Living With Stalin's Ghost

Living With Stalin's Ghost by Bruce C. Daniels - a new understanding of post-Communist Russia

INTRODUCTION

Publication date is January 2008.
Ready for shipping now!

Introduction

Russia is a Hard Country to Know
Do Not Trust First Impressions

 

     I looked more out of place than any other person in Texas as I stood in line to board the plane from Lubbock to Houston. And that is not because I cannot look like a Texan-I can if I want to. But from my Winnipeg days I owned a parka good for arctic weather that I wanted to bring to Russia; if packed it would take up a small suitcase. Carrying it seemed the easiest thing to do, but when also carrying a laptop computer and two briefcases of teaching notes that I did not trust to the airline's baggage destroyers, wearing the parka seemed the only reasonable way to get it on the plane. Thus on a lovely day with temperatures poking into the high 70s, a sweaty American/Canadian wearing a heavy, hooded coat waited in line with a bunch of students wearing t-shirts and left Lubbock, Texas. I would often look just as much out of place during the next six months.
     Changing planes in Houston and Amsterdam brought more of the same strange stares: probably only the laptop prevented offers of spare change from kind strangers who thought I was down on my luck. But the wisdom of my decision became apparent when our pilot announced as we approached Moscow that we would be landing in a blizzard. I had been to Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport once before as a tourist in 1993 and had been forced to wait over one hour in line to go through immigration and then another hour to get my luggage. No one had been friendly and no one had been kind and everyone had shouted bewildering commands in Russian that I had no chance of obeying. By all accounts that I had heard since, the situation had deteriorated even more. The Fulbright office in Washington warns all travelers to expect the worst-so I did. Nothing came close to the worst. I sailed through passport control and customs in 15 minutes and my luggage was waiting for me on the other side.
     So also was a young guy named Alexey who I had been told would pick me up. Alexey stood holding a sign saying "Fulbright" and I was pretty sure that meant me so I introduced myself. Alexey grabbed a couple of bags, I grabbed a couple and away we went into what the newspapers would say two days later was Moscow's worst blizzard in four centuries of recorded weather history. In reality, it was not that bad: winds of 30 Kilometers, temperature of minus 17 Celsius, and perhaps (when all was over) 16 inches of snow. Just an average spring day in Winnipeg. The fabled brutal Russian winter that everyone everywhere seems to think is the worst cold weather in the world is simply not that fierce. If you are Napoleon and are trying to move a hundred thousand troops from Poland to Moscow or if you are a German soldier at Stalingrad being resisted by a few million Russian patriots, I am sure that the cold and snow might wear on you a bit. But I lived through what Muscovites say was the worst winter in years and it was roughly comparable to Boston and much better than Northern New England, the Northern Great Plains, and all of Canada except British Columbia. It is indeed, I believe, the fabled failed winter military campaigns that have made the west so erroneously think of Russia as frozen tundra.
     My first four or five days in Moscow was the only time in my trip that I asked myself a few times if I had made a mistake taking my new job. After this short settling-in process, however, every other week was glorious. I kept telling myself during the first few days, that I should not be upset by a few early difficulties. But I was. And more than being disheartening, much of what I saw puzzled me. Moscow did not make sense at first and seemed awash in contradiction and paradox. The lesson to be learned from my early thoughts, of course, is that one should never trust first impressions of a new place and people. A combination of natural anxieties, jet lag, and cultural differences made me cranky and clouded my vision.
Back to Alexey and my introduction to Moscow. It took nearly two hours to get to my apartment because of rush-hour traffic and the blizzard conditions, which despite my above winter comments, did make driving difficult especially when we got inside the city, which has a poor snow-removal capacity. I certainly had a strong positive first impression about Alexey. He was close to finishing his Ph.D. on the crisis in NATO during the 1960s; he gave me a wonderfully articulate tour of all we passed en route; and he was solicitous of any concerns I had. When I asked Alexey if he would make a career in government or as a professor after finishing his Ph.D., he replied, "I will be a scholar" with such solemnity that I had to make him repeat it to make sure I had heard correctly. When I asked him if he had traveled abroad, he told me he had just arrived back from London two days earlier and had been to New York and Washington in previous years.
I was also grateful for Alexey's welcome because all tourist brochures and all western governments and businesses warn visitors not to take a cab from the Moscow airport. Gypsy cab drivers may rob you and legally licensed ones may extort you for huge sums. So the Fulbright office always hires a driver to pick up anyone coming to Moscow under its auspices. This was the grungiest rented car that I had ever seen but I was mighty pleased to be in it and not out on some highway emptying my wallet.
