All posts in Russia

  • The Transsiberian Railway

    Ulan-Ude’s giant head of Lenin looking imposing.

    The Trains

    The Russian Railway website does not generally work with foreign credit cards, which meant that we had to get friends to buy our train tickets once we arrived in Russia. As it was the end of August — prime vacation season — this meant that the quality of trains we had access to was not… always the best.

    For one thing, the toilets were questionable. On most of the trains that we took across Russia’s hinterland, the toilet flushed with the aid of a foot lever, and “flushing” was a hatch opening up in the bottom of the toilet and spraying your poop directly onto the tracks.

    Because of the risk of contaminating groundwater, you can’t be having poop on the tracks in all regions, so each settlement was flanked by a half-hour kontrolnaya zona, during which the train attendants would come through the train and lock each bathroom until we had safely passed all signs of human habitation. If you had to go? Tough luck. You should have known not to drink any water while approaching a town.

    Occasionally, the trains we took had a mix of older and newer rolling stock. The newer rolling stock had suction toilets of the kind you might find on airplanes, which sometimes made it possible to go to the bathroom even in the station (I say sometimes because, confusingly, these too were often locked). This did not mean they were without issues. At each stop where people got on, the train attendant would go around to everybody (except for us, whom she skirted with her eyes, certain that we would not understand what she was about to say) and say, “the hot water is at the back and NO TOILET PAPER IN THE TOILET.”

    Did the toilet have a bidet or something to make this easier on everybody? Of course not.

    Surprisingly enough, people did not want to toss their noticeably used toilet paper in the garbage can for all to see, so the toilets inevitably broke. Breaking meant the toilet filled with an unflushable amount of water. As soon as it happened, the same train attendant would come back through the car, peeking into each compartment and wagging her finger. “DON’T PUT TOILET PAPER IN THE TOILET.”

    The first train we took, from St. Petersburg to Moscow, was the last train with tickets available, and for good reason. The train didn’t simply go from St. Petersburg to Moscow, but actually from St. Petersburg to Krasnodar, in the south of Russia, close to Crimea. Crimea is a popular vacation destination, and taking land transport from St. Petersburg to Crimea takes a long time, which means it’s an option preferred by Russians of lower economic classes.

    Picture us, innocent, having just bought the last available ticket to Moscow at the train station. As yet, we know none of this. We settle into our berths and get ready for an uneventful trip.

    This was not to be. One of us proposed buying something from the canteen, but the train attendant didn’t have change for the large bills that the ATM had spit out. We decided to ask around on the train if anybody had change, and that is how we met Boris and Lena.

    Lena was a 42-year-old taxi driver and Boris was a 26-year-old of uncertain occupation (his styling was a bit mobster-esque, but he was also cheerful and friendly and loved to cook — “he made all this!” Lena exclaimed, reprising her exclamations each time a new dish was brought out. Their two-year-old, Misha alternately explored the train and gazed out the window and passing trains, gasping after each one.

    Lena and Boris taught us how to do things that are not allowed on trains. Smoking, for example. The technique was to walk to the back of the wagon and go onto the platform where the doors were. After that, you had to go between the cars, where the movements of the floor could chop off your toe if you weren’t wearing proper footwear, and the clattering din was enough to give you a headache if the smoke from four cigarettes didn’t do it first.

    Since so many people were doing it, the train attendants couldn’t do much more than wag a finger and say nielzya (not allowed) because, really, how to kick every single passenger off the whole, entire train?

    Lena and Boris were also generous people who took us under their wing from first “would you happen to have any change?” “Yes, we have change,” they said. “But wouldn’t you like some coffee?” They handed Adem a packet of instant, which we drank.

