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Offline mendeleyev

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Life in Russia
« on: May 30, 2013, 11:22:56 PM »
I met Leonid Brezhnev in June of 1973 at the White House, Washington DC. I didn't really "meet" him of course although several times he was standing just a few meters away. Important government officials and politicians were at his side and I was just there to watch and learn, a budding young broadcaster just getting started.

While we never spoke or shook hands as that would have been out of the question, had there been the opportunity I'd have loved to ask him a very personal question: "Mr. Brezhnev, why are your eyebrows so dark and bushy?"

General Secretary Brezhnev to the left, President Nixon on the right. height=457
General Secretary Brezhnev to the left, President Nixon on the right.

It was then that I was bitten by the "Russia bug" and although it took more than a few years to get there, a feeling deep inside hinted that Russia would someday be my home. Two years of Russian language in college helped keep the dream alive and while I didn't know when the chance would come, I hoped that Russia would be free of Communism by the time of my arrival.

During their first summit, May of 1972 in Moscow, the two leaders made progress in weapons reduction talks. When Mr. Brezhnev arrived in Washington for their June 1973 summit at Camp David the two countries had agreed upon and signed a major SALT weapons treaty before flying off to California on Air Force One to spend some time at La Casa Pacifica, the Nixon "Western White House" in San Clemente.

It is customary for visiting heads of state to stay at Blair House, a simple walk across the street from the White House, though Nixon made arrangements for Brezhnev to stay at Camp David instead. What better gift to give a new friend than a new car – a brand new Lincoln Continental, in this case, and Brezhnev’s eyes lit up when he saw it. He took the wheel, motioned Nixon into the passenger seat, and sped off at 60 mph, careening down the narrow, winding roads to the horror of the Secret Service.

He blew through a stop sign and lurched into traffic on a nearby highway. “That was something,” said a trembling Nixon, who later wrote that “Diplomacy is not always an easy art.” Within hours of their first meeting, Brezhnev announced that he had already invited the President back to Moscow for another summit.

The camaraderie continued as Brezhnev joined RN on the Spirit of ’76 to San Clemente. Air Force One flew low over the Grand Canyon so that Brezhnev could get a glimpse of the shadowy canyon walls. “I’ve seen many pictures of this in newsreels and in cowboy movies,” he noted as he jumped back from the window, slouched his shoulders down, placed his hands on his hips, and drew imaginary six shooters from his imaginary holsters – his John Wayne imitation got the attention of everyone on board.

(Text in italics above is from the Nixon Foundation archives.)


26 Kutuzovskiy Prospekt. (foto: Максим Феоктистов) height=372
26 Kutuzovskiy Prospekt. (foto: Максим Феоктистов)

Years later my second apartment in Moscow would allow me to become a neighbor of the former Soviet leader, at least in spirit. Brezhnev was already gone but the memories of those first encounters with Brezhnev and Nixon swept through my mind often as I passed the large apartment building at 26 Kutuzovsky Prospekt where notable Soviets such as Brezhnev, Mikhail Suslov, and Yuri Andropov had once lived .

When State Duma members began to talk of "rehabilitating" the former Brezhnev address, part of a larger rehabilitation of Brezhnev's place in history by his admirer Vladimir Putin, it just seemed natural to retrace my steps and to see how much that neighborhood had changed. Behind Kutuzovsky Avenue were other apartment houses such as the one where I had lived on nearby Studencheskaya Street.

The new "City Centre" with dominating super skyscrapers had led to new developments on both side of the Moscow River. Many older buildings had been demolished in the name of progress with new office buildings developed as if they'd somehow sprouted up towards the heavens and it seemed as if only the grand old Stalinist era structures and neighborhoods along Kutuzovskiy Avenue, protected for the sake of history, had been left intact.





Kutuzovskiy Avenue video:
At :03 seconds there is a building flanked by oval looking openings at either side for cars to travel behind the building. That is how I'd walk the short distance home when on Kutuzovskiy. The Moscow Cats Theatre, home to the worlds best performing felines is housed inside 25 Kutuzovskiy. To the right at the :04 to the :08 mark is the stately apartment building that once was home to Leonid Brezhnev and Yuri Andropov.

