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- <text id=91TT2882>
- <title>
- Dec. 30, 1991: Russia:Unmerry Christmas
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 30, 1991 The Search For Mary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 26
- RUSSIA
- Unmerry Christmas
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The red flag will be lowered soon, but citizens are more
- preoccupied with how to repair the ruined fabric of their daily
- lives
- </p>
- <p>By John Kohan/Moscow--With reporting by Yuri Zarakhovich/
- Yaroslavl
- </p>
- <p> Neighbors are not happy about the barnyard noises and
- smells coming from the back of Alexander Torzhenko's house on
- a busy street in the center of the south Russian city of
- Krasnodar. But the elderly manual laborer and his wife Alexandra
- are determined not to give up the pigs or the dozen ducks they
- keep in two ramshackle wood shacks on their 15-sq.-yd. plot. In
- fact, the couple seem to be settling in for a long siege.
- "Around here, they steal," says Torzhenko, so he has dug a
- cellar with concrete walls and a heavy metal trapdoor to store
- pork and the potatoes he grows on a parcel of rural land in this
- rich, black-earth region. "I trust Mikhail Gorbachev when it
- comes to one thing," he adds. "He said there would be famine--and there will be."
- </p>
- <p> The soil is not as fertile in Bakarevo, a settlement 900
- miles to the north on the Volga River, near the city of
- Yaroslavl. In fact, Venyamin, who prefers not to give his last
- name, cannot scrape a living out of his small landholding. He
- works as a ship chandler to support his wife Antonina, her
- mother and two young sons. They also have damp earthen cellars
- beneath their wooden cottage to store their winter stash: 15
- sacks of potatoes, two barrels of salted cabbage, heaps of
- onions and carrots, five huge jars of pickles and 40 quarts of
- fruit preserves.
- </p>
- <p> Both families have one thing to celebrate this grim
- Yuletide: they are fortunate enough to have stockpiles of food
- for the difficult months ahead. Russians may not understand the
- notion of the new commonwealth being created by President Boris
- Yeltsin, but they can see with their own eyes how the fabric of
- daily life has been torn to shreds by six years of political and
- economic upheaval.
- </p>
- <p> They are not expecting any dramatic improvements either
- when the red hammer-and-sickle flag is lowered over the
- Kremlin, giving way to Russia's white-blue- and-red banner, and
- Gorbachev finally steps down as Soviet President. Both might
- happen momentarily. Meeting Saturday in the Kazakh capital of
- Alma-Ata, presidents of 11 former Soviet republics--only
- Georgia was absent--signed documents formally creating a
- Commonwealth of Independent States to succeed the U.S.S.R. and
- settled some of the last details. For example, they agreed to
- form a military council to exercise unified control of the armed
- services and to have Russia take over the Soviet seat on the
- United Nations Security Council.
- </p>
- <p> That also should enable Yeltsin finally to lift controls
- on prices and "privatize" state-owned property. To many
- Russians, that prospect is as appetizing as a large dose of
- castor oil. With everything in short supply, it is not
- surprising that the collectivist ethic has given way to the
- principle of every man for himself.
- </p>
- <p> Social and economic decay are evident everywhere. Domestic
- airports look like refugee camps as stranded passengers keep
- weary vigil, hoping the state-owned Aeroflot airlines will soon
- resume flights canceled by a severe shortage of fuel and spare
- parts. With more than 8,000 wells standing idle, oil and gas
- production have dropped 10%. Life in the far eastern city of
- Khabarovsk, a key industrial and defense center on the Chinese
- border, has almost ground to a halt because of dwindling food
- and heating oil.
- </p>
- <p> Nothing causes more alarm for Russians than the prospect
- of a bleak winter without food. Famine has recurred with
- frightening regularity during seven decades of communist rule.