    Coffee turned into apples and apples turned into sandwiches spread with lard and grated spam, and lard and grated spam turned into shots of Russian homemade vodka samugon. As the bottle of liquor got pulled out, I began to fear potentially going blind from the effects of moonshine of uncertain provenance, so I told Lena that I wasn’t drinking because I was trying to get pregnant, a lie (I didn’t smoke either, though I did allow myself to be shown how it was done.) After she’d had a shot herself, she drunkenly leaned into me and told me in a low voice that sometimes, when you really want to get pregnant and can’t, the problem is that you can’t relax and what better way to relax than to have a drink and forget your troubles? She cited two friends who had tried for a baby for a long time only to finally conceive during a night of drunken nookie and/or a day of drunken embryonic implantation.

    Adem accepted the samugon and got quickly and gloriously drunk as the shots kept getting thrust into his hands. He tried to refuse, but not speaking Russian, had few tools with which to do so. Waving his hands? Not good enough. The only words he knew in Russian were spasiba and nyet, but these two were not enough to communicate. He repeated nyet like a whimpering mantra, but his refusals were refused by an increasingly aggressive and drunken Lena, who had taken out yet another bag of food and busily tried to force a burger past his lips and into his mouth. Hurriedly, I told Lena that he wasn’t hungry anymore and that I quite fancied the burger that she was trying to foie-gras feed him but not before feeling a delicious wave of schadenfreude wash over me. “This,” I would say to a groaning Adem later in words laced with I-told-you-so, “is how foreign people feel when they come to Turkey. Now tell me, again, how wonderful Turkish hospitality is.”

    Lena and Boris gave us one last gift of a dried fish before we arrived in Moscow, a fish we would take all across Russia and back and christened Gagariba (a portmanteau of Gagarin and the Russian word for “fish.”) On the platform in Moscow, we were picked up by the friends we were staying with.

    “We are so surprised about you taking this train!” they said. “How was it? Was it crazy? You know this is the train of Russians who can’t afford to fly to go on vacation?”

    Ulan-Ude


    Ulan Ude, the capital of the Buryat respublika, is a polluted, ugly city. It is such a hole that even Yandex, the Google and Google Maps of Russia, hasn’t really bothered with it. It could not tell us any public transit details, nor was it much help for calling taxis. This was a surprise, considering that Yandex has even mapped dachaville, middle of nowhere respublika. The more we got to know Ulan-Ude, the more we understood. The only ingredients in the food are meat and dough (dill, if you are lucky and cabbage if you are very lucky), our boogers turned black from the pollution, and even in mid-September it was very very cold.

    We were not in Ulan Ude for the public transit or for the taxis or the food, though. We were there for Russia’s Buddhist temple complex of Ivolginskiy Datsan, the only Buddhist spiritual centre of the Soviet Union.

    Our first morning in Ulan Ude, we put on inappropriate clothing for the weather, blew the aforementioned black boogers out of our noses, and took three marshrutki to the complex.

    By the time we arrived, we’d had plenty of time to realize that our summer outfits were unfit for the rainy weather, so we ducked into the gatehouse to warm up and see if we had to pay to visit the complex. The lady inside proposed an English-speaking tour guide, and soon, for the price of 500 rubles, we were being led into the complex by Anna, a guide with a flat voice and a tenuous knowledge of English.

    “Dear our guests,” she intoned for the first time of many. “Before we start the tour, I must ask where you are from.”

    “Turkey,” we said.

    “Oh my,” she said flatly. She turned to Adem. “I have been working here for five years and I have never met anybody from Turkey before.”

    She ushered us closer to the main temple and began. “Dear our guests, please take a look at this beautiful temple.”

    It was, admittedly, beautiful.

    “Here,” she continued, “lives a monk who is the phenomenon in Russia and all over the world. At this time he is 166 years old.”

    Adem would later confess to me that he didn’t hear this part.

    “Dear our guests. Please listen carefully to this history of Buddhism in Russia. Our Great Queen Catherine allowed Buddhist temples to be built during her reign. She was a great supporter of Buddhism.”

    “Dear our guests. Please pay attention to this beautiful Buddhist university. This is where the Buddhist monks in Russia study. There are only men in this university.”

    “Dear our guests. Please pay attention to this beautiful prayer wheel.”