I couldn't find my old home and in a moment of inspiration the thought occurred to approach from behind the area, via Metro station Studencheskaya with its view of the Kievskiy Railroad yards. Studencheskaya is an older station and one of the few with above ground platforms because of its proximity to the river where trains cross before returning underground. Moscow is a big city, the largest in Europe, and it had been years since I'd stepped off a train at Studencheskaya and taken the escalator up to street level.

What I saw upon exiting the Metro was a changed neighborhood. Far different than the hustle and bustle of earlier years I was greeted by an uncomfortable quietness accompanied by a policeman on duty and the unsightly curse of tagged graffiti everywhere. Welcome to Chicago--in the middle of Moscow.

I fantasized that in earlier years you might have seen me jogging across the street and along the sidewalk, retracing my way as if it were only yesterday that this was home. I'd gone home so many times whether day or night, in rain or snow, but most of the times had returned home just happily tired. It didn't take long however to realize that I was lost. The old familiar alleys and sidewalks had given way to modernity and I didn't know which way to turn.

I fumbled around alleyways and sidewalks along Mozhayskiy and Dunaevskogo Streets, each familiar but not quite right. On one hand it was exciting to see so many houses (apartment buildings) under renovation because this area, the place where Soviet writers had once been assigned to live, deserves a place in the modern world. But inside was a growing fear that in the name of progress my old home and all its special memories might be gone.

Perhaps I caught a stroke of luck or maybe God in His providence has mercy on forgetful journalists, because just about the time that my sense of direction depleted and my feet overcome with exhaustion, there in the corner of my eye appeared a familiar triangular-shaped outdoor/indoor shopping centre that served the old neighborhood.

Named Myasokontrakt Kommercheskiy Tsentr, the shopping area continues to be a busy place, doing brisk business with a combination of outdoor kiosks and a larger indoor open supermarket where vendors rent refrigerated spaces and counters to sell a fascinating array of fruits, vegetables, meats, and flowers. Inside that market a shopper can find everything from food staples to soap to candles, batteries, vodka, bottled water and chocolate cakes.

Wowsky! I was so happy. Thankfully I still carry what Russians call a "perhaps" bag, a cloth or mesh bag if something was found to buy. For me it is a convenient way to carry a camera and accessories without advertising that I'm walking around with expensive photo gear.

Still thinking that my old apartment house had been demolished, I decided to check out the market where it seemed that the meat, bread and cheese was inviting me to make a sandwich for lunch so I complied. Several pieces of fresh fruit called my name, too. Next I headed to the outdoor kiosks to stock up on chocolate. The chocolate there is of excellent quality at prices far below other parts of Moscow and I wasn't about to leave the area without a good supply of chocolate. One never knows when you might need some.

Finally satiated by the shopping experience, I decided to walk home from the market just as if this had been a shopping trip like so many times before. It took less than two minutes on the slightly inclined sidewalk that angled northeast toward a cluster of tall shade trees. Suddenly I began to smile as tall trees which block much of the sunlight gave off the familiar feeling of shade and dimming sunlight while guiding my way.

That sidewalk angled to the left led me home! The playground is a soccer area with basketball hoop in summer and the several inches of water is added in winter for ice skating and hockey. height=369

Walking up this sidewalk angled to the left led me home! The playground is a soccer area with basketball hoop in summer and then several inches of water is added in winter for ice skating and hockey.

There it was! Certainly not modernized like so many structures nearby; it was as if a small island of old Moscow had been left for the sake of posterity. This is an older area of Moscow, first developed in the 1930s with most of the remaining apartment buildings constructed in the Stalinist style before the Great Patriotic War, 1941-1945.

I sat down on a nearby bench in the common yard area to take photos and reflect on the good times and blessings from that chapter in life. It had been sweet, a time of learning and most importantly a time to court the lady who is now my wife. Oh, I did have two sweethearts on the side so to speak--two elderly pensioners, sisters who lived across the hall and who had "adopted" me as their American "beau" back then.

Those two sisters were angels sent to keep me company and to teach about the joy of sharing with those less fortunate. I hope to see them again someday in the life to come and as we Orthodox often say, "May their memory be eternal."

