Communist Party chief Gennady Zyuganov led some 1,000 zealots who laid
carnations at Stalin's grave by the Kremlin wall in Moscow, praising him
as a symbol of the nation's "great victories" and saying that Russia
needs to rely on this "unique experience" to overcome its problems.
Stalin led the Soviet Union from 1924 until his death in 1953.
Communists and other hardliners credit him with leading the country to
victory in World War II
and turning it into a nuclear superpower, while critics condemn his
repressions. Historians estimate that more than 800,000 people were
executed during the purges that peaked during the Great Terror in the
late 1930s, and millions more died of harsh labor and cruel treatment in
the giant Gulag prison camp system, mass starvation in Ukraine and
southern Russia and deportations of ethnic minorities.
"Those repressions touched every city, town, and village," Mikhail
Fedotov, chairman of the presidential human rights council, said on
Tuesday. "We can never forget this."
The liberal Moskovskie Novosti's cover Tuesday read "Stalin. Farewell"
with the dictator's face scribbled over with childish graffiti, while
staunch Communist daily Sovetskaya Rossiya ran a cover story on Stalin
headlined "His time will come."
An opinion survey commissioned by the Carnegie Endowment found Stalin
has remained widely admired in Russia and other ex-Soviet nations
despite his repressions. Its authors noted that public attitudes to the
dictator have improved during Russian President Vladimir Putin's 13-year
rule, as the Kremlin has found Stalin's image useful in its efforts to
tighten control.
Roman Fomin, who organized a group laying carnations at the grave, said a
leader like Stalin "would definitely be for the good of the country and
the country would be developing much better than it is now."
Putin, whose professed ideology draws heavily from Soviet statism, has
made efforts to give Stalin a more positive historical evaluation.
School history textbooks have been released stressing Stalin's role as
an "effective manager" of the 1930s Soviet industrialization campaign,
though historians express far greater skepticism about his supposed
economic achievements.
Liberal newspaper Vedomosti dismissed "the crazy dichotomy of
achievements and losses" in an editorial Tuesday. "You can't put
economic achievements and human losses side by side, but even if you
try, you won't find any justification for the Stalin myth," it said.
Pro-Kremlin lawmakers campaigned this year to rename the city of
Volgograd to Stalingrad — its name from 1925 to 1961 — in commemoration
of the battle against Nazi Germany there, widely considered both World
War II's bloodiest and its turning point. Most Russians, however, oppose
the move and see Stalin's death primarily as the end of an era of
political repression, according to a poll by the independent Levada
Center published Monday.
Opposition politicians have criticized the government for failing to
clearly condemn Stalin's repressions. Grigory Yavlinsky, a liberal
former presidential candidate, demanded Tuesday that the government
"recognize what happened as a crime" and compensate Gulag prisoners who
built some of Russia's biggest industrial enterprises, including metals
giant Norilsk Nickel.
Much of the resurgence in Stalin's popularity owes itself to nostalgic
perceptions of him as a strong leader in line with Russian traditions,
rather than a longing to reinstate Communist dictatorship. One old woman
made the sign of the cross after laying flowers at his grave; another
carried a drawing of him in the style of Russian Orthodox Christian icons.
A surprisingly large number of Russians even believe that Stalin had
mystical powers. As recently as 2003, about 750,000 people voted for a
party that aimed to continue what it said was Stalin's attempt to battle
the ancient Egyptian priesthood of Ra, which supposedly runs the world
from its base in Switzerland. Zavtra, a newspaper run by a popular
novelist and columnist, frequently runs pieces like one from about the
same time predicting that Stalin would return from the dead and saying
that "if you put your ear to the Volga steppe outside Stalingrad you can
hear his footsteps."
"Russian society is living through a period of crisis of historical
consciousness and, in my view, the only remedy for this ailment is
creating an archive describing" the Stalin era, said Andrei Sorokin,
Director of the Russian Archive of Socio-Political History.
In 1989, at the peak of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's efforts to
liberalize the country and expose Stalinist crimes, only 12 percent of
Russians polled described Stalin as one of the most prominent historical
figures, while in the Carnegie poll last year, 42 percent of Russian
respondents did so.
The poll revealed that the dictator also has continued to enjoy wide
popularity in his native Georgia, where 45 percent of respondents
expressed a positive view of him. Efforts to shed the nation's Soviet
legacy by Georgia's pro-Western President Mikhail Saakashvili have
failed to change public perceptions of Stalin.
Georgian communists, who flocked to Stalin's hometown of Gori for the
anniversary on Tuesday, hope that the government of Prime Minister
Bidzina Ivanishvili, whose bloc defeated Saakashvili's party in
parliamentary elections last fall, will restore the Stalin monument torn
down on Saakashvili's orders.
"Stalin has given a new impulse to the development of mankind," said
58-year old history teacher Aliko Lursmanashvili who heads the Gori
branch of Georgia's Stalin Society uniting the dictator's admirers.
Mixing communist symbols with religious rites, communist participants in
the rally went to a local church to light candles to remember Stalin
after they had rolled up their red flags.
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