapsing glory of the complex.
‘You know, say what you like
about the people who were in power
then, at least they were not these
criminals like we have now. Yes,
they arrested me, but they did not
beat me, whereas now so many
people have been killed just for
money.’
I said, surprised, that he sounded
nostalgic. He seemed to long for the
days when the police took him so
seriously they would smash down a
door and drag him away.
‘I am nostalgic. If you think of
all the horrors people live through,
from these criminals. All authority is
from God, and in the 1990s there
was no authority. Yes, they were
against us in those days, in the
1970s, but at least there was
authority of some kind. At least then
the oppression was for ideological
reasons, now it’s just for the
money,’ he said, looking up at the
buildings, and nodding at the gaping
windows.
‘Lacking
a
master
destroys more than any enemy,’ he
said.
Trees were growing from the
tops of the walls of the old palace
now, and the rot looked irreversible.
I was not sure whether to take it, like
he did, as a metaphor for the whole
country or not. I could see his point
that the Soviet Union at least looked
after its citizens, but I could not
agree that that was justification for
forcibly injecting them with anti-
psychotic drugs if they held a
different opinion.
The lake was ahead of us, and
provided a more cheerful topic of
conversation. Dozens of local kids
swam and splashed in the shallows.
Others were rowing out in an
inflatable dinghy, their friends trying
to drag them out. When they failed,
they ducked under the water and
heaved
the
whole
boat
over,
shrieking. According to local legend,
the lake was created in honour of
Catherine the Great in the shape of
the Russian letter ‘ye’, which is the
first letter in Yekaterina, her first
name, although it did not look much
like one when I called up the satellite
picture that evening.
That evening, I read some more
of Father Dmitry’s writings from
this period. He self-published a little
newspaper, which he called
In the
Light of the Transfiguration
. He
stuck it up on the wall in Grebnevo
so all his visitors could be instantly
informed of the troubles and
triumphs of his flock, and of their
friends throughout the Soviet Union.
A few issues of the paper were
reprinted in a three-volume edition
of his works published in 2004, and
in them he detailed the attacks on
him and his spiritual children, and
taunted the authorities with his
defiance.
‘O Godless ones! You have
everything in your hands, I have
nothing but faith in God,’ he wrote.
‘To send out an army with weapons
against a weaponless priest is
shameful and embarrassing.’
He then listed his demands: a
printing press of his own; the right
to speak out wherever he wanted;
and the right to hold services in one
of the churches in the Moscow
Kremlin. That, he said, would even
up the forces. He was beginning to
talk as if he was at war with the
government.
A couple of days later, I decided to
investigate
the
Literary Gazette
’s
allegations against Father Dmitry.
Perhaps he really had published
poems
in
a
Nazi-sponsored
newspaper. It was not the most
terrible of crimes if he had, but the
article was very specific in its
information. Admittedly it had said
Father Dmitry was aged twelve
when his work was printed, which
would
have
meant
the
Nazi
occupation started a decade earlier
than it actually did, but it was
curiously exact in naming the
newspaper as the
New Way
and
saying it had been published in
Klintsy. It even gave a name for
Father Dmitry’s poem: ‘Song from a
Cellar’.
‘The Hitlerites didn’t give a
damn about the literary form, but the
content was to their liking, and was
entirely consistent with Goebbels’s
propaganda,’ it said.
I felt I had a sense of Father
Dmitry’s character by now. His
strength lay in his refusal to
compromise. He held firm to his
own beliefs in all circumstances, no
matter what was demanded of him.
If he had published a poem in a Nazi
newspaper, it would reveal a flaw in
his character, particularly if the poem
did indeed chime with Goebbels’s
propaganda, since it would mean he
had collaborated with the occupiers.
I had already visited the Lenin
Library’s store of papers printed
under occupation when I looked for
information on Father Dmitry’s
childhood, so I returned to that high-
ceilinged parquet-floored room up
under the library’s flat roof, with its
spider plants and striplights, and
found the
New Way
, published in
Klintsy, in the card index.
A few minutes later, the helpful
librarian brought it over to me,
safely enclosed in a stiff card folder.
It was stamped ‘restricted’ – in
Soviet
times,
only
researchers
approved by the K G B would have
had access to this. Now, anyone
could read it. After all, no one really
cares any more.
The paper was bad quality,
yellowed and full of holes. Its
masthead said, above the words
‘under
the
Swastika
flag
to
freedom’, that the
New Way
was
published
on
Thursdays
and
Mondays. I sat and began to read. It
was pretty crude.
‘The German army is bringing
freedom to the whole Russian
people, together we will defeat
communism and secure the dawn of
personal well-being,’ said one issue
in huge letters. And there were
collaborators among the Russians
who helped set the tone.
‘Yid-Bolshevism has not killed