My old "home sweet home" seemed almost unchanged in spite of all the redevelopments and renovations of structures surrounding it.


"Don't judge a book by the cover" is the way to approach Moscow real estate. The apartments inside are in most cases much nicer than what lacks in "curb appeal." At $6500 a square meter, the average 50-60 sq m2 flat sells close to a half million dollars. height=662

"Don't judge a book by the cover" when it comes to Moscow real estate. The flats inside are in most cases much nicer than what is lacking in "curb appeal." At $7800 a square meter, the average 50-65 sq m2 flat sells for just under to a half million dollars.

This was the furnished flat where the landlord left an old rocking chair in the living room under strict orders that no one was allowed to sit on the chair. It was reserved for Stalin's ghost, and the landlord who was a well-educated attorney, was serious. Stalin had earned the reputation as somewhat of a "night owl" on occasion walking the streets at night where he'd invite himself in to take some tea and bread with his usually very surprised and even more frightened hosts.

Many Russians believe that the soul remains on earth for 30 days as God shows them their life and reveals their past sins. As Stalin had many more sins that the average sinner, some believe that he is still walking around Russia because the recital of all his sins has yet to be completed.

As the afternoon shadows deepened I stood and walked toward the sound of busy Kutuzovskiy Avenue traffic, and this time being sure of my bearings made my entrance via the large oval topped opening to the street at the famous Moscow Cats Theatre.

There it was: 26 Kutuzovsky Prospekt (Avenue), the former home to Secretary Brezhnev.

I'm certain that soon his plaque will again adorn the building. The plaque had been removed in 1988 after a decision by the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet parliament and the Council of Ministers directed that the names of Leonid Brezhnev and Konstantin Chernenko be removed from all public places.


His name is spelled in Cyrillic as: L-e-o-n-i-d I-l-i-ch B-r-e-zh-n-e-v. height=253

Cyrillic: L-e-o-n-i-d   I-l-i-ch   B-r-e-zh-n-e-v.

The expected decision to reinstate the Brezhnev plaque is part of a drive by President Vladimir Putin to rehabilitate Brezhnev's reputation and memory, the bland Soviet leader who turned on his two closest mentors when he thought it possible to seize power. Except for Stalin, no other Soviet leader ruled for as long as Brezhnev, from 1964 to 1982.
« Last Edit: May 31, 2013, 07:35:59 AM by mendeleyev »
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Offline Ooooops

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #1 on: May 30, 2013, 11:29:33 PM »
I met Leonid Brezhnev in June of 1973 at the White House, Washington DC.


I went to 1st grade in September 1971.   :D


Interesting write up, thanks!

Offline mendeleyev

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #2 on: May 30, 2013, 11:53:19 PM »
Quote
Interesting write up, thanks!


You are welcome, Ooooops.   :)
« Last Edit: May 30, 2013, 11:59:10 PM by mendeleyev »
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Offline mendeleyev

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #3 on: May 30, 2013, 11:54:25 PM »
I forgot to mention that to see the photos in larger form you may simply click on them.
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Offline Ooooops

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #4 on: May 31, 2013, 01:43:37 AM »
I grew up with "Дорогой Леонид Ильич" and his eyebrows on TV all the time.  Second longest presiding ruler of Russia after Stalin.   I wonder if Putin will surpass them...   

Offline mendeleyev

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #5 on: May 31, 2013, 07:39:18 AM »
Ooooops, thanks for the heads up. Yesterday I'd done a lot of editing and that little "except for Stalin" phrase needed to be added to the sentence on Brezhnev's length of time in office.

I don't think that Mr. Putin will rule as long but I've certainly been wrong before so we'll have to wait and see. For the first time his nationwide approval ratings have dropped below 50% but that doesn't always translate into changes at the voting booth.
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Offline Chicagoguy

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #6 on: May 31, 2013, 07:59:35 AM »
 

 "but that doesn't always translate into changes at the voting booth."
Assuming votes are all counted in a legal and fair way. As we always do in Chicago  8)

Offline Boethius

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #7 on: May 31, 2013, 09:04:08 AM »
Under Brezhnev, there was an uncontrolled party, above the law.  Interesting the current regime would want to rehabilitate that.
After the fall of communism, the biggest mistake Boris Yeltsin's regime made was not to disband the KGB altogether. Instead it changed its name to the FSB and, to many observers, morphed into a gangster organisation, eventually headed by master criminal Vladimir Putin. - Gerard Batten

Offline Larry1

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #8 on: May 31, 2013, 09:52:29 AM »
It's interesting that Putin would show such approval for a party leader who presided over the long stagnation of the Soviet Union and handed over to his successors a moribund economy.

