Read The Last Man in Russia: The Struggle to Save a Dying Nation Online
Authors: Oliver Bullough
hails Galya ignored. News of
Galya’s visit spread quickly, and as
we waited for Vasilyevich to bring
out the papers, four or five women
gathered: all of them were old
friends of hers. There was no one
else in the village. None of them had
heard of the Dudkos. I was feeling a
bit light-headed in the burning heat
and
began
wondering
whether
Father Dmitry had existed at all.
The papers on the church were
interesting, but Vasilyevich had no
copies, so I looked through them,
gave them back and turned to go.
Galya and I would need to walk
back to Berezino from wherever we
were, so that I could find a bus back
to Bryansk. There would be no
further buses from here that day.
The earth track passed between
further fallow fields. There was no
cultivation here at all – just grass –
and almost no livestock: only the
occasional
cow.
The
whole
population seemed to have given up
farming.
We
heard
a
car
approaching from behind us. At the
wheel was the man with the papers.
‘A friend of my wife came after
you left,’ he said, addressing Galya
instead of me. ‘She used to work for
the post office. Apparently, this used
to happen to letters sometimes. There
are two Berezinos in the Bryansk
region. The other one is over by
Unecha, near the border with
Belarus, spelled Berezina, with an
“a”.’
It made sense. Berezino comes
from the word for birch tree, and
Russia has a lot of birch trees. It is a
village name that could easily be
repeated many times. Galya looked
at me. The giggle was back.
‘Two Berezinos? And you’ve
come to the wrong one,’ she said.
She looked profoundly amused. The
lines at the corners of her eyes were
even deeper than before. She hooted
with laughter and put her arm
around me.
‘How far have you come to go to
the wrong village? From London?’
I stood stupidly in the sun. I
could not help but smile. Galya’s
laughter was irresistible. I was
probably already a local legend: the
daft foreigner with a notebook who
couldn’t read a map.
‘Get in,’ the man said. ‘I’ll take
you to the bus stop. You’ve got a
long trip if you’re going all the way
to Unecha.’
Galya, who was still giggling,
left me at the bus stop. She wanted
to have a proper conversation with
her mother and thought the old
women might have calmed down by
now. I could hear her still chuckling
as she walked away. At last the bus
came, and I was heading in the right
direction.
When I finally found the narrow
road to Father Dmitry’s real home
village, far to the west and a day’s
journey away, it was possible to
imagine that nothing had changed
here not only since he was born in
1922, but for centuries before that
too. Conifers formed a spiky horizon
all round. Potatoes sprouted from
sandy fields. Sparse crops of barley
ran right up against the walls of log-
built houses.
But the impression was illusory.
The peasants here in western Russia
were some of the doughtiest enemies
the Bolsheviks ever faced. They had
to be prised away from their ancient
customs like a child from its mother.
The assault on them was merciless,
their defeat was total, and their lives
changed for ever. In the face of the
onslaught, peasants clung to all that
they could salvage: to their faith,
Orthodox Christianity.
Orthodoxy is made up of ancient
rituals and chants and processions
that believers lose themselves in.
Icons are objects of adoration, and
churches have tiered screens to
separate the priest conducting the
mysteries from the waiting faithful.
Orthodoxy claims descent from the
faith of the earliest times, which is
why it is so resistant to change – a
characteristic reinforced in Russian
villages
where
reform
remains
distrusted.
Father Dmitry never wrote much
about his childhood, but from what
he did record it is clear that his home
was deeply religious. His father, an
ordinary farmer with a stubborn face
in photographs, kept a Bible in the
house. His small son would secretly
read it to himself. He played at being
a priest, taking an ember and a
candle, and filling the hut with
smoke. He gave communion from a
glass of water to all his friends, who
treated the event, he said much later,
with great solemnity.
Playing was not something they
did much of, in those days, however.
The Bolshevik state was only newly
established, and its economy was
wrecked
by
civil
war
and
international blockade. Before the
revolution, the government had
barely troubled the peasants, beyond
demanding taxes. Once the tax
collectors were gone for the year, the
only official they saw was the
constable.
The
Soviets
were
different.
Communist officials confiscated
the peasants’ crops to feed the cities.
They had machine guns and the
farmers were powerless to resist
them. One winter, troops came and
took the last wheat from Father
Dmitry’s family: the grain they
needed to live on and to plant for the
next year. His father, the bearded
tyrant who ruled his household and
read the Bible, lay on the ground and
wept. Dmitry, his brothers and his
mother wept too.
