Showing posts with label khrushchev. Show all posts
Showing posts with label khrushchev. Show all posts

11 March 2010

"Khrushchev and His Time"

It was sobering to notice how many of 
these magazine covers looked familiar to me!
Click on this link (archived) for Life's gallery,
"Why Communism Terrified Us."
Time's first Khrushchev cover, eight months 
after Stalin's death.
. . . is the name of an excellent exhibition at the Manezh, next door to the Kremlin, in Moscow. It is scheduled to close at that location on Sunday. The exhibit is a project of the Moscow House of Photography--click on this link for their English-language announcement and sample of photos. House of Photography founder Olga Sviblova explains some of the impulse behind this exhibit in her article "Why we organized the 'Khrushchev and His Time' exhibit" (Russian); here's an excerpt:
I was fortunate enough to study in one of Khrushchev's "lyceums": Mathematics School 444. It was Khrushchev who had opened special math and language schools for the restoration of a society that had been genetically altered by Stalinist repression. This same Khrushchev was the one who began taking down the Iron Curtain by way of the Youth and Student Festival in 1957, and by invitations to Western artists and performers. Under Stalin, knowing a foreign language could serve as a pretext for repression; Khrushchev began to restore foreign language instruction through those special schools.

I can't speak for others, but our school was absolutely free. We weren't just taught to think math. In our literature classes we read Aksyonov, Vosnesensky, Voinovich, Solzhenitsyn, as well as dissidents' letters. Our teachers, coming from their institutions of higher education to our school, believed that life had begun to change, and that each of us was responsible for the vectors of this change. I'll write more about this school, which did so much to shape me, on another occasion. Right now my main point is what I learned there: I was taught confidence, that we make our history with our own hands, and that freedom is inseparable from responsibility.

Under Khrushchev, our family moved from a communalka to our own separate apartment in a khrushchyovka [more pictures here] in Izmailovo. Today we are getting rid of these five-story units, and few people remember how good these gingerbread homes were, painted as they were in all colors of the rainbow, with small but private kitchens and bathrooms. ...

Khrushchev's time was a time of physicists and poets, a time when education began to be respected more than the Party membership card, a time when everyone took their backpacks and went hiking into the mountains, singing the songs of Okudzhava and Vysotsky around the campfire, looking up at the the stars--somehow we were beginning to look up to the sky, not just down at our feet.
Sviblova isn't blindly sentimental; she mentions the shadow side of the Khrushchev era, and how soon some of the old chill returned, but the Khrushchev thaw--that huge change in quality of life for millions--is as important a legacy for Khrushchev as the negatives we can so quickly recite: Hungary, the Berlin Wall, Pasternak's repression, the massive anti-religion campaign, the scandal at the Manege avant-garde artists' exhibition, the shoe-thumping at the United Nations.

In 2007, I lived in a khrushchyovka for two months. For one person, it was very nice. (Can't say what it would have been like for a family!) Memories of Khrushchev himself go back to my childhood in Chicago, to October 1962, when I remember my parents anxiously scanning the airwaves with our Hallicrafters short wave radio, trying to figure out how the Cuban missile crisis would turn out. Even before that, I remember a political cartoon--Khrushchev propelling a Soviet spacecraft into orbit by bouncing it off the U.S. president's head. And I vividly remember being in a drama class in October 1964 when I heard the news that Khrushchev had been removed from power.

At the Manezh exhibit last Saturday, deeper visual memories must have been triggered. The wall of newsmagazine cover pictures of Khrushchev included several that seemed very familiar. We were there to meet our friend Vicky and two of her English language students--all of whom were born years after Khrushchev died. Although most of the others at the exhibition were about our age or older, there were a good number of young adults in attendance.

Along with the hundreds of photos and copies of documents, video installations played loops of newsreel footage and samples of Khrushchev-era popular culture. Among the many highlights--the defense of Stalingrad; the development of the Moscow Metro; memos and orders relating to the suppression of the rebellion in Hungary; documents from the GULAG; the 1956 "secret" speech denouncing Stalin; Khrushchev meeting Van Cliburn; the Pasternak case; Khrushchev and Gagarin; and Khrushchev in retirement. As the exhibit's introductory text notes, he was the first Soviet leader who was not the least bit camera-shy; and in part the exhibit is a tribute to the wonderful photographers who took advantage of this access to help build up a cumulative portrait of this impulsive and contradictory leader who, for a season, was definitely on the world's center stage.