    “Dear our guests. Please pay attention to this sacred rock.”

    The sacred rock was up on a pedestal, looking much like a regular rock. Anna continued, “If you stand ten metres behind this rock, close your eyes, and concentrate on it, then walk towards the rock and touch it, you can make a prayer and it will be answered.”

    “Oh cool,” we said, nodding enthusiastically since we were the only people on the tour.

    “Now,” said Anna. “You must touch the rock.” Stand here, about ten metres behind. Reach your hands forward, close your eyes, and walk towards the rock. When you touch it, make a prayer.

    Adem and I looked at each other in horror. His spatial awareness and sense of direction are only barely acceptable and mine are about as developed as those of a bumper car. Neither of us wanted to embarrass ourselves by closing our eyes, holding our hands out, and walking in a direction that would certainly not be on the way to the rock.

    On the other hand, neither of us wanted to seem disrespectful by refusing to touch the rock. What to say anyway? “Sorry, I am spatially challenged. I must have done something wrong in a previous reincarnation to be so challenged in prayer.” “Sorry, my life is already so great that I literally don’t have anything else I could wish for.” “Sorry, I don’t have any friends or relatives to pray for.”

    Rather than disappoint Anna, we gamely took up our positions ten metres behind the rock. I went first. Adem stood behind me with his eyes open periodically yelling, “Left!” “Right!” “Left!” “Okay, now just left. Just left, no, now right.”

    Finally, I touched the rock. Relief flooded through me. I quickly prayed that I would never have to touch the rock again.

    Adem repeated the performance as I yelled directions behind him. Having touched the rock, he walked triumphantly back to where Anna and I were standing. We looked at her expectantly. Where were we going next? To the Buddhist library, perhaps? As dear her guests, to pay attention to more beautiful things?

    “I think,” said Anna slowly as we looked at her triumphantly, “that you both need to try again.” We blinked. “Sometimes,” she said slowly, “your concentration is just not enough.”

    Adem and I looked at each other. We took our places at the start of the finish line. We concentrated. And, somehow, miraculously, we both managed to touch the rock again without getting directions yelled at us. It was truly a miracle. I didn’t even open my eyes.

    We returned to the guide. “This is the end of the tour,” she said. “But if you would like to go see the phenomenon in Russia and all over the world, I can arrange for you to receive his blessing. He lives in the most beautiful temple, over there.”

    We definitely wanted to see the most beautiful temple in the complex. “Of course we want to,” we said.

    “Great,” Anna said. “That will be another 500 rubles.”

    Adem grumbled something about religion and capitalism while I reached into my purse.

    “Okay,” said Anna. “When you go into the temple there will be a monk. He will let you in. You will take a scarf as an offering to the phenomenon in Russia and all over the world. You will go up to the lama and you will make these gestures. Now, he is in very deep meditation, so you will not be able to speak to him. But, you can speak to him in your mind. You may stand in front of him for as long as you wish and speak to him for as long as you like. Afterwards, ask the monk that let you in for a scarf. He will tie it into a special knot. With this scarf, if you press the knot to your forehead, you can commune with him wherever in the world you go.”

    We nodded. She led us to the temple and waved us in, but stayed outside herself.

    Inside the foyer, we encountered the monk of which Anna had spoken. Though decked out in robes, he was absorbed in playing a game of Candy Crush. He had a plastic bottle of Coca Cola in his other hand. He briefly looked up and motioned with his head that we could go in.

    The inside of the temple was underwhelming compared to its facade. We pressed gamely forward until we realized.

    The phenomenon in Russia and all over the world was at the front of the temple.

    Bald and seated in meditation posture, missing his eyeballs.

    He was dead, and mummified, and obviously so.

