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Author Topic: Life in Russia  (Read 15278 times)

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Offline OlgaH

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #25 on: May 31, 2013, 05:03:15 PM »

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

I believe you. I went through it too... but we had to memorize some paragraphs and even a page. Our "sadistic" teacher never told us the pages' numbers only "about", so we had to find it. It went out as soon as we were done... only titles left.  :D

Offline Gator

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #26 on: June 01, 2013, 04:26:24 AM »

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

I believe you. I went through it too... but we had to memorize some paragraphs and even a page.... It went out as soon as we were done... only titles left.

For some reason I don't think we are talking about the equivalent of Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, one of the few speeches American students had to memorize. 
 
 

Offline mendeleyev

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #27 on: June 01, 2013, 06:09:27 AM »
Gator, loved the cartoon! There is a lot of truth in humour sometimes.
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Offline Anotherkiwi

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #28 on: June 01, 2013, 04:18:17 PM »
...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?"

I'd really love to know the answer!  I'm stuck with the same, so much so that several of my RW contacts have referred to me as "their" Brezhnev!  :-[

Offline Ooooops

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #29 on: June 06, 2013, 06:25:11 PM »

City to Create Residential Zone for Expats

Moscow authorities plan to attract investors to the construction of residential areas for foreign businessmen working in Russia and their families, first deputy head of City Hall's department of economic policy and development Alexei Peshkov said Wednesday.


http://www.themoscowtimes.com/business/article/city-to-create-residential-zone-for-expats/481152.html
« Last Edit: June 06, 2013, 11:12:55 PM by Ooooops »

Offline mendeleyev

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #30 on: June 06, 2013, 11:04:57 PM »
It is official: the Putin marriage is over.

Unofficially that has been the reality for several years. Rarely seen together in public, it was usually at Easter in the splendor of Russia's national Cathedral of Christ the Saviour that the public might see the couple standing side by side, as in 2011 and 2008. Mr. Putin attended services alone, standing by Dmitry and Svetlana Medvedeva in 2010 and 2009.

Easter 2011, Moscow's Christ Cathedral. height=346
Easter 2011, Moscow's Christ Cathedral.

Outside of the occasional greeting of visiting foreign leaders, one could count on one hand the public sightings of the two together. That would include Easter 2011, casting their ballots in the presidential election of March 2012, the presidential inauguration in the Kremlin Grand Palace (followed by the ceremonial blessing in the Kremlin's ancient Annunciation Cathedral), and the funeral of Patriarch Alexi II in 2008.

They usually spent Christmas holidays apart; Mr. Putin spent Christmas alone in a village outside Moscow last year.

2012 Presidential inauguration, Kremlin Annunciation Cathedral. height=331
2012 Presidential inauguration, Kremlin Annunciation Cathedral.

Journalists knew better than to inquire about family matters, so when President and Mrs. Putina granted an interview last night to state television channel Russia 24 after taking the first act in a performance of the Esmeralda ballet, the announcement came as a surprise. The Russian people have for some time sensed the end of the marriage, yet conservative attitudes held that the public had come to expect the couple to maintain silence on the issue while in public office.


Vladimir and Lyudmila attended the first act of the Esmeralda ballet. height=331
Vladimir and Lyudmila attended the first act of the Esmeralda ballet in the Kremlin Grand Palace.

There they stood, she watching him intensely, at they approached a camera crew in the Grand Kremlin Palace. Mr. Putin began first and then Lyudmila said her piece briefly as in less in a minute it was clear that the marriage was over. In the words of the gracious Lyudmila, "our marriage is over because we barely see either other...our children are grown...we simply don't see either other."
Mrs. Putina's comments lasted a scant 19 seconds, yet twice she mentioned that they never see each other, a point that while obvious still struck this reporter as sad for both of them.




Lyudmila Putina will fade from view, of this we are certain. The rare days of seeing her at official functions, mostly of Mrs. Putina holding one of their dogs when foreign dignitaries visited the presidential residence at Novo-Ogaryovo outside Moscow, are over. Both dog lovers, the two pledged to remain friends--but no word yet on what happens to the family pooches: Koni, Yume and Buffy.


Koni wears a Russian global navigation satellite system collar called GLONASS. height=545
Koni wears a Russian global navigation satellite system collar called GLONASS.