     We drove through a main square, Smolenskaya, near the apartment I had rented via e-mail on the recommendation of an American who was leaving Moscow. We drove down a dingy street behind the square, a dingier side-street, and then a dark alley to a ratty door. This was it. It looked pretty bad but I know that looks can be deceiving-I am a worldly guy-so I withheld judgment. The driver rang a bell and we were buzzed in to a hallway that made the alley look charming. I withheld judgment no more. A dark staircase that looked like it belonged in an 1890s Brooklyn tenement, cardboard and cigarette butts on the floor, a row of mailboxes several of which hung open, trash discarded everywhere, peeling paint, chunks of materials missing from stairs-it did not look like the entranceway to an $800 a month apartment.
     The building did have an elevator and we took it to my third floor apartment where my new landlord, Anatoly, was waiting. Anatoly spoke no English but appeared anxious to please and with Alexey interpreting we got down to brass tacks. I paid him two months rent in American currency which he insisted upon; he filled out all sorts of complicated papers for my visa registration which as my landlord he was required to do if he rented to a non-Russian; he showed me the various tricks of the place-how to lock and unlock the two massive locks on the door, how to light the stove, where to put the trash, how to work the washing machine without a permit from the antique bureau, etc. He was earnest and I was grateful for what appeared to be real kindness.
     Here is what one gets in central Moscow-and central is the key word here, since location jacks up all prices massively-for $800 American dollars a month: one room for sleeping, entertaining, eating, and so forth that measures 19 by 11 feet, a commode in a claustrophobic crevice, a bathroom with tub and basin in which the tub takes up almost all the space, and a kitchen with what appears to be vintage 1930s fridge, stove, and washing machine. For furnishings, four dinner plates, five unmatched glasses, three formerly-Teflon-coated pans, one wine glass, a bed with a thin mattress, a large round table with four wooden chairs, a bureau, two lamps, and a free-standing wooden closet. I will confess to being horrified, but here is where first impressions were wrong.
     First, I left out two wonderful features which I did not appreciate that first night. I had a direct view overlooking the Moscow River and illuminating a lovely urban skyline. Under the large windows that spanned the entire room was an inside wooden ledge about two feet wide on which I often sat and sipped wine out of my one glass, and contemplated the river and city. It was beautiful and almost assuredly added much to the location variable to boost the rent substantially. The view proved to be a source of great relaxation and poetry for my soul throughout my stay. And, second, the bathtub was so large that I could stretch out completely and still would have had room for a fleet of toy boats in an endless supply of hot water. Who needs three big rooms or modern appliances when he is lucky enough to have a view and a bathtub like that? Forget the horror of opening night; I quickly came to love the apartment and for a person living alone, it was perfect.
Moreover, as much as I had tried not to bring my North American norms with me, I did not really understand Russian norms at first. Before leaving Texas, I had imagined Russian flats would be like those of England and France that I had seen-smaller than American ones but well-appointed and charming, perhaps even cute. Most of the apartments that I have since seen in Moscow-even those of distinguished professors and professionals-are astonishingly small and spare by American and by English or French standards. Russians live in small places because most people have not had enough money to afford larger places. I bought some dishes and a radio/CD player for my flat and I was as happy as a clam there. I also believe that my place was safe despite the dingy entrance.
     I met a third person my first night, Professor Yuri Rogulev, my designated contact person at the university, who entered the apartment with a bag of groceries for me about ten minutes after I arrived. Yuri proved to be as nice as Alexey and Anatoly, both of whom were deferential to him; I could tell that he was regarded as a person of consequence. I knew that he was the author of at least two books on American labor history and had once been a Fulbright senior scholar in the other direction and had taught labor history in the United States. After unpacking the groceries, all four of us went out into the night-Alexey and Anatoly back to their own homes while Yuri walked me to Smolenskaya, a large square surrounded by retail businesses, to show me several stores where I could shop for food. The square seemed nearly deserted at about 7:30 P.M.-I learned later that this was only because of the storm-but both stores we went in were full of shoppers.
     Yuri walked me back home, wished me well, and at 8:00 P.M., having not slept in over 24 hours, I was on my own in Moscow.

TR 59 Daniels, Bruce C. [TR 59 ISBN 978-1-878508-27-0 150 pages, $19.95 paper]
Living With Stalin's Ghost
A Fulbright Memoir of Moscow and the New Russia.
Transactions
Volume 59 150 pages, (2008)

Ordering instructions
including discounts and shipping costs.

Order Form

Table of Contents from book


 Home  About the book  About the author  About the academy  Buy the book


© 2008 by the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences
Published by the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences,
P.O. Box 208211, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8211.