    Unfortunately, you are not supposed to turn around in Buddhist temples, so we could not tell if the monk at the back was watching us. So, we stood in front of the phenomenon in Russia and all over the world for a minute, pretending to commune through our minds. After we decided that we had communed for a respectful enough period, we walked backwards out of the temple to the foyer.  The monk had clearly not been watching us after all — he was still absorbed in Candy Crush and, rather than ask him for the communion scarf, we scampered out of the temple only to be once again surprised by the placid face of Anna who had waited outside. She did us a kindness by not commenting on our lack of scarf for future communions with the Phenomenon in Russia and all over the world.

    “You know,” Anna said reflectively as soon as we got out. “Some people claim that he is dead, but in fact, he is alive and just in very deep meditation. Did you know that the monks here even take his body temperature, and it sometimes goes up to 34 degrees?”

    Adem and I nodded. Of course. Even in Siberia, it gets hot sometimes.

    Anna walked us out to the gatehouse. The marshrutka to takes us back to Ulan Ude was already there. “Just a moment,” she said. “I’m going to ask the driver to wait for you. I need you to give reviews of my tour.”

    She waved us into the gatehouse and spoke to the driver while we bought camel-wool socks, then came into the gatehouse waving an iPhone which she put onto video mode. “Do you think you could say some things about my tour in your languages?”

    We both gave a short, complimentary review, and then skipped outside to the van without a door that would drive us back to the city.

    Four Putins

    Travelling in Russia, we knew enough to keep our mouths shut about any political opinions we might have about Russia – at least until we knew it was safe. And so, if anybody asked us if we had heard of Putin or had any thoughts on him, we evasively said things like, “Oh yeah, Putin. I think I’ve heard of that guy. He’s some famous person in Russia, right?”

    We probably needn’t have worried, as not only did we not meet anybody who was a great fan of Putin (I’m not sure what official statistics are saying, but my guess based on the people we met, with whom we mostly only spoke Russian, is that his popularity has taken a dip), but people mostly only seemed to ask us what we thought about Putin in order to tell us what they thought about Putin.

    Lena and Boris said they used to like him, but now think he’s horrible.

    A couple of drunk guys in the dining car of the train who were travelling to the middle of nowhere and were planning to go to the banya and tried to get us to buy them vodka told us that they thought he was horrible, too.

    Another woman, unconvinced by our evasive answers about how much we knew pressed us to tell her what we really thought. “We think,” we finally said carefully, “that he is smart, and cruel.”

    “I agree,” she said. “Anyway, I am not so interested in politics.”

    Finally, in Buryatia, we met a man who told us about his belief in a Russian YouTube conspiracy.

    It is common knowledge that Putin is an ex-KGB agent, and the KGB and its heir the FSB have lots of resources at their disposal. These include plastic surgery and other methods of disguise.

    At some point or other, the world’s best plastic surgeons were tasked with creating decoy Putins. The reason for this is unclear – to protect the real Putin? Just to mess with people?

    Whatever the case, the evidence for this is (apparently) overwhelming. For example, it explains why, even though Putin (allegedly) used to speak German so fluently that he could be mistaken for an honest-to-goodness Bavarian, he has recently been known to make basic mistakes when speaking German. It also explains why Putin and his ex-wife Lyudmila recently divorced.

    I mean, why would Lyudmila claim that Putin was no longer the man she married, unless… he… was… LITERALLY… no longer the man she married?

    I like to imagine this conversation.

    Putin: Lyuda dear, what’s for dinner tonight? Something involving potatoes, kasha, or dill? No, no wait, don’t tell me. It could also involve cabbage, beets, or sour cream. Hmmm…. Even after 30 years of marriage,  you still know how to keep me guessing.

    Lyudmila: Volodka, I’ve been thinking recently.

    Putin: Pierog?

    Lyudmila: I would like a divorce.

    Putin: (surprised) But why?

    Lyudmila: (bursting into tears). You’re just not the man I married anymore! The man I married spoke German like a Bavarian! The man I married came by his good looks honestly! And you speak of surprises. Surprises! After this long! HOW can you POSSIBLY not know after 30 YEARS that I ALWAYS make vareniki on Thursdays? You claim to have been a KGB AGENT!