Koni is a hit with journalists--so much so that the presidential press office issued a friendly but official request from Mr. Putin asking journalists not to feed Koni. "Sometimes, Koni leaves a room full of journalists with a very pleased expression on her face and biscuit crumbs around her mouth...Please don't feed my dog."  Koni was born in 1999 and is frequently at President Putin's side when greeting foreign dignitaries at his office in Novo-Ogarvovo.

Mrs. Putina is considered to be a specialist in Russian language and is expected to continue her work on preserving the integrity of the language.

An airlines stewardess in the early 1980s, Lyudmila Putina. height=498

An airlines stewardess in the early 1980s, Lyudmila Putina.

Vladimir Putin and Lyudmila Shkrebneva met in 1980 and dated three years prior to their  marriage on 28 July 1983. He made a promise to stay out of the KGB but it wasn't long before the new Mrs. Putina, a trained linguist, found herself learning to speak German fluently when they moved to East Germany where Mr. Putin oversaw the East German state security apparatus.


The Putins in the East German Democratic Republic. height=330
The Putins in the East German Democratic Republic.

Although clear that the two lived separate lives for years and while rumours swirled regarding Mr. Putin's supposed affairs, he scrupulously wore his wedding band and if Lyudmila was mentioned in conversation his comments while brief have been respectful.


The Putin's with their older dog, Conny. height=368
The Putin's with their older dog, Koni, a black lab.

The couple was last seen together in public for his inauguration of his third term as president on 7 May 2012. Their divorce announcement came at the same place, the stately Kremlin Grand Palace.


2012 Inauguration, Mrs. Putina greets Germany' Gerhard Schroder. height=332
2012 Inauguration, Mrs. Putina greets Germany' Gerhard Schroder.

Some speculated over recent years that Mrs. Putina had "taken the veil" and entered a woman's monastery--something that might have been a more common form of banishment for royal wives during the years of the Russian Empire.

Russian media is the past had speculated that Mr. Putin maintains an affair with Russian gymnast Alina Kabayeva . The Russian newspaper that first reported the story, Moskovsky Korrespondent, was shut down soon after the story was published.





The Putins have two daughters, Maria is 27 and Yekaterina is 26, and both girls live and work in Moscow although the press is denied access to them. The two daughters attended German-language schools and then studied under assumed names at the State University in Saint Petersburg where Maria studied biology and Yekaterina majored in Asian Studies. Both are rumoured to be romantically involved with foreigners.
« Last Edit: June 06, 2013, 11:07:50 PM by mendeleyev »
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Offline mendeleyev

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #31 on: June 07, 2013, 01:03:40 AM »
Well, you knew that public reaction would vary at the announcement of the Putin divorce and we will try to cover that to some extent here at the Mendeleyev Journal.

During the opposition protests one of the most commonplace slogans shouted at protest rallies and seen on signs is "Россия без Путина!" (Russia without Putin).

Людмила без Путина = Lyudmila without Putin. height=331

So it didn't take long for the first glimpses of graffiti around parts of Moscow to slightly alter the slogan to Людмила без Путина (Lyudmila without Putin).

Toptwit.ru, a service that monitors and counts twitter messages reports that the phrase Людмила без Путина is one of the most common tweets by Russian users today.
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Offline ML

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #32 on: June 08, 2013, 03:03:16 PM »
. . . Mr. Putin spent Christmas alone in a village outside Moscow last year.


Shouldn't this say:  Mr. Putin spent Christmas in a village outside Moscow last year without Mrs. Putin.

I don't know . . . just asking.
A beautiful woman is pleasant to look at, but it is easier to live with a pleasant acting one.

Offline mendeleyev

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #33 on: June 08, 2013, 07:52:30 PM »
...you're probably right. Depends on the emphasis being made. I'll accept your edit, ML.  :)
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Offline Anotherkiwi

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #34 on: June 08, 2013, 09:45:42 PM »
...you're probably right. Depends on the emphasis being made. I'll accept your edit, ML.  :)

Even if he was "alone," there would surely have been bodyguards and FSB agents swarming all over the place.

Offline mendeleyev

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Re: Life in Russia
« Reply #35 on: June 08, 2013, 10:46:57 PM »
...and pesky journalists.  :)

More I think of it, I like ML's suggestion.
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