Russia

Authorities in Russias Zabaikalsky region in October unveiled the regions largest memorial dedicated to Russian soldiers killed in the war in Ukraine: a 3.3-meter-tall stele and a statue of a soldier holding a child erected in the very heart of the region's capital Chita.The Zabaikalsky region, a swathe of Russias Far East with a population of just over 1 million, has one of the highest war death tolls among all regions with at least 774 residents killed fighting in Ukraine since February 2022, according to independent tallies.Yet the plan to set in stone a reminder of the war raging thousands of kilometers to the west was initially opposed by residents, who deemed the 5.6-million-ruble ($63,000) memorial to be a more appropriate addition to a local cemetery than a historic city center.There are places of mourning and there are places of normal life.
I mean, we dont bury the dead under our windows, do we? activist Marina Savvateeva told the local news outlet Chita.ru.The monument in Chita is just one of thousands of statues, memorial plaques, and tall engraved stone slabs known as steles commemorating Russian soldiers killed in Ukraine that have appeared across the country since the start of the Ukraine war.But while Russias invasion of its neighbor is being immortalized in stone, memorials dedicated to Soviet-era repressions, some of the darkest pages of the countrys history, are disappearing en masse in what experts say signals a worrying trend.I monitor all memorial plaque openings in Russia.
I see plaques dedicated to writers or other cultural figures being installed too, but their number just cant compare to those dedicated to soldiers, said Alexandra Polivanova of the Nobel Peace Prize-winning Memorial human rights group.Data collected by Polivanova indicates that at least 3,187 memorials commemorating Russian soldiers killed in Ukraine have been opened across the country in 649 days of the Kremlins invasion an average of five plaques per day.While some of these memorials are large installations or statues meant to honor all heroes of the special military operation in Ukraine, most are simple plaques, posters, murals or even decorated desks dedicated to individual soldiers and placed in schools or colleges that the fallen heroes once attended.It is really important for the Russian state to get people in Russia to believe in their war in Ukraine and they try to do that by [introducing] faces of war into everyday life, said Allyson Edwards, a specialist in Russian memory politics at Bath Spa University.Monuments elevate these soldiers from an ordinary Russian person drafted to fight in the war into someone who has done something exceptional enough to have a monumentdedicated to them, Edwards told The Moscow Times.Installations glorifying the Kremlins invasion of neighboring Ukraine are just one type of propaganda consumed daily by ordinary Russians.At the same time, at least 23 monuments to victims of Stalins Red Terror have been vandalized or dismantled across the country since the start of the war in Ukraine, according to Memorials counts.We are certain that all of these actions are sponsored by the government one way or another, Memorials Polivanova told The Moscow Times.Memorials dedicated to individual ethno-confessional groups that suffered from Soviet imperial expansion are most frequently targeted, according to Polivanova.In July, a granite cross commemorating persecuted Poles vanished from St.
Petersburgs Levashovo Memorial Cemetery, where more than 45,000 victims of Stalins terror are believed to have been buried.A few months earlier, a memorial to Ukrainian victims of Stalinist purges at the same cemetery was vandalized.
A similar fate was met by other memorials to persecuted Poles and Lithuanians elsewhere in the country, including the Far East republic of Sakha (Yakutia), Siberias Tomsk region and the Sverdlovsk region in the Ural mountains.And dozens of plaques honoring victims of the Soviet gulag forced labor camps have disappeared from buildings throughout the capital Moscow since the start of the year.It is not surprising that such monuments are not welcome during a time when Russia is again conducting an imperial war of conquest, said Polivanova.Polivanova said she believes that behind the destruction of memorials to victims of Soviet repressions lays not only the states desire to downplay the darkest pages of Russias past, but also to tighten its grip on unwelcome actions of the present, as many of these sites have taken on a second meaning since the invasion of Ukraine.With limited legal avenues for expressing solidarity with Ukrainians being available to them, individual Russians often respond to their countrys gruesome attacks on Ukrainian civilians by placing flowers, candles, and other tokens of their sorrow at memorials to well-known Ukrainian cultural figures as a way to honor the dead.But in cities with no monuments to Ukrainian luminaries such as writer Taras Shevchenko or poet Lesya Ukrainka, people have brought flowers, candles and handwritten notes to monuments of victims of Soviet repressions.People understand that they are again dealing with a government that is completely indifferent to [the value of] human life, the lives of its citizens and those of other states, said Polivanova.
The only thing this government cares about is territories.Grassroots activists have been instrumental in spreading awareness of the destruction of memorials and restoring the sights of mourning.Memorial activists in St.
Petersburg erected a new memorial to Polish victims of terror in place of the destroyed cross at Levashovo Memorial Cemetery, though the new statue, too, soon mysteriously disappeared.And in Moscow, activists have been putting up hand-written cardboard plaques in place of the vanished metal signs honoring gulag victims.It is important to understand that memorial plaques to Russian soldiersare created by the state.
The state makes them because it understands that the level of faith in the war is very low and it seeks legitimacy by setting it in stone, Polivanova explained.Spontaneous grassroots initiatives are the ones that are trusted by the people.
They are the real and honest ones.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Russia Claims New Village in Ukraine’s Donetsk Region