    In one version of the legend, the other three Putins offed the real Putin. This is apparently why Putin has been acting out of character lately, though it isn’t clear exactly in what way his behaviour has been out of character (except for the German mistakes.)

    We would just like to say

    We were shown around/helped/encouraged by some very kind friends (and some very kind people we met along the way), to whom we owe a lot for the great time we had. Thank you 🙂

  • Who Wore it Better: Vladimir Putin or Justin Trudeau?

    Anybody interested in modern Russian culture will learn about the cult of Vladimir Putin at some point. I remember my first encounter with it when, at 18, I stumbled across the YouTube music video of “He must be like Putin.”  This video depicts two beautiful Russian women describing how they kicked out their deadbeat boyfriends, and that any future suitors must be like Putin – strong, loyal, etc. I first assumed it was a joke. It wasn’t.

    That song was released nearly ten years ago, and neither Putin’s popularity nor his cult appear to have abated, despite his authoritarian style of governance, penchant for throwing people into prison for dubious reasons, likely penchant for assassinating opponents, and corruption. Nevertheless, a quick google search for “cult of Putin” yields photographs of a shirtless Putin riding a horse, petting a leopard, apparently inspecting a tiger, fishing very large fish, working out, and doing judo. This is not to mention the Russian flags emblazoned with Putin’s face, and a bizarre painting of Putin holding the world on his shoulders. (Vlatlasdimir Putin? Vladimir Putin the world on shoulders?)

    Did I mention Putin hang gliding with a crane?

    Did I mention Putin hang gliding with a crane? Source: CNN

    As I travelled through Russia and was bombarded by Putin-themed paraphernalia in gift shops and elsewhere, I began to feel a bit disgusted by the whole thing. Sure, at 18 it was hilarious to see anybody be the subject of this kind of adoration, but it was entirely different now that I’d actually talked to a few Russians about it. I even hate to write about the cult of Putin; not only have many people written about it better than I, writing about it may contribute to Putin’s cult of personality overseas, a sort of cult of personality where people from not-Russia like me go “lol, look at that authoritarian man. Isn’t he actually kind of sexy when he winks? Some ignorant comment about the Soviet Union. Russians are funny and do stupid stuff. LOL xD xD xD.”

    After laughing for a while, everybody forgets that Putin is bad news.

    In reality, Putin’s cult of personality is a very real and harmful thing. It contributes to his high popular support which, in turn, allows him to continue to not play well with others, which causes problems that affect and even cost human lives in… you know, Syria, Turkey, Ukraine, Georgia, and well, okay, Russia is not the only country that puts its fingers in pies it shouldn’t, but no Western country idolizes their leader that much. I mean look at Justin Trudeau.

     

    Source: trudeaupmilf.tumblr.com

    Source: trudeaupmilf.tumblr.com

    I mean, look at him!

    Source: Vogue

    Source: Vogue

    Isn’t he beautiful?

    I just want to run my fingers through his hair, you know? Hey Justin, why don’t you take some pictures with your shirt off?

    trudeau haida gwai

    Trudeau sports a Haida tattoo (Haida Gwai are a tribe of indigenous people who live in British Columbia.) This picture sports a terrible pun. Source: Huffington Post

    This is a joke. I am not, and will never be, a Trudeau maniac. I wear my “Justin Trudeau is just okay” hat proudly, which causes my friends and family to make a game out of keeping me abreast of all the sexy Justin Trudeau news fit to print.

    Justin Trudeau is sexy articles in the newspaper? Check.

    Justin Trudeau: The sexiest world leader article in Turkish? Check. (Yes, both Vladimir Putin and Justin Trudeau’s cults extend beyond the countries they lead.)

    Comedy article that calls Justin Trudeau the PMILF? CHECK, of course.

    Article about how Justin Trudeau’s rather mediocre watercolor of a somewhat mediocre museum was auctioned off on eBay for $25,000? Check.