Offline mendeleyev

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #9 on: May 31, 2013, 10:06:28 AM »
It is interesting and I've given it a lot of thought. One possible hint is that Brezhnev was the leader for Mr. Putin's childhood years and then most of his service in the KGB. Brezhnev was at the helm of the country that Putin wishes had remained intact. Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Moscow's "Rain TV" that "Brezhnev wasn't a minus for the history of our country, he was a huge plus. He laid the foundation of the economy, agriculture, etc."


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Offline Gator

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #10 on: May 31, 2013, 10:19:42 AM »
The Soviet jokes reveal much regarding the policies of each leader.  This in my favorite Soviet political joke as it contrasts Stalin, Khrushchev,  Brezhnev and Gorbachev.   
 

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #11 on: May 31, 2013, 10:24:42 AM »

I went to 1st grade in September 1971.   :D


So did my wife.   Your age is the best!    :)   Memories of the functioning USSR, the tumultuous transition to capitalism, and the New Russia.

Offline Belvis

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #12 on: May 31, 2013, 12:49:47 PM »
It is interesting and I've given it a lot of thought. One possible hint is that Brezhnev was the leader for Mr. Putin's childhood years and then most of his service in the KGB.
I don't think Putin appreciates Brezhnev of nostalgia. Actually he was not the worst Soviet leader especially when we see who preceded him and who superseded. However all memory about him was erased in  public consciousness except jokes and  mockery. Oooops was growing almost 20 years under his rule bu remember only his eyebrows I bet  :)
Putin is trying to recover some respect to former leader  motivated by rather  moral  values than political considerations, as I see it.

Marshal Brezhnev was notorious for his love to decorations:


Marshal Brezhnevputin

Offline OlgaH

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #13 on: May 31, 2013, 01:50:04 PM »

Putin is trying to recover some respect to former leader  motivated by rather  moral  values than political considerations, as I see it.


Moral values always have been a political tool no matter of time.  The communist regime was also built and held on the communist moral values (whoever is not with  us against us)
 
There is nothing more powerful and scarier than the hordes of "blind patriotic" fanatics supporting their leader...

Offline OlgaH

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #14 on: May 31, 2013, 02:12:41 PM »
Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Moscow's "Rain TV" that "Brezhnev wasn't a minus for the history of our country, he was a huge plus. He laid the foundation of the economy, agriculture, etc."


Really?  :D Did he mention so "famous"- infamous приписки (pree-pee-ski) upward distortion (exaggerated figures of economic growth in the USSR)?

Offline mendeleyev

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #15 on: May 31, 2013, 02:34:28 PM »
Quote
Moral values always have been a political tool no matter of time.  The communist regime was also built and held on the communist moral values (whoever is not with  us against us)

Olga, we're entering such a phase again. In some aspects a nationalism has begun to creep in but in other ways, citizens are questioning the status quo.


As to economic numbers, yes of course they were exaggerated. At the end the CCCP was financially bankrupt and the average citizen had no idea because of the distortions in reporting of all those "successful" 5-year plans.
« Last Edit: May 31, 2013, 02:40:15 PM by mendeleyev »
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Offline Boethius

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #16 on: May 31, 2013, 02:45:47 PM »
I recall reading some KGB reports to the Politburo which indicated that the Soviet economy was in stagnation from the late 1950's.   They were online at one point, it may have been in some of the documents Bukovsky had copied when he had access to Soviet archives, I can't recall, offhand.  I do know I can't find them now, though they may be available in an offline search.
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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #17 on: May 31, 2013, 03:25:17 PM »
Really?  :D Did he mention so "famous"- infamous приписки (pree-pee-ski) upward distortion (exaggerated figures of economic growth in the USSR)?