[Russia] - Moscow Blames Sanctions for Russia-UN Food Deal Collapse


[Russia] - Russia Says Foreign Minister Lavrov Met Kim Jong Un


[Russia] - Ukraine Says 6 Killed in Massive Russian Drone, Missile Attack


[Russia] - Conference Seeks Solidarity Among Indigenous Peoples of Russia, Ukraine and Central Asia


Russia and Belarus to Develop AI Rooted in 'Traditional Values'


[Russia] - Russia's FM Lavrov Arrives in North Korea


Russia Orders Closure of Polish Consulate in Kaliningrad


[Russia] - Elite Russian Marine Unit Commander Reportedly Killed in Ukrainian Missile Strike


Russia Nationalizes Country’s Third-Largest Gold Producer


[Russia] - Russia Weighs Scrapping Its Only Aircraft Carrier After Years of Restoration Delays


Border Defense Fraud Probe Targets Belgorod Region Officials – Kommersant


[Russia] - Dutch Court Sentences Russian to 3 Years for Sharing Microchip Technology


Peskov Defends Russia’s Media Crackdown as Part of ‘Information War’


[Russia] - Starovoit Buried at Historic St. Petersburg Cemetery Days After Suspected Suicide


[Russia] - Ukrainian Attacks on Western Russia Kill At Least 3


[Russia] - Russian Military Personnel Costs Hit Record High-- Analysis


[Russia] - St. Petersburg Court Drops 'LGBT Propaganda' Case Against Popular Bookstore


[Russia] - Russian Police Offered Bonuses to Recruit Detainees for Ukraine War-- Vyorstka


[Russia] - Ukrainian Attack on Belgorod Region Kills 2, Governor Says


[Russia] - Russian State Media Turns on Trump After Putin Criticism


[Russia] - Putin Skips Memorial Service for Ex-Transportation Minister, Sends Wreath Instead


[Russia] - 'We Are Being Held Without Protection': North Caucasus Women Decry Dire Conditions in Kurdish-Run Syrian Camps


[Russia] - Rubio and Lavrov Held 'Frank Exchange' on Sidelines of ASEAN Summit, Moscow Says


[Russia] - Moscow Swelters in Heat Wave After Powerful Storms Batter the City


Nizhny Novgorod Region Rolls Back Migrant Work Ban Amid Labor Shortages


[Russia] - Russian Basketball Player Arrested in France at Request of United States


Gelendzhik Airport to Reopen More Than 3 Years After Wartime Closure


[Russia] - Moscow Theatre Director Questioned in Large-Scale Embezzlement Probe


Russia Adds Entrepreneur Kidnapped at Moscow Train Station to ‘Terrorists and Extremists’ List


[Russia] - Death by Falling: A Timeline of Cases Across Russia and Abroad


[Russia] - Russia to Launch Direct Flights From Moscow to North Korean Capital on July 27


Crimean Woman Fined Over $1K for Posting Photos of Men in Wedding Dresses Online


[Russia] - Leading European Court Rules Russia Committed Rights Abuses in Ukraine, Downing of MH17


[Russia] - Rangers Kill 11 Brown Bears Lured by Food Waste in Russia's Far East


Russia Reopens Embassy in Tehran 2 Weeks After Israel-Iran Ceasefire


[Russia] - Kremlin Brushes Off Trump's 'Tough Talk' and Claims 'No Disagreement' on Ukraine Negotiations