    My all-time favourite Justin Trudeau-themed thing that anybody has ever threatened to buy for me has to be this sweatshirt emblazoned with a picture of Justin Trudeau riding a moose.

    Source: Shelfies.com

    I know you will be tempted to buy me this shirt, but please, take your 44 dollars and give it to charity. Please. Source: Shelfies.com

    As soon as I saw this . . . through an amnesic fog . . .  an image came to mind. A similar shirt with . . . a moose I believe. And maybe another world leader? Perhaps . . . yes, it is becoming clearer now. Vla-Vladimir Putin? Feeding a baby moose?

    Ah, Peace. Just what Vladimir Putin is known for.

    Ah, Peace. Just what Vladimir Putin is known for.

    I refuse to spend my hard-earned dollars on reinforcing the Putin cult, even the more mocking Putin cult that exists here on the other side of the Atlantic, and even on a pink shirt caption “Peace” and emblazoned with a photograph of Vladimir Putin feeding a baby moose with a bottle. However, I took a picture for the benefit of my readers around the world because I wanted to know the answer to a very important question.

    Who wore it better? Or, I mean, since they aren’t actually wearing the respective shirts, who appears on a kitschy shirt with a moose better?

    Vote in the comments! If I get more than five comments, I’ll draw a name and send you a can of maple syrup with a label emblazoned with a stenciled picture of Justin Trudeau’s face and maybe some horrible free-drawn maples leaves rendered in red sharpie. Maybe you will even be able to sell it on eBay for $25,000! YOU KNOW YOU WANT ONE!

  • 4 Sexy Foods Around the World

    Let’s face it. Nobody reads my blog for the hard-hitting political analysis and creative use of words. Like most travel blog audiences, they read it for the pretty pictures! The clickbaity lists! The bits where it seems like you, too, might one day go on a perfect vacation and look at a mountain or sea or something while simultaneously saving the world. And everybody is salivating in anticipation of the release of my upcoming e-book, “How to feel cool like me and also make money.”

    The other most important rule of travel blogging is this: sex sells. Sure, thoughtful reflections on the difficulties of travelling are very well and good, but if I want anybody but my Mom to read them I should probably post a few artistic-looking pictures of me in a bikini and talk about how enlightened I’ve become since I started travelling. And also be actually funny.

    Since I am not of the bikini-pics online persuasion, however, I have decided to only sell the other 95% of myself to the man by writing an article about sex and food. That way I’ll touch on most of the basic Maslowian needs, maybe get a few clicks from people googling pervy stuff, and then feel better about myself because I measure my self-worth in website clicks and Facebook shares.

    Ready?

    Here goes.

    1. In Avcılar, Turkey, Try the Yogurt

    IMG_20151123_200133738 IMG_20151123_200149006

    The yogurt aisle in a Turkish supermarket is the place to get your freak on.

    Just kidding.

    The yogurt aisle is one of my favourite parts of Turkey because I love yogurt and because I love how serious Turkish people are about their yogurt. Serious enough to devote half an aisle to various brands of plain yogurt and the remainder to fruit yogurt and yogurt-derived products like Ayran – a salty yogurt based drink.

    No other Turkish food rivals the place reserved for yogurt in your average supermarket, not even cigarettes.

    Oh. I promised sexy food you say? Well, for your information, yogurt has been known to prevent yeast infections and since sex without a yeast infection is ultimately sexier than sex with a yeast infection, I maintain that yogurt is a sexier food than people give it credit for. Still, if you aren’t satisfied with the sexiness-level of yogurt, have a look below.

    2. In Sochi, Savour some Fried Labia

    labia

    So you’ve made it to Sochi, site of a now run-down Olympic stadium and an expensive place from which to see the Black Sea. You’re out on the waterfront – basically the only thing to see in Sochi – wondering where you can get the hottest vittles in town.

    Fear not! You have but to choose the local delicacy, the fried labia. You can order these puppies for a smooth 400 Rubles or 8 Canadian dollars. I would write the value in American dollars too, but that would just remind me that my grocery bill is 15% higher than it used to be. The stain on the menu only proves the incredible popularity of this dish. Don’t miss out!