Earlham College considers a split with Indiana Yearly Meeting.

Anne Jackson talks about porn addiction and shame and the importance of confession in this podcast on the Samson Society's site. The hosts also talk about (and quote from) the new book by Patrick Carnes, In The Shadows of The Net: Breaking Free from Compulsive Online Sexual Behavior. (Thanks to Anne Jackson's own blog for the reference.)

How Peter Hitchens found God and peace with his famous atheist brother Christopher. (Thanks to Glendora Friends Church's blog for the reference.)

Lynn Gazis-Sax provides a wonderfully thoughtful overview (no surprise there!) of the Greek financial crisis.

Two tragic anniversaries: Tom Fox (March 10), Rachel Corrie (March 16).


This clip could be called "Muddy Waters and His Time," a gallery of magnificent blues performers--including James Cotton, Sonny Terry, Brownie McGhee, Mable Hillary, Sunnyland Slim, Otis Spann, Willie Dixon--most of whom are now no longer with us.


Bye, Bye Bye Baby, Goodbye - Blues Masters bhgbjazz

28 February 2006

A busy weekend

Some examples:
  • Russians and many others marked the 50th anniversary of Khrushchev's secret speech to the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1956. In addition to the Sean's Russian Blog's postings I mentioned last week, Sean provides a great summary of weekend coverage of this anniversary here, along with a fascinating critical look at some survey information on current attitudes.

    I didn't look at all the links, but the column in Izvestia was particularly poignant. The title of the piece was taken from a comment Khrushchev made in March 1956 to a meeting of the Polish ruling party: "Without Stalin, ... perhaps there would not even have been a war." The article includes discussions about the speech in CPSU leadership sessions, related minutes and protocols, samples of the feedback received from local Party cells, including letters denouncing Khrushchev's betrayal of Stalin, and other ripples from Khrushchev's speech.

    Daniel Schorr reminisced about the secret speech on National Public Radio: "It was fifty years ago this weekend, but I remember it like yesterday." I believe him.


  • Portia at church, from www.jamaica-gleaner.comJamaica's People's National Party, the party of outgoing prime minister P.J. Patterson, elected Portia Simpson Miller, as the first woman president of the party, and consequently as the first woman to serve as prime minister of Jamaica, when Patterson steps down. She opened her eloquent victory speech by saying, "Tonight I give the glory to God Almighty" and quoting Isaiah 40:31: "But they that wait upon the LORD shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint." As she went into the leadership race, she was not the leading contender; some commentators said that controversies over police brutality (a problem even when a Quaker was head of Jamaica's police forces) gave her an edge over the national security minister.


  • The Winter Olympics in Turin came to an end. Norway ended up in sixth place by the New York Times total medal count, and in 13th place by Aftenposten's gold-weighted count. Well, I guess it's time for me to go back to being a world citizen. (But not before this chauvinistic whisper: Norway still beats the world handily in medals per capita.)


  • Over the weekend, Quakers continued to post interesting things in their weblogs! The problem is that the same subjects are coming around again and again, as they should—nothing final is ever said, and new voices must be heard—but now I find I have less energy to repeat the things I said in previous rounds, as valid as I thought they might be. Example of a very helpful exchange: Zach on "outer sacraments"—and read the comments as well. My mind is no more made up than it was when I wrote this entry on "worship seeking understanding"—I love the "motions" of worship but am dubious about investing those motions with ritualistic or mystical legitimacy.


  • Iraq is in agony. The U.S. administration's moral bankruptcy continues to be exposed as more voices weigh in on torture. We have no news about the Christian Peacemaker Teams hostages. Sudan's crisis spills into Chad ... and vice versa. Why am I not on my knees instead of keyboarding?


  • By comparison with most of the world, I had a restful weekend. A Mennonite friend and I spent part of Saturday at Edúcate Ya in training as English-as-a-second-language teachers; we rolled out our proposed after-church classes at Ministerios Restauración on Sunday.