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- <text id=89TT0962>
- <title>
- Apr. 10, 1989: Then And Now
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Apr. 10, 1989 The New USSR
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE UNION, Page 60
- THEN AND NOW
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Nearly 20 years after being expelled, a TIME correspondent
- returns to discover what is new--and not new--in Moscow
- </p>
- <p>By Stanley W. Cloud
- </p>
- <p> Seen again from the air, Moscow is unchanged. The city
- squats as always on the steppes like an ungainly old hulk,
- beached and abandoned, its Stalin-era spires so many masts
- thrusting into the gloom, and the nearest sea hundreds of miles
- away. Fair warning, neo-Napoleons! Even with glasnost,
- perestroika and the Pepsi Revolution, Moscow the impregnable
- lives on, isolated and forbidding, a dour reminder of what it
- means to be Russian.
- </p>
- <p> On the ground it is much the same at first. Behind the hard
- eyes of a young passport officer lurk the ghosts of his
- country's history: Ivan the Terrible, Peter the Great, Lenin,
- Stalin and all those they once ruled, the entire tragic parade
- of persecutors and persecuted. And when the officer finally
- grunts his assent and one is readmitted to the Soviet sanctum,
- one still imagines great steel doors clanging shut.
- </p>
- <p> Almost 20 years earlier, at the start of the Brezhnev era
- of economic stagnation and recurring rounds of repression, I
- was assigned to TIME's Moscow bureau. I took up residence with
- my family in an apartment block reserved for foreigners and set
- out to cover what was, despite the depressing realities of
- Soviet life, a fascinating story. Then, on a May morning in
- 1970, I received a phone call from an official in the Soviet
- Foreign Ministry. "Your work here is finished," he said. There
- were no accusations, no explanations, just "Your work here is
- finished," and a departure deadline.
- </p>
- <p> Now I was back for the first time.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the chrome and modern conveniences of Sheremyetovo
- International Airport, the old city quickly pulls you into her
- familiar, exhausting, yet not altogether unpleasant embrace:
- the slush and mud of the broad avenues; the air that smells of
- bad cigarettes, carbon monoxide and disinfectant; the monotony
- of dun-colored buildings; the occasional startling glimpse of
- a golden-domed church or pastel-walled czarist mansion; the
- dark masses hurrying by or huddling in their inevitable queues
- to buy what little is in the stores. Much more than merely
- familiar, Moscow today seems as immutable, as depressingly
- eternal as ever.
- </p>
- <p> Soon enough, though, signs of change emerge. Traffic is
- much heavier, and if Pepsi has not exactly replaced vodka as
- the national beverage, it is widely available. Cooperative
- restaurants enjoy a fairly brisk business, at least among those
- who can afford the prices (lunches and dinners often go for $20
- to $30 a person, without drinks or wine). Major hotels offer
- Western joint-venture seekers many distinctly unsocialist
- hard-currency attractions--slot machines, for one--while out
- on the sidewalks, better-dressed young people hurry by,
- oblivious to the stiff-knuckled old women sweeping the streets
- with birch-branch brooms.
- </p>
- <p> And all the red banners and posters that once festooned the
- avenues and office buildings have vanished, along with their
- exhortations for workers to fulfill the latest Five-Year Plan
- and their dreary pronouncements that the socialist road is the
- road to peace. If the boilerplate is not missed, the color is.
- </p>
- <p> But change has its price, though. Gaping cracks have opened
- in the wall of social "order" that once comforted the Russian
- psyche and justified Soviet ideology. Organized crime is so
- active that Mafia has become commonplace in Russian patois. The
- homeless are more obvious too, including provincials who have
- traveled to Moscow to buy or trade for food and must spend the
- night huddled in drafty railway stations. Elsewhere, gaudy
- hookers and teenage toughs prowl pedestrian tunnels, and
- beggars--old women, mostly--hold out quavering hands for kopecks.
- Black marketeers hustle even in Red Square, and on a green fence
- near city hall someone has neatly painted, in English, SEX! and
- ROCK!
- </p>
- <p> Evidently Mikhail Gorbachev is willing to tolerate
- capitalist-style "contradictions" in his attempt to fuel
- economic reform with a dose of democracy. In any case, the heavy
- Soviet lid has been lifted, and the voices from inside the
- box--above all, the voices of ever resilient Russian
- intellectualism--are being heard in ways and forums
- unimaginable 20 years ago. If the democratic experiment has so
- far failed to improve the economy, it has radically altered the
- arts and the mass media.