    Your culinary identification just doesn’t permit you to fully enjoy the experience of tasting labia? Fortunately, most people who aren’t into labia will be into the next item on my list.

    3. It’s Getting Hot in Alaçatı, Turkey! Finish Off Your Day with a Jizzscicle

    jizz popsicle

    Labia might not be your thing, but fortunately most people who aren’t into them don’t mind a little jizz. Capitalizing on Alaçatı’s blisteringly hot weather, the impressive virility of young Turkish men (and the difficulty they have finding Turkish women to consume their product) and the fact that about 50% of people are into that kind of stuff, one enterprising Alaçatı entrepreneur created the ultimate throat cooling snack. Bet you can’t have just one!

    If you have made it this far into the article, you are probably not a total prude, but you might be. You might be one of those people who reads to the end of some hypersexualized thing because you enjoy feeling indignant, because you want to criticize me afterwards, or just because you can’t take your eyes off the trainwreck that is my sense of humour.

    Well anyway. If labia and jizz cramp your style, and if it’s all you can do to admit that genitalia exist, you don’t have to worry. Turkish people can be prudish too, and it isn’t always considered a bad thing. Sometimes people just don’t want to acknowledge the difficult-to-ignore fact that most organisms have a vagina, a penis, or a butt (in various combinations.)

    Translation: Durdu: Pregnant women shouldn't go out in the street because nobody will be able to think anything but 'How did she get pregnant?' Hanimi: I just wanted you to know that your mother wasn't the virgin Mary. She also had sex. Durdu: Don't cast aspersions on my mother!

    Translation: Durdu: Pregnant women shouldn’t go out in the street because nobody will be able to think anything but ‘How did she get pregnant?’
    Hanimi: I just wanted you to know that your mother wasn’t the virgin Mary. She also had sex.
    Durdu: Don’t cast aspersions on my mother!  This guy is probably a troll, but unfortunately there are factions within Turkish society with shockingly similar views.

    4. In Kocamustafaşa, Shut Your Eyes to the Existence of Genitalia at the Butcher Shop.

    IMG_20151124_165457100

    One of the most clever ways you can pretend that they don’t exist is by stuffing a fake rose or perhaps a piece of lettuce in the orifice of any dead animal that you might be tempted to eat. (Unfortunately, Turkish butchers don’t seem to be up on their Western Judeo-Christian tropes, so they have missed out on the potential hilarity of using a fig leaf.) That way, nobody will ever notice that anything untoward might ever have gone on there. Definitely not. You can eat your meat without worrying that sexuality will rear its ugly head and remind you of its existence.

    Bon appetit!

  • Take Care of Your Breasts!: Nostalgia for the Soviet Period in the ex-Soviet Union

    As I planned my trip through Russia and the Caucasus, I began to prepare by interacting with more and more people from ex-Soviet countries. Mostly, I met them online. My friends were typically born after 1980, and spent their childhoods in the perestroika-era Soviet Union. Many of them professed a kind of nostalgia for the Soviet Union of their childhoods. “In some ways, it was a great childhood,” I remember one Russian telling me. “We didn’t know a class system. Of course there were problems but as a child, I wasn’t aware of all that. It was a great childhood, for me.”

    A few friends from other ex-Soviets spoke well of the Soviet education systems of their childhoods, and decried the loss of the education quality that has occurred in their countries since 1991.

    I was surprised to hear these perspectives. The North American collective consciousness had left me with little knowledge of social life in the Soviet Union. Sure, I had nebulous ideas about nuclear armament and Stalin’s purges, but no real timeline or concept that the Soviet Union wasn’t a static entity and that it had undergone massive changes across its history, even if North Americans weren’t easily privy to them. I couldn’t think of anything that the Soviet Union had done that could be considered beneficial to its population. It wasn’t that I had anything against acknowledging that there might have been some good things about the Soviet era. It was simply because, as a North American, my exposure to the social culture and history of the Soviet Union was limited.

