Voices from Russia

Sunday, 19 May 2013

19 May 2013. A Picture IS Worth a Thousand Words… Here’s What Radonitsa’s All About

00 Radonitsa 09.05.13. Minsk. 19.05.13

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During the Easter season, real Orthodox go out to the cemeteries and visit the graves of their loved ones. We tend the graves and lay symbolic offerings of food and flowers on them (often, Easter eggs). However, on Easter and during Bright Week, we can’t offer Pannikhida, the first opportunity is the first Monday after Bright Week. Since many monasteries keep Monday as a day of abstinence, the custom has arisen of celebrating Radonitsa (Day of Rejoicing) on the Second Tuesday after Easter. Mind you, you can lay offerings on a grave on Easter and Bright Week (we certainly did), but you can’t offer Pannikhida. In the above image, people in Minsk are visiting family graves, offering a toast, and giving due respect. Radonitsa isn’t “canonical”… it’s a “people’s feast”… the Church didn’t decree it, the people just did it. Now, if some would just get their long noses out of books…

BMD

Monday, 13 May 2013

13 May 2013. Sergei Yolkin’s World. Traditions of the Warm Season

00 Sergei Yolkin. Traditions of the Warm Season. 2013

Traditions of the Warm Season

Sergei Yolkin

2013

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Since a shower head looks vaguely like an old Sov public radio loudspeaker, Yolkin has it broadcasting a “message”. In fact, all the old Sov news bulletins of the ‘30s and ‘40s started with Yuri Levitan intoning, “внимание” (vnimanie: attention)… often, followed by “говорит Москва” (govorit Moskva: Moscow calling). Every year, the local authorities turn off the urban central hot water plant for about a week to maintain the system. It could be as short as three days… it could be as long as two weeks… you’re looking for precision? Hey, “Russians aren’t Germans”. Of course, they don’t publish it (you’re supposed to “know” that such things happen on a regular basis at about the same time every year)… you get the “announcement” the “hard way”… now, that’s getting your attention the Russian way…

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Attention, attention! Sergei Yolkin wants you to know that they’re turning off the hot water in Moscow to do the traditional summer maintenance of the system!

13 May 2013

Sergei Yolkin

RIA-Novosti

http://ria.ru/caricature/20130513/937014362.html

Monday, 6 May 2013

6 May 2013. Sergei Yolkin’s World. It’s May! To the Backyard! We Gotta Plant the Potatoes!

00 Sergei Yolkin. It’s May! To the Backyard! We Gotta Plant the Potatoes! 2013

It’s May! To the Backyard! We Gotta Plant the Potatoes!

Sergei Yolkin

2013

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In Russian slang, to “plant someone” is the same as the American usage “they threw him in the slam”. So, Yolkin makes a funny out of “planting” and planting. In short, another play on words. Russians ARE going out to their dachas and setting up their gardens… after all, the Nasty Nineties might reoccur (when the oligarchs are dispossessed, it isn’t going to be pretty or painless).

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Russians are waiting for the long holiday in MaySergei Yolkin suggests what some are going to do with those five days of freedom.

29 April 2013

Sergei Yolkin

RIA-Novosti

http://ria.ru/caricature/20130429/935214283.html

Wednesday, 24 April 2013

Boston and Moscow: A Tale of Two Police Forces

00 police lights

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Of all the mayhem that took place last week in Boston, there was an image I willed to stay with me… a photo showing a local police officer in a bulletproof vest, carrying two gallons of milk in a residential area. The caption of the photo, which made the rounds on Facebook over the weekend, read that the officer elected to help a family with small children that was out of milk and stuck at home during the lockdown. As the mother of a small child, I could immediately relate to the horror of being forced to remain at home with an empty fridge. Forget terrorists… the screaming alone would kill you.

As a Moscow resident, I also thought about the image of our own police officers. Several of my Russian friends shared the photo with disdainful comments of their own, messages that amounted to, “Try getting a Moscow cop to do something like THAT during a lockdown. Fat chance”. Of course, one should probably try imposing a lockdown on Moscow and see how that works out (hint: It won’t work out), before one judges. Yet, I understood the sentiment my Russian friends were expressing. In a city like Moscow, authority figures simply can’t appear too caring. It’d go against everything they were taught. It’d make them look soft, possibly vulnerable… and vulnerability is frequently punished.