- </p>
- <p> In 1970 I spent much of my last full day in Moscow at the
- apartment of an "unofficial"--i.e., banned--artist, the
- late Vasily Sitnikov. A true eccentric who built kayaks by hand
- in the vain hope of exporting them to the West, Sitnikov
- scorned "socialist realism" in his art. His most serious
- paintings alternated between a touching optimism and a profound
- morbidity. During our afternoon together, we discussed the
- plight of Soviet artists, and I left with two paintings hidden
- under my jacket (in case KGB watchers were about). On my return
- to Moscow this year, I saw a fully sanctioned exhibition of
- "unofficial" art not unlike Sitnikov's and felt deep sadness
- that he had not lived long enough to see it.
- </p>
- <p> Sharp memories of the brutal past were jogged as well by a
- new play, Four Interrogations, the story of an old woman
- unfairly charged under Stalin as an "enemy of the people."
- Before the curtain rises, the audience sits in darkness while
- voices screech Stalinist slogans over a loudspeaker. Then an
- imposing photo of Stalin is projected onto a black curtain.
- Finally, a spotlight sweeps over the audience, stopping now and
- then to hold first one person, then another and another in its
- sudden white glare.
- </p>
- <p> Still, glasnost, seen from the queues instead of from the
- theater seats, must appear as little more than a pretty
- plaything for the rich. Up to 30% of Moscow's 9 million citizens
- live in communal flats. If there is any choice at all in the
- stores, crowded with shoppers whom shortages have made
- ruble-rich, it is between the shoddy output of state enterprises
- and the higher quality--and prices--offered by co-ops.
- "There is more freedom now, but life is harder," a Russian
- friend said. Reality is a daily grind: commuting from cramped
- flats to unsatisfying work, sending children to decrepit
- schools, trudging from shop to dismal shop in hopes of finding
- even basics like laundry soap.
- </p>
- <p> Valeri Saikin, chairman of Moscow's executive committee
- and, in effect, the city's mayor, knows all about the curve of
- declining Soviet expectations. "Moscow is a very large city,"
- he said. With a refreshing lack of ideology, he added, "But it's
- difficult to solve all the problems by administrative methods
- alone. We need more initiative by individuals and local groups.
- Many American cities have fewer problems because private firms
- help. Here, all responsibility is with the city government. We
- should have a more balanced system."
- </p>
- <p> Saikin would like to see Moscow produce more of what it
- consumes. He does not, however, concede that mismanagement and
- corruption are to blame for economic failures. Chronic
- shortages, for example, are the fault of the 2.5 million migrant
- shoppers who flock daily to threadbare Moscow, which to them is
- a cornucopia. Said His Honor, whistling in the arctic wind: "We
- would have enough food in Moscow today, and no lines, if we
- weren't exporting so much to other areas." Let carping
- journalists and the grumbling public be patient. "Our
- shortcomings have been exposed," said a glasnost-weary Saikin.
- But patience is in short supply: Saikin lost his bid last week
- to join the Congress of People's Deputies.
- </p>
- <p> If Saikin is dubious about glasnost, he is not alone. Many
- political and social conservatives, not all of them
- neo-Stalinists, are appalled by Gorbachev's program. Among the
- critics is Stefan Krasovitsky, a member of the Christian society
- Rus (the ancient name for Russia), who sees the new openness as
- "a program of absolute obscenity, youth-depraving,
- child-seducing pornography through the state-owned means of mass
- information."
- </p>
- <p> However that may be, Soviet artists and writers who once
- relied on official decrees to guide them now must look to what
- Vitali Ignatienko, the energetic editor of New Times magazine,
- calls his "internal censor." Better internal censors than
- official ones, of course; and better the uncertainties of
- self-regulation than awakening one day to find that glasnost was
- only an Oz-like Technicolor dream. Should glasnost end, said
- Vitali Korotich, editor of Ogonyok magazine, "I will be
- destroyed, and we will be left a hungry, stupid, terrible
- country with a big army--a very dangerous country."
- </p>
- <p> As I was leaving Moscow, Korotich's apocalyptic vision was
- still on my mind. And, standing before another snarly passport
- officer at the airport, I found myself wondering if 20 years
- from now this young man, or one like him, will have taken
- control--in the name of order and the purity of Lenin's
- revolution.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-