- "Hunger did not start with perestroika," explains Dmitri
- Pushkar, a deputy on the Yaroslavl regional council, who
- monitors food supplies in the countryside. "It began with the
- coming of Soviet power." Vadim, a local taxi driver, puts it
- more bluntly: "I remember the postwar famine of 1947, when we
- had nothing to eat but nettles and goose feet. So what else is
- new?"
- </p>
- <p> Plenty, according to Vyacheslav Tabolin, a Russian
- authority on pediatrics. He fears a major health crisis is
- looming for today's undernourished children, because their
- parents and grandparents suffered from malnutrition. Health
- officials estimate that only 8.5% of schoolchildren in the first
- to tenth grades are of a height, weight and build normal for
- their age.
- </p>
- <p> The current food crisis is different from earlier ones in
- a crucial respect: the Soviet agricultural system, which turned
- rural areas into an enormous food factory for urban centers, has
- completely broken down. The food that is being grown is staying
- in the countryside. Collective and state farms are refusing to
- sell to the new government in the same way that peasants once
- held back their harvest from the Bolsheviks. They want a better
- deal--and that means trade in goods, not in worthless paper
- rubles.
- </p>
- <p> Large urban centers like Moscow, St. Petersburg and
- Ekaterinburg (known as Sverdlovsk until this year) in the Urals
- have been hardest hit. With supplies of milk and meat down 10%
- or more from last year, big-city larders are perilously close
- to empty. Shoppers have few alternatives short of breeding hens
- on their apartment roofs or rabbits on their balconies. They can
- wait in long lines to buy whatever meager items city officials
- provide or to purchase scarce goods like meat at inflated prices
- in the free markets or from street vendors. Explains Natalya,
- an assistant director in a Moscow theater: "I can spend a third
- of my monthly salary just buying 2 lbs. of pork or a bag of
- mandarin oranges."
- </p>
- <p> City dwellers get little sympathy out in the provinces.
- "Muscovites talk about a crisis because they are finally going
- hungry," contends Yaroslavl Deputy Pushkar. "But this is the way
- the rest of the country has always lived." Olga Ivanova
- supplements her meager monthly pension of 205 rubles ($2.28 at
- the current tourist rate) by selling eggs on a Yaroslavl street
- corner. She vaguely recalls buying smoked ham in a state-run
- shop six or seven years ago, but the only meat available now
- sells for 40 rubles (44 cents) for 2 lbs., or 20% of her income,
- at the free market.
- </p>
- <p> That is a bargain price for many Muscovites, who are
- flooding into the provinces to do their shopping. Annoyed at the
- sudden influx from neighboring regions, officials in Krasnodar
- set up customs posts on roads out of the territory and
- instructed local authorities to search visitors passing and to
- confiscate meat, butter and other scarce supplies. The
- government in Moscow ordered the draconian measures to cease.
- </p>
- <p> Greed, envy and desperation have given rise to economic
- crime. In the Yaroslavl village of Kamenshchiki, police recently
- caught five people dragging the carcass of a cow they had shot
- from the pasture of a private farmer; two were habitual
- criminals, but three were ordinary citizens. In the Pskov
- region, workers on a collective farm were so resentful of the
- success of a private grazer that they decided to "confiscate"
- 140 calves and all his equipment.
- </p>
- <p> U.S. cargo planes began delivering 300,000 lbs. of surplus
- food to Moscow and St. Petersburg last week, adding to the
- stream of emergency supplies pouring in from the West. Such
- timely help will certainly be welcome, but it cannot solve the
- long-term problems of a country that simply did not learn how
- to feed itself during seven decades of communist rule. Nor can
- it ease the bitterness of many citizens who, though they never
- enjoyed abundance, remember how they once lived in a superpower
- rather than a patchwork quilt of fledgling states reduced to
- begging for help. If Yeltsin and the democrats cannot soon bring
- about an economic turnaround, Russians who now wait patiently
- in lines may demand any kind of government that will give them
- bread. In addition to milk, butter and meat, another vital item
- is in short supply these days--and it is one that no
- foreigners can provide: hope for the future.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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