However, I remembered a story that happened to a former Moscow neighbour of mine a couple of years ago. This story will never go viral on Facebook… and not just because there’s no photographic evidence. Simply put, most people wouldn’t believe it. Yet, as a witness to part of it, I can at least confirm some of the details. This neighbour, an ancient lady of the sort one might describe as “old Soviet intelligentsia”, had a nasty run-in with a member of Moscow’s nouveau riche. He nearly ran her over on a pedestrian crossing in his luxury car, and she injured herself while lunging out of the way. The guy tried to speed off, but ended up losing control of his vehicle and crashing it into a construction fence.

I wasn’t there for the immediate aftermath, but was living in that neighbourhood at the time, and hearing about what had happened, elected to meet her at the police station and walk her home. She didn’t need hospitalisation, but she was badly shaken and, worse still, humiliated by the man who’d nearly run her over. Apparently, he’d screamed at her that it was all her fault, that she was an “old bag” and “too slow”. This may seem shocking, but if you know anything about the Moscow nouveau riche, you wouldn’t be shocked at all. I waited for her from across the street and saw her walk out, shaking, barely able to retain her composure, after giving a statement to the police. There was a little hat with velvet flowers on her head, and the hat alone broke my heart. For an older woman, she’d taken such great pains to always look her best… and here she was, looking fragile and lost, with the hat askew on her gray hair.

As I made my way over to her, an old cop car drove out of the parking lot adjacent to the station, and a policeman inside rolled down his window. He said, “Get in, we’ll drive you home, it’s only a few blocks”. My neighbour asked if I could join, and they nodded, so I got in. On our way back to her building, the two policemen sitting up front consoled this old, lonely woman the best way they knew how. From what I gathered later, they’d witnessed her being berated and humiliated after having been nearly run over by the member of the so-called “elite”… and took umbrage. Therefore, they told stupid jokes, made her laugh, and told her that things would be OK. It was a very short and surreal ride in a Moscow cop car, but I haven’t forgotten it. I haven’t forgotten the officers’ eyes in the rear-view mirror, as they told her that the guy would surely “get his due”.

I never did find out what happened to the guy in question… whether he suffered any consequences, whether he at least had his license suspended, or if he pulled strings and got off scot-free, as people like him frequently do. My neighbour died soon after, when I was away. She had a chronic illness she had taken pains to conceal. Her heirs, who live far away, I didn’t know very well. Nevertheless, I do think about this woman, already in the last weeks of her life, being helped out of that police car and walked all the way to her apartment. I think about those two cops… one older and one younger. They weren’t being heroes that day, but they did act like human beings, which can be heroic in the right kind of context. I hope they’ve continued to act like human beings… and I hope that one day, they too will go viral on Facebook for performing a small act of kindness. If only to remind us that Moscow’s cops can also be kind.

22 April 2013

Natalia Antonova

RIA-Novosti

http://en.rian.ru/columnists/20130422/180786237/Trendwatcher-Boston-and-Moscow-a-tale-of-two-police-forces.html

Editor’s Note:

Nicky and I had an encounter with an “entitled” nouveau riche similar to the one that happened to the old woman in Moscow. We were pulling out of the Russian store on Central Avenue, and a BMW started rolling down the alleyway that provided access to Central Ave. The driver jumped out of the car, and started to scream at us in Russian and English, and you could tell that they considered themselves “better” than the rest of us, and that “their shit didn’t stink”, as the saying has it. They were thoroughly nasty, but you could tell that they thought themselves “oh-so-superior” to the common herd such as us.

