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Author Topic: My Russian Hero!  (Read 6517 times)

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Offline CanadaMan

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My Russian Hero!
« on: November 12, 2013, 09:14:07 PM »
 Bee Farmer's post entitled ' What is a "hero" ' and ML's recent post about FSU men and women taking, but not reciprocating or saying thank you, inspired me to tell a story about a Russian hero I met this year in Moscow.
 
This past summer I made a last-minute decision to visit Moscow while in Europe.
 
I booked a hotel (Sevastopol) I had never been to and didn't even check its location after I picked up my visa and bought my plane ticket. I figured it would be close to the Sevastopol metro station.
 
I arrived around 11:30 pm and managed to catch the last Aeroexpress Train into Moscow (Paveletsky Rail Terminal)
 
Once I arrived I got out my metro map and hopped on a train I hoped was going in the right direction.
 
Inside the train I asked a couple of young guys who were seated if the train was heading in the right direction for Sevastopolskaya.
They didn't seem to have an answer or didn't understand me but another young fellow seated across from them came up to me and invited me to sit down with him.
 
He told me he was going to Sevastopolskaya station and would help me get there.
The young man looked to be in his early 30's.
 
Needless to say, he was very friendly and his English was good enough to carry on an animated conversation.
 
We were in the first metro for only one stop and my new friend motioned for me to follow him out the train.
 
He told me he would be meeting his girlfriend at the connecting metro station. He mentioned something about her being attractive.
There she was, quite attractive indeed, but she didn't appear to be too happy when he greeted her.
They talked briefly and the next train arrived.
 
The three of us entered the train but his girlfriend didn't want to sit with us for some reason.
She sat down across from us and on the other side of the train door, a few meters away.


I watched in amusement as his girlfriend gave him the finger a couple of times as he tried to communicate with her.

We continued our conversation and at one point he was asking how much a certain food cost in Canada (for comparison sake to Russia) and I kept asking if it was a dairy product, meat or vegetable. Grains hadn't come to mind and he kept saying "chlep, chlep!" He asked a young kid seated across from us for help and I re-learned how to say 'bread' in Russian. :)


Several stops later we arrived at Sevastopolskaya and he motioned for me to follow him once again.
As we left the train it seemed like his girlfriend began to warm up a bit. He was carrying on a conversation with her and I was tagging along.
 
We reached the outside of the metro station and the landscape looked like 90% of what non-downtown Moscow looks like; high rise after high rise apartments and not much else.  :)
My friend asked me to wait at the metro steps with his girlfriend while he walked over near a building. He was trying to find someone to speak with but I'm not sure if he was successful or not.
 
In the meantime a couple of amateur 'taxi' drivers stopped and asked if we needed a ride.
After a few minutes my friend returned and asked that we follow him.
He cut across some property and headed towards another street. By this time his girlfriend had perked up considerably and was actually trying to help out with her mobile phone. She was trying to pull up a map of the area.
 
We landed on the street that my hotel was supposed to be on but it was nowhere to be seen.
I pulled out my netbook and looked up the details for the hotel; street address and phone number.
I gave the number to my friend and he tried calling. No answer, number not in service!
 
We ambled down the street and started approaching a few high rises. He asked a fellow who was sitting in a parking kiosk if he knew where Sevastopol Hotel was. Nyet.
 
Then he went into a building a few more meters down. He came back with a little encouragement. He said it's probably the next building over.
We waited outside while he spoke with a security personnel inside the building.
There was no sign on the building from the front, identifying a hotel. No neon, nothing!
 
He motioned us to come inside. We entered and walked away from the security guard to another room.
At the back of this room was a woman at the 'check-in' counter.
 
My friend started a rather lively conversation with this woman and pretty soon they were arguing with each other.
I had no idea what it was they were arguing about.
 
After a couple of minutes I learned the check-in staffer was telling my friend that I had to pay for two night’s accommodation instead of one.
My friend didn't know I had booked two nights and thought she was trying to add an additional charge to my bill.
 
I looked at my watch and it was now 1:30 a.m.!
I figured now that I was at my 'hotel' I would be able to sort things out with the administration and started to thank my friend and his girlfriend for their help above and beyond the call of duty.  :)
 
Had my head not been total mush at the time I would have asked for his number or e-mail address to stay in touch, but it was not meant to be.
And so we bid adieu, hearty handshakes and smiles. My Russian hero and his girlfriend disappeared into the dark streets of Moscow, in the wee hours of the morning. I will always remember them and be grateful for their kindness and selfless attitude.
 
 

Offline Hammer2722

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Re: My Russian Hero!
« Reply #1 on: November 13, 2013, 01:17:27 PM »
Nice story CanadaMan.  :clapping:
every ship can be a minesweeper at least once...

Offline Muzh

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Re: My Russian Hero!
« Reply #2 on: November 13, 2013, 01:40:14 PM »
Canadaman, you should post that on the Moscow Times or some other newspaper. Great story.
To argue with a man who has renounced the use and authority of reason, and whose philosophy consists in holding humanity in contempt, is like administering medicine to the dead. Thomas Paine - The American Crisis 1776-1783

Offline Daveman

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Re: My Russian Hero!
« Reply #3 on: November 13, 2013, 01:49:08 PM »
Excellent snippet of the trip.  Thanks for sharing.


She gave him the finger a few times? ... you sure they weren't already married???  >:D   


That would have been a helluva needle in the haystack nightmare on your own.. 
The duty of a true patriot is to protect his country from its government. -- Thomas Paine

Online Faux Pas

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Re: My Russian Hero!
« Reply #4 on: November 13, 2013, 02:02:48 PM »
Yeah it is a good story. Thanks for it CM.

