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- <text id=89TT0978>
- <title>
- Apr. 10, 1989: Soviet Scene
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Apr. 10, 1989 The New USSR
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOVIET SCENE, Page 10
- Moscow Beginners
- Where Slava Starts Over Again
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>At a meeting of the country's first A.A. group, alcoholics learn
- a sort of personal perestroika, one day at a time
- </p>
- <p>By Glenn Garelik
- </p>
- <p>"My name is Slava, and I am an alcoholic."
- </p>
- <p> The young man speaks rapidly, but every syllable
- reverberates. More than 30 other men and women seated in a
- large, drab room at a Moscow community center listen quietly.
- Over the next hour and a half, most of them, giving only their
- first names, will stand under the bare fluorescent lighting and
- make the same confession. It is a painful admission to make
- anywhere, but especially in the Soviet Union, where drinking is
- legendary and individual accountability has decayed. This is the
- daily meeting of Moscow Beginners, the first antidrinking group
- for Soviet citizens that is registered with Alcoholics
- Anonymous.
- </p>
- <p> A.A. is a new weapon in the country's struggle against
- alcoholism, encouraging people to rebuild themselves--a sort
- of perestroika of the personality, one day at a time. More
- poignantly, it is an exercise in self-expression that is the
- essence of glasnost, an act of standing up and discussing a
- shortcoming that the state once preferred to keep quiet.
- </p>
- <p> Disturbed by his countrymen's fondness for the bottle,
- Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985 launched an all-out campaign against
- alcohol. The Soviets raised the legal drinking age from 18 to
- 21, limited the hours when alcohol could be sold and increased
- the price of vodka from 4.7 rubles ($7.75) to 10 rubles ($16.50)
- a liter. But popular resistance has forced Gorbachev to ease up
- on his crusade, and public drunkenness is on the rise again.
- </p>
- <p> Moscow Beginners was started in 1987 by the Rev. J.W.
- Canty, an Episcopal priest from New York City who came to Moscow
- in 1985 to help lay the groundwork for the group. Meanwhile,
- Volodya, 36, a machinist, had heard about A.A. on a Canadian
- radio broadcast and had written to A.A. headquarters in New
- York, which in turn informed Canty that he had a taker in
- Moscow. The group's first session, held in a hotel room across
- from the Kremlin, was attended by Volodya and two visiting
- American members of A.A. Membership grew slowly, largely because
- the group did not have official recognition and would-be members
- were unaware of its existence. But radio and television programs
- highlighted Moscow Beginners, and now the Ministry of Health has
- endorsed A.A.'s self-help concept.
- </p>
- <p> As at A.A. sessions around the world, the Moscow Beginners
- tell tales of searing despair. For Sasha, a 37-year-old
- engineer, the horror culminated in 1987, when he was repeatedly
- hospitalized for alcoholism and his wife left him. "I was
- watching my life spin out of control," he now recalls.
- </p>
- <p> Like Sasha, almost everyone in the group has undergone
- compulsory hospitalization, some as many as seven times. The
- hospital stays can last as long as six months, and patients are
- often treated with sulfazine, a drug that induces high fever.
- The intended result: to sweat the toxins out of the body and
- thus shock it into a change of behavior. The drug's effects are
- not long lasting, and Western doctors refuse to use it.
- </p>
- <p> Two Moscow Beginners tell how they were forced to spend
- terms of up to two years in prisons reserved for those who
- cannot be cured by the hospitals. There, boredom was punctuated
- only occasionally by days of forced labor in understaffed
- factories. Even the government has admitted that these jails are
- not likely to keep alcoholics on the wagon.
- </p>
- <p> By contrast, Sasha says, he is enthusiastic about A.A.'s
- methods. "The beginning for me was when I learned that the word
- alcoholic could be said out loud, that people would even
- applaud. With alcoholism, you have to admit despair before you
- can experience victory."
- </p>
- <p> Volodya has known his share of despair. Having drunk
- heavily since his teens, he says, "I thought I would never be
- able to stop. I went to clinics where I would dry out, but I
- could never stay sober. I felt I did not have what it takes to
- help myself. And then came the group. It was like a miracle."
- </p>
- <p> It is an interesting choice of words in an officially
- atheist society, and A.A.'s teaching that members must learn to
- rely on a "higher power" creates an inevitable conflict for
- Moscow Beginners. Some of the members are uncomfortable with the
- group's religious tone; others, understandably, are afraid to
- tamper with the organization's time-tested tenets.
- </p>
- <p> "My name is Mikhail, and I'm an alcoholic," says the next
- speaker. Sober only a short while, Mikhail, 41, stayed home
- from work on his last birthday out of fear that his co-workers
- would insist on celebrating the event with a bottle. "I don't
- want to talk about my drinking tonight. I just want to thank you
- for the chance to express myself honestly. Until I came here,
- I had never done that before."
- </p>
- <p> Already the group is reaching out to others. Some of the
- Moscow Beginners spend Saturday afternoons visiting inmates in
- two of the city's alcoholic prisons, and this month a clinic
- using American treatment methods and run jointly by Soviets and
- Americans will open for outpatients. It will be the first
- alternative to the state-run program. Beyond that, according to
- Volodya, "people are writing to us from all over the country."
- </p>
- <p> Tonight, though, it is 33-year-old Slava who is in trouble.
- "I have to tell you something this evening that I am not proud
- of," he says hesitantly. "I drank today. And my wife left me.
- Please don't abandon me. You know what I am going through.
- Forgive me for betraying you."
- </p>
- <p> "Betrayed is a strong word," says Liuba, 35, a factory
- worker who during her drinking days found herself waking up in
- the beds of men she never remembered meeting. "It's better not
- to use it. We might not have drunk today, but only at the end
- of the day can any of us say that with confidence."
- </p>
- <p> "You know," says Slava, "after being here and talking, I
- feel peaceful inside. I'm sure I'll get better; with the help
- of my friends, I will get better."
- </p>
- <p> "Until I joined this group, I felt isolated," says Sasha
- afterward. "Now I am helped by my friends--and by my strength
- and my example, I can be of help to them." By helping others
- help themselves, Moscow Beginners is rebuilding the sense of
- self-worth that society had stripped from them. In a limited
- way, the A.A. style could turn out to be just what the doctor
- ordered for a society that is trying to humanize itself. Says
- Volodya: "What I like about A.A. is that it ends our dependence
- on a cure from above. We are rediscovering how to help
- ourselves, and how to help each other. In this country we had
- forgotten how to do that."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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