Let’s not be coy. Crapitalism encourages such behaviour. After all, they “earned” what they have… and, we, lazy layabouts, didn’t deserve equal (or even decent) treatment. It’s why I oppose people such as Victor Potapov, James Paffhausen, Alexander Webster, Terrence Mattingly, Rod Dreher, and Freddie M-G… they’re cheerleaders for the Affluent Effluent and “Economic Freedom”. Reflect on this… they’d tack up Our Lord a second time, and they’d back Caiphas to the max. Why? After all, you can’t have working-class rabble-rousers stirring up the envious hoi-polloi, can you? It does make you wonder about the Christianity of certain loud “Christian” sorts, doesn’t it? Oh, yes… there was only ONE “educated” ApostleJudas Iscariot. Think on that one, too… it’s a meaty Lenten meditation (pun intended)…

It won’t last forever… God will NOT be mocked…

BMD 

Thursday, 7 June 2012

7 June 2012. Lil’ Mizz Ginny Refuses to Post News of Moriak’s Hospitalisation on oca.org

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As of 22.30 EDT Thursday 7 June 2012, oca.org has no news posted of Moriak’s hospitalisation. Nothing. The guy’s a ruling bishop of the Diocese of the Midwest, and there’s not even a small blurb saying, “Pray for Matthias Moriak, he checked into hospital”. In short, “Let them eat cake“, and Ginny Nieuwsma proved herself a soulless opportunist, yet again. She only posts what she’s told to, that is, she’s a PR flack, purely and simply. She’s NO journalist. As Eduard Radzinsky wrote of one of Tsar Nikolai Pavlovich‘s courtiers:

He did what every official in Russia resorts to in a moment of the tsar’s anger… he became “direly ill”. People gloated, but the tsar visited the patient, which prompted a traffic jam at Benkendorf‘s house.

In short, Moriak’s not only hiding out from angry parishioners, he got no support from JP or Syosset… hence, the silence on oca.org. Moriak ain’t a happy camper… but he made his bed, so, can he complain of the lumps? JP and Lyonyo are keeping silent… you see, things are simmering on other fronts, especially, the legal one. Stay tuned, the best IS yet to come…

BMD

*Eduard Radzinsky Alexander II: The Last Great Tsar (Free Press: New York NY (USA))

Monday, 5 September 2011

5 September 2011. ROCOR Announces Commemoration of 9/11… They Did the RIGHT THING… OCA Announces Damage at Chancery Instead… They SCREWED UP…

The ROCOR posted the following on its main website:

Brother Archpastors, Reverend Fathers, Brothers, and Sisters:

We hereby bring to the attention of the archpastors and clergymen of our dioceses that the feast day of the Beheading of St John the Baptist, which this year falls on a Sunday, is also the tenth anniversary of the terrorist acts in the United States, which tore away from this vale of tears thousands of peaceful citizens. On this day, blessing is given to raise the following petitions during Divine Liturgy, and during a commemorative litany that should follow, to prayerfully remember all the victims of this terrible act of wickedness, preceding it with words of edification. May our fervent prayers to God warm our hearts! May it warm and console both those who died, and those who survived!

With love in the Lord and a request for your prayers,

Hilarion

Metropolitan of Eastern America and New York

First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia

2 September 2011

ROOCR Official Website

http://russianorthodoxchurch.ws/synod/eng2011/20110902_enmhstatement.html

NB:

I removed the “cross” before Metropolitan Hilarion’s name, as this isn’t an official posting of his letter.

BMD

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The ROCOR posted its intent to honour the victims of 9/11… the OCA posted about trees being down near its Chancery buildings on the Island. Am I the only one to notice that oca.org can’t get around to posting on the funeral, the trip to Czechia, or the Dickie Wood saga? Now, they can’t seem to post anything in re the upcoming tenth anniversary of 9/11… I find that rather strange for a body that bills itself as THE territorial Local Orthodox Church in the USA… please, excuse me as I hurl!

Kudos to Vladyki Hilarion and good on him… he did the right thing! A pie in the face and a razz to all the OCA autocephalists and konvertsy… they’re navel-gazing mewling brats.

One of these things is NOT like the other… read and heed, kids.

Barbara-Marie Drezhlo

Monday 5 September 2011

Albany NY

Editor’s Afterthought:

The staff at oca.org posted the notice about damage at the OCA Chancery on Saturday 3 September 2011… DURING LABOUR DAY WEEKEND. Therefore, they can’t use the excuse, “The staff was away for Labour Day“… I wonder what they ARE going to say, if anything at all. DO watch for something tomorrow on oca.org on 9/11 and Royster’s funeral… I’d bet on it, the chances are more than even…

Also, pray for a good resolution of the situation surrounding the rebuilding of St Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church… it’s why I chose the image that I did… don’t forget that this little church was lost in the attacks as well. I lit a candle there, once…

BMD

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