But, it can't possibly be true. It's common knowledge all Russian men are drunkards that beat their wives and he didn't give his girlfriend one single rap across the mouth. They didn't even stop for vodka  :D

Offline CanadaMan

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Re: My Russian Hero!
« Reply #5 on: November 13, 2013, 04:14:05 PM »
Thanks folks, I'm glad you enjoyed the story.

Although this couple went out of their way (literally) to make sure I was steered in the right direction, there were countless other instances where I received help from total strangers who gladly obliged me.

Just to put a 'face' to this story, here are a couple of photos of the glitzy, majestic Sevastopol Hotel.







You can see its full magnitude and grandeur.  :)

Note the absence of any signage on the building.

Can you imagine finding this needle in the middle of the night?

That is a freshly painted walkway to the front entrance of the building!

The Sevastopol later turned out to be a story in and of itself.  :)


Offline mendeleyev

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Re: My Russian Hero!
« Reply #6 on: November 13, 2013, 06:20:50 PM »
Oh my, CanadaMan.

Happy that you received help although you put your life in their hands at that time of the night in that neighborhood. Thank God they were honest and you are alive.

I've loaded two photos below. One is of the Metro map and I've circled your Sevastopolskaya Metro station in red. The other photo is the address of your hotel circled in red.


http://www.sevastopol-hotel.ru/


Someone made a video of this hotel which is very funny:







« Last Edit: November 13, 2013, 06:23:17 PM by mendeleyev »
The Mendeleyev Journal. http://mendeleyevjournal.com Member: Congress of Russian Journalists; ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ.RU (Journalist-Russia); ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ.UA (Journalist-Ukraine); ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ.KZ (Journalist-Kazakhstan); ПОРТАЛ ЖУРНАЛИСТОВ (Portal of RU-UA Journalists); Просто Журналисты ("Just Journalists").

Offline mendeleyev

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Re: My Russian Hero!
« Reply #7 on: November 13, 2013, 06:29:58 PM »
That hotel is a member of the "Best Eastern" chain of hotels. It is a reservation system much like Best Western in the West.

Many of the hotels immediately after the Soviet period were privatized and it is common for the hotel to use several floors and the rest of the building consists of apartments which is one reason for no signs. Some hotels were divided by floors and you have Hotel A on floors one and two and then Hotel Two on the third floor, etc.

It is also common to have the same hotel offer various styled rooms. There is a large Best Western hotel in northeast Moscow, the Vega, and it has floors of modern and even close to luxury rooms while other floors are closer "Russian standard" which are not much better than what you experienced.


The Mendeleyev Journal. http://mendeleyevjournal.com Member: Congress of Russian Journalists; ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ.RU (Journalist-Russia); ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ.UA (Journalist-Ukraine); ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ.KZ (Journalist-Kazakhstan); ПОРТАЛ ЖУРНАЛИСТОВ (Portal of RU-UA Journalists); Просто Журналисты ("Just Journalists").

Offline SANDRO43

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Re: My Russian Hero!
« Reply #8 on: November 13, 2013, 06:38:57 PM »
Many of the hotels immediately after the Soviet period were privatized and it is common for the hotel to use several floors and the rest of the building consists of apartments which is one reason for no signs. Some hotels were divided by floors and you have Hotel A on floors one and two and then Hotel Two on the third floor, etc.
Ah, finally I understand the origin of the term roulette hotel - they omitted prefacing Russian, though... ;D
Milan's "Duomo"

Offline Ooooops

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Re: My Russian Hero!
« Reply #9 on: November 13, 2013, 06:52:42 PM »
Oh my, CanadaMan.

Happy that you received help although you put your life in their hands at that time of the night in that neighborhood. Thank God they were honest and you are alive.


Mendy, that is so sad that you know better not to trust you fellow Moscovites…   :(

Offline CanadaMan

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Re: My Russian Hero!
« Reply #10 on: November 14, 2013, 05:50:00 PM »

Many of the hotels immediately after the Soviet period were privatized and it is common for the hotel to use several floors and the rest of the building consists of apartments which is one reason for no signs. Some hotels were divided by floors and you have Hotel A on floors one and two and then Hotel Two on the third floor, etc.

It is also common to have the same hotel offer various styled rooms.

Thanks Mendy for the photos and video! You've got the exact location :)

I never quite figured out what was going on with this 'hotel'.

What I do know is that only the top three floors (14, 15, 16) are 'inhabitable'.   ;)
That is, they have been renovated to standards that are acceptable for westerners.

The rest of the floors are in a very sad state of repairs.
But people were actually staying there too.

It appears that the plan is to renovate the entire building eventually.
During my stay, banging, drilling, and other construction noises were heard throughout the day, including weekends.
At the rate they were working, it will take several years before it's all completed.


Offline mendeleyev

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Re: My Russian Hero!
« Reply #11 on: November 14, 2013, 09:18:53 PM »
Quote
During my stay, banging, drilling, and other construction noises were heard throughout the day, including weekends.
At the rate they were working, it will take several years before it's all completed.

Many of the floors there are for private living apartments and my guess is that either the hotel is remodeling or, there is an even greater chance that investors have purchased flats and are refitting them for apartment rentals.
The Mendeleyev Journal. http://mendeleyevjournal.com Member: Congress of Russian Journalists; ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ.RU (Journalist-Russia); ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ.UA (Journalist-Ukraine); ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ.KZ (Journalist-Kazakhstan); ПОРТАЛ ЖУРНАЛИСТОВ (Portal of RU-UA Journalists); Просто Журналисты ("Just Journalists").

 

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