Hence Brezhnev's comment in the cartoon about the stopped train, "Close the curtains and pretend we're moving."

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #18 on: May 31, 2013, 03:37:00 PM »
Olga, we're entering such a phase again. In some aspects a nationalism has begun to creep in but in other ways, citizens are questioning the status quo.


As to economic numbers, yes of course they were exaggerated. At the end the CCCP was financially bankrupt and the average citizen had no idea because of the distortions in reporting of all those "successful" 5-year plans.

mendeleyev, it is not just about status quo and nationalism. It is also about, for example, pro Putin voters (especially so called бюджетники "budget" employee and workers)   because he promised them free apartments and salary/pension raise, and they are not interested where all the money comes from to pay for all the promises and what burden and hoops the businesses have to endure to survive. One of my Russian neighbours who is pro Putin state employee with university degree in economics and "red" diploma still cannot get why inflation eats her Putin's rise in wages faster than he can promise  ;D but she loves uncle Putin and waits for her next salary raise and perks. And it was a surprise for her when she finally got to know that the state budget revenue almost exclusively comes from taxes  :D

Offline Ooooops

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #19 on: May 31, 2013, 03:41:49 PM »

So did my wife.   Your age is the best!    :) 


 Memories of the functioning USSR, the tumultuous transition to capitalism, and the New Russia.


If you say so.    :D


Oh yes...   There is a curse in Russian (and, obviously, in Chinese) - "May you live in interesting times"...
« Last Edit: May 31, 2013, 03:45:18 PM by Ooooops »

Offline Ooooops

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #20 on: May 31, 2013, 03:43:30 PM »
Oooops was growing almost 20 years under his rule bu remember only his eyebrows I bet  :)


Not true!   I also remember his life changing book "Malaya Zemlya"!   :D :D :D   

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #21 on: May 31, 2013, 03:54:29 PM »
Quote
mendeleyev, it is not just about status quo and nationalism. It is also about, for example, pro Putin voters (especially so called бюджетники "budget" employee and workers)   because he promised them free apartments and salary/pension raise, and they are not interested where all the money comes from to pay for all the promises and what burden and hoops the businesses have to endure to survive. One of my Russian neighbours who is pro Putin state employee with university degree in economics and "red" diploma still cannot get why inflation eats her Putin's rise in wages faster than he can promise  ;D but she loves uncle Putin and waits for her next salary raise and perks. And it was a surprise for her when she finally got to know that the state budget revenue almost exclusively comes from taxes

Exactly, Olga.

This is why a deputy PM was fired last week--Mr. Putin made promises that simply cannot be kept at current tax receipts and his cabinet cannot fill the promises fast enough. The Kremlin controlled gas/oil giant Gazprom is feeling the pinch as the government has gone back and asked for additional money because oil revenue is not meeting tax levels needed to keep up with his promises.

To make matters worse, Putin promised more free stuff to new pensioners and they still have not fulfilled all housing obligations promised years ago to veterans of the war of Nazi aggression, 41-45!

When Treasury Minister Alexei Kudrin quit, all financial responsibility went out the window as Putin earmarked much of the country's reserves to fulfill campaign promises.
« Last Edit: May 31, 2013, 04:00:14 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 Ooooops

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #22 on: May 31, 2013, 04:11:44 PM »

Из-за отсутствия свободного места, спину тов. Брежнева принято считать частью груди!  (с)


Offline OlgaH

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #23 on: May 31, 2013, 04:24:50 PM »

Not true!   I also remember his life changing book "Malaya Zemlya"!   :D :D :D

I remember it as the pain in the neck... his trilogy Малая земля, Возрождение и Целина (The small land, Rebirth, and Virgin Lands).

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #24 on: May 31, 2013, 04:53:12 PM »
I remember it as the pain in the neck... his trilogy Малая земля, Возрождение и Целина (The small land, Rebirth, and Virgin Lands).


To tell you the truth, I don't remember anything but titles...    :-*   But I had A+ grades for those essays, filled with just as much hot air as Mr.Brezhnev's speeches...    :D

 

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