    Now that I’ve been to a few ex-Soviet countries, I’ve found that the nostalgia I noticed before I left is common – although not universal – across the ex-Soviet Union. A few months ago I wrote about how little of this nostalgia I noticed in Georgia, but I spoke too soon. At a language-practice meeting in Tbilisi, I met a woman in her fifties. “How was it living in the Soviet Union?” I asked, expecting her to reiterate what the other Georgians had told me about how the evil Russian occupation had not managed to subdue proud and tenacious Georgia. (These statements, I later learned, were somewhat ironic as Stalin himself was . . . Georgian.) She didn’t. “Oh,” she said, “It was wonderful. The education system was excellent. We learned many foreign languages. And it was so cheap to travel from here to Moscow.”

    What characterizes collective memories of the Cold War period for North Americans doesn’t seem to be the same across the post-Soviet world. Did Soviet citizens live with the same terror of nuclear war that North Americans did? I don’t know.

    What I do know is that, these days in the ex-Soviet Union, nostalgia for the Soviet period abounds. It’s certainly not universal; many people have terrible things to say about the difficulties endured during the Soviet era. But . . . it is common, and it takes many forms – from lamenting how expensive travel to Moscow has become since the break-up, to buying postcards and magnet editions of vintage Soviet posters, to spending time at one of the three museums of Soviet Arcade Games that grace Moscow, St. Petersburg, and Kazan.

    This is the Museum of Soviet Arcade Games in Moscow. Yes, you can play the games. They only work if you feed them Soviet money though.

    This is the Museum of Soviet Arcade Games in Moscow. Yes, you can play the games, but only if you feed them Soviet money.

    Another Russian friend pointed out that North Americans also have some kind of nostalgia for the Soviet period. “For example,” he said, “the game Fallout is about Nuclear War, which was a big preoccupation of the Cold War.” He was right – with one major difference. In the ex-Soviet Union, nostalgia for the period is about many different aspects of Soviet culture and society whereas in North America, Cold War nostalgia tends to be about . . . the threat of war.

    I picked up these postcards at a gift shop in Moscow. They came in a pack of twenty. Many of them are military themed, but what struck me were the four related to public health campaigns.

    These two cards both address the issue of overdrinking. The one on the right reads, “A river begins with a small stream” and dates to 1929. The Soviet Union obviously continued to struggle with this public health issue as the card on the left, which simply reads, “NO,” dates to 1954. 

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    These two posters are also about public health issues. The one on the left reads, “Take care of your breasts” while the one on the right reads “After work, go to the bathhouse.” In the Soviet Union, many apartments did not have baths inside, so inhabitants were forced to frequent bathhouses (back before they had connotations of homosexuality.) Both of these posters date to the 1930s.

    Stalin’s purges aside, the social history of the Soviet Union is not well-known in North America. It’s a shame, really, that it isn’t. To conclude this post, I present you with a question my Ukrainian roommate in Georgia asked me about the social culture of North America that proves that a mutual lack of cultural knowledge exists up until the present day.

    “Kate,” he said. “Do people in North America read on the john, or is that just something that people in ex-Soviet countries do?”

    I was quick to assure him that piles of books and magazines are common features of many North American bathrooms. Although the Soviet Union has been gone for 24 years, the vestiges of the Cold War live on in a mutual lack of knowledge about these – admittedly perhaps insignificant – cultural details. Still, I don’t think that a North American one-dimensional understanding of the Soviet and ex-Soviet space is insignificant at all (although, in the case of bathroom reading, perhaps it is.) In fact, the more you know . . . the more you are likely to make reasonable judgments about North American and post Soviet people and their mutual relationships. Sure, there’s bad stuff, but there’s also good stuff. And if you aren’t the sort to divide social movements into such easy moral categories, I can say for sure that there’s plenty of interesting stuff to be learned about the countries that make up the ex-Soviet Union.

    So come on in! The water’s fine!