His sister was married by then,
but her husband left for Ukraine to
try to find food for his wife and
young child. He was not heard of
again. Abandoned, she struggled
into the nearby town of Unecha with
her baby to beg for food from the
townsfolk. The baby cried and cried.
He needed to be fed, she said, as
often as a kitten. Her milk dried up,
and she tried to appease him with
water but he cried still more.
Finally, the baby calmed and
slept. Her begging had failed and she
had fed him nothing, but at least he
was not uttering the unignorable
screams of a hungry infant. She
struggled on in her fruitless quest for
food. It was only when she got back
home that she realized he was dead.
Desperate with grief, she ran to her
own mother. She walked around
their hut in her grief, until she found
an edible plant in the garden. She
dropped to her knees to eat it, but
Dmitry was too fast for her. He ran
out into the garden and slammed her
round the head with a pole.
‘What did you do that for?’ his
mother demanded.
‘We all want to eat,’ he replied.
He wrote later that he was pleased he
had defended their food store, even
from his own sister.
The family had planted rye,
which they guarded jealously until it
grew large enough to be eaten. The
children awoke one day to find their
grandmother had broken into their
garden and was eating the immature
seeds. She could barely walk she
was so hungry, but the brothers
drove her out of their crop like a
cow. When they had pushed her out,
they began to throw lumps of earth
at her. She sank to her knees and
cursed them.
Dmitry’s grandfather was also a
religious man, and he built his own
church out in the fields where he
recited what he could remember of
the old services. He was hungry and
begged food. Their neighbours beat
him and he lost his mind. The
children then teased him and laughed
at him, throwing stones. Once he
caught Dmitry and thrashed him.
When Dmitry was already in his
teens, he and his father gathered to
mark Easter, the holiest date in the
Orthodox calendar. Dmitry held his
homemade cross while his father
read the holy service. Stalin’s
government wanted to force the
peasants to give up their own
property and merge it into a single
collective farm. The new farms
would be efficient and mechanized,
and
would
provide
the
food
surpluses the Soviet state needed so
that it could industrialize. In effect,
the peasants’ labour, livestock and
land would be taken from them and
used
by
the
government
for
someone else’s benefit.
It is not surprising that many of
the peasants wanted nothing to do
with the new farms, but the
government was determined. It sent
squads of city folk into the villages
to force the peasants to take part.
Recalcitrant peasants were taxed
at a rate 70 per cent higher than their
collectivized neighbours and, even
after selling all their valuables, could
rarely afford to pay what the state
demanded. That is what happened to
Father Dmitry’s father, who refused
to join the collective. He was
charged with tax evasion. His
insistence on maintaining the old
religious rites was added to the
charge sheet. He was, under the new
legal code on the young judge’s
desk,
conducting
religious
propaganda. He and Dmitry had to
walk 3 kilometres to the courthouse
in another village.
‘Why have you not paid the
state?’ asked the judge.
‘I have not paid, yes . . . there’s
nothing to pay with . . . I live badly,’
his father replied.
‘And why don’t you join the
collective farm? There you will live
better.’
‘Well, I can go into the farm, if I
have to.’
The judge gave him two years in
jail.
He
was
one
of
the
approximately 25 million Soviet
citizens repressed – shot, deported,
imprisoned, exiled – in the years
between Stalin seizing power in
1928 and dying in 1953. That is an
eighth of the Soviet population,
approximately two people for every
three families. Tens of millions more
suffered by association. As relatives
of ‘enemies of the people’, the
families of the convicted prisoners
too were denied many of the rights
of citizens. Dmitry, the son of a class
enemy, knew that his troubles were
in many ways only now beginning.
After his father’s conviction,
they sat for a while but had nothing
to say. When Dmitry returned home
alone, his mother was inconsolable.
The sentence was extended, and
those two years became four. The
boys begged and stole food to keep
themselves alive.
The collective farms were key to
Stalin’s plans to turn the Soviet
Union into a modern state capable of
standing up for itself. They would
break the old traditions, forcing the
peasants to do the state’s will and to
become pliant proletarians. They
would also create a surplus of food
to be exported so the Soviet Union
could
import
the
tools
and
equipment needed to modernize the
economy. In this they succeeded. By
stealing the peasants’ food, the
government
won
its
crash
industrialization.
As
Stalin’s
supporters say: when he arrived,
Russia had wooden ploughs; when
he died, it had the hydrogen bomb.
The collective farms were not a
long-term success, however. By the
end of communism, Moscow was
paying as much for imported grain
as it was earning from exporting oil.
Grain yields per hectare were a third