[Russia] - Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to Visit North Korea This Weekend


[Russia] - Russian Lawmakers Greenlight Restoration of FSB-Run Prison Network


[Russia] - FSB Agents Shoot and Kill Man Accused of Planning Bridge Bombing in Saratov Region


[Russia] - Russian Military Launches Largest-Ever Air Attack on Ukraine


Ukrainian Drone Attack on Kursk City Beach Kills 4, Governor Says


[Russia] - Russian Broadcaster RTVI Starts Airing in Mali


[Russia] - Trump Accuses Putin of Talking 'Bulls ***' on Ukraine


[Russia] - Russia Plans USAID-Inspired Development Model in Bid to Extend Global Influence


FSB Accuses Ex-Independent Media Manager of Treason


Russia Blacklists Yale University as ‘Undesirable’ Organization


[Russia] - Ignore Donald Trump's 'Political Seesaw,' Russia's Medvedev Says


Russian Military Drone Crashes Into Dacha in Republic of Tatarstan


Nadezhdin Campaign Manager Stripped of Russian Citizenship


Who Was Roman Starovoit, the Sacked Transportation Minister Found Dead in Apparent Suicide


[Russia] - Russian Tour Companies Introduce Trips to Taliban-Ruled Afghanistan for $3K


Lavrov Names Sanctions Relief and Return of Frozen Assets as Preconditions for Ukraine Ceasefire


[Russia] - Former Russian National Guard Official Arrested on Bribery, Abuse of Power Charges


[Russia] - Black Sea Oil Spill Reaches Abkhazia's Shores


[Russia] - Russian Anti-Terrorism Police Warn of Foreign Spying Disguised as Photo Contests


Russian Army Says It Seized First Village in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk Region


[Russia] - Former Transportation Minister Roman Starovoit Found Dead With Gunshot Wound After Being Sacked by Putin


[Russia] - Russia Targets Emigres in Kazakhstan With Back Tax Demands


Ukrainian Drone Attacks Trigger Major Flight Disruptions at Russia’s Busiest Airports


[Russia] - New Details Emerge in Bribery Case Against Rusagro Founder


[Russia] - Far-Flung Kamchatka Peninsula Restricts Mobile Internet to Thwart Alleged Ukrainian Sabotage


Rosstat Stops Publishing Monthly Population Data Amid War Deaths, Demographic Crisis


[Russia] - Russian Gold Mining Tycoon Barred From Leaving Country Amid Nationalization Efforts


Putin Sacks Transportation Minister Roman Starovoit


[Russia] - Ukraine Says 4 Killed, Over 30 Wounded in Russian Strikes


Russia Says Captured 2 More East Ukraine Settlements in Donetsk and Kharkiv Regions


UN Condemns Russia's Largest Drone Assault on Ukraine


Trump Says He’s ‘Very Unhappy’ With Putin Call, Hints at New Sanctions


Russia Removes Peace Symbol from School Textbook Cover


[Russia] - Head of Moscow Region's Azerbaijani Diaspora Stripped of Russian Citizenship


Russia Adds 14-Year-Olds to ‘Terrorists and Extremists’ List


[Russia] - What Ukraine Is Missing as U.S. Holds Back Air Defense and Battlefield Weapons


[Russia] - Russian Firms Seek North Korean Translators to Support Influx of Workers


[Russia] - Dutch and German Intelligence Say Russia Increasingly Uses Chemical Weapons in Ukraine


[Russia] - Russia Carries Out 8th Prisoner Exchange With Ukraine Since Istanbul Talks


[Russia] - Professionals: Russia Recognizing Taliban Rule in Afghanistan Largely a Symbolic Move


Storm Batters St. Petersburg With High Winds, Rising Water Levels


St. Petersburg Naval Parade Canceled Over Security Concerns – Fontanka


[Russia] - Russian Car Market Expected to Contract by 24% This Year


[Russia] - Transneft Vice President Dies in Apparent Fall From Window, Reports Say


Russia Launches Largest Air Attack Since Invasion as Ukrainian Drone Strike Kills Woman in Rostov