27 февраля 2007

some tyrannies are so close...

…you don’t realise how bad they are until they’re gone. adam and the ants dominion over the charts in the early 1980s springs to mind, as does the belief in a cartesian dualism, and, the archetype of them all, the bogeyman under the bed. typically, we accept, for example, how great the double-drum sound of adam and the ants is, how the tribal chant supplants the need for melody, a good voice and someone who can actually play the guitar with a kind of ur-sound which speaks to the primeval soul within us all. only later, after rehab and madness and vanessa feltz, does enlightenment visit us with a glimpse of the terrible truth: ant music was garbage.

in a similar vein, last friday i realised the passing of another tyranny of which i had previously been unaware: greeting cards. it was when the builders stopped that i knew it was an important day. the builders just down the road from me work a minimum of 12 hours a day, 7 days a week, often more. it doesn’t matter if it is minus 40 and a blizzard, they simply keep going. they are driven. however, last friday they stopped, and the reason for this was that it was ‘defender of the motherland day’, or, as some of my students explained it to me – ‘man day’. on this day, all russia celebrates men and how great they are. it makes a pleasant change to celebrate the awesomeness of men but, even so, i had thought it might be one of the kind of made-up days, like ‘bosses’ day’ of the kind we have in england. nevertheless, when the builders stopped i knew it was for real.

because they are ever thoughtful, the russians i know made me feel like a defender of the motherland too by giving me the appropriate greeting and little gifts. what they didn’t give me, though, was cards. nor did i get any cards at new year or christmas or valentine’s or any of the other special days since i have been here. the reason for all this is not because they think i can’t read; rather, it hit me on friday, it’s because there aren’t any cards to give – siberia is a card-free zone. suddenly, the cause of the lightness of spirit i have felt since being here, the extra spring in my step, and the causal joie de vivre with which i take each day is clear – i am free from the tyranny of getting cards. no more hours misspent amongst acres of over-priced pink cardboard, searching for that elusive hallmark verse which is both highly irreverent and deeply sincere and which will have a masterpiece of postmodern art on the front designed to reveal all the depth and shade of my personality. no. this is russia and the tyranny is over: happy day to you all.

19 февраля 2007

god will forgive you...

…apparently. at least he will if you asked for forgiveness yesterday. this is because yesterday was the last day of mazlinitsa. mazlinitsa is like pancake day but spread over a whole week, and this is in a country where pancake day is already spread over the whole year, so you can imagine why some form of forgiveness might be called for. unsurprisingly, then, the last day of mazlinitsa is called forgiveness day. the idea is that you ask for forgiveness from everybody you know, whether you think you need to or not, because you never know whom you have accidentally slighted. when someone asks for forgiveness, you simply reply ‘god will forgive you’. and that is that.

it is all strangely touching – being absolved of an offence of which you are unaware – especially when combined with the mighty blini. the connection between the two seems fragile at first but it is all to do with renewal, as mazlinitsa is actually a festival to say goodbye to winter. blini are symbols of the sun, and of the warmth which is now so close. well, not that close actually. it is minus 34, as i write, and it is snowing and blowing a gale. not even the toughest parts of skegness would consider that summer weather, but still, it was minus 40 the day before so maybe the great pancake in the sky really is on its way. either way, i hope you can forgive me.

12 февраля 2007

some people eat caviar here...


...some people don't.

04 февраля 2007

sometimes you have to get a train...

…when you get a train on the trans-siberian railway. sometimes you don’t. sometimes you can get an electrichka instead. this is better than a train apparently, although it looks remarkably like a train, largely due to the fact that it is actually a train. there are other non-train trains you can get too which also look like trains, but you had better be dead or drunk before you get one of them because everyone else on board will be too. it is a very complicated system.

it is made more complicated by the fact that you have to be stephen hawkings to understand the space-time continuum in which you will be travelling. this is because all the trains in russia operate on moscow time. moscow is several time zones away. when you look at your ticket for the time of your train, you have to do maths to work it out. this is hard. there is a whole chapter on it in ‘a brief history of time’. first of all you have to determine whether you are adding or subtracting, then you have to decide how much you’re going to add or subtract, and then you actually have to do the addition or subtraction – all without the use of excel. you can’t even look at the station clock to help you because you aren’t sure if it’s siberian time or moscow time. they could be trying to trick you, after all.

luckily, i spot a group of quantum mathematicians and hang around listening to them until i have the correct answers (with working out). my iq certified, i join the rest of the population of siberia in the waiting room. everyone i don’t know is there. there is a man with one leg and a long beard, who looks like he sailed with ahab, hawking for change with a tin cup. there is a card school with old men smoking cigars. there is a makeshift nursery using suitcases as crawl-proof walls. a middle-aged woman with slack jowls sleeps with her head lolled back over the seat. a family share satsumas from a handkerchief spread on a babooshka’s lap. a couple stand in the corner embracing tightly, with their heads on each others’ shoulders, not talking. it is not as frenetic or as anonymous as a large british train station. there is life but there is no fuss.

there are also no seats left, so i’m happy when it’s time for me to find my train. it is due to leave from platform 2, it says on the board. unfortunately, when i get outside, i discover that not only is there no platform 2, there are no platforms at all. what there is, is a great snowy plain with trains as long as the horizon. it is fantastic – like a station from a world war 2 film or ‘dr zhivago’. the trains and carriages have no discernible livery beyond a kind of faded darkness. they look like they are haunted relics from the revolution, used for transporting troops to the front to fight the white bolsheviks. i can’t wait to get on board. i am expecting straw.

getting on board is not as simple as it sounds. without a platform and with no steps, it is a big leap from the ground to the train. but, as ever, people help each other, dragging the short and the infirm by their wrists onto the carriage. once inside, there is no straw. instead, there are nooks made from dark wood, as if the whole thing were an old pub on tracks. and like my idea of a perfect pub, there are dark leather benches which you can stretch out on. i can smell alcohol too, so all that’s missing is a dart board. i say hello to my companions in the nook – a couple and a young woman – and sit down. all is well.

and then the conductor shows up. there is one for each carriage and i show her my ticket and passport (and insurance docket – reassuringly bought for every journey). clearly a very curious woman, she starts asking me questions about my sleeping habits. it all seems a little personal when we hardly know each other but i show willing and reply as best as i am able. surprisingly, given that this is siberia, she doesn’t seem to understand russian – specifically my russian. we babble at each other for a bit while i try out different facial expressions – ‘somewhat confused’, ‘not really very sure’, ‘quite uncertain’, ‘flummoxed’, and finally, ‘oo it’s all so mysterious’. in the end i admit, in russian, that i can’t speak russian and that i am a stupid foreigner, in the hope that she will leave me alone.

but no, the young woman next to me has, it turns out, a basic grasp of english.
- you sleep? she asks, pointing to the plank of wood above our heads.
- eh? i reply, using one of the many words common to both languages.
and so it goes on until it’s revealed to me that my ticket is for the fold-down bench six feet in the air. the bench i was sitting on is for the young woman only. naturally, there are no steps and i have to vault up to my new abode using the table. once again, i am forced to ponder the miserable fate of short people in russia.

to begin with, i feel very isolated up there. way down below, as if on a beach seen from some cliffs, the couple have laid out a picnic on the table and are busy sharing it with the evil young woman who understands the devil’s tongue. i worry about my boots, left behind me on the floor. if this were england, they would surely be stolen. and then there’s the fact that i can’t sit up – i am forced to lie down. suddenly it hits me – how fantastic! i am forced to lie down. there is no need to negotiate for knee room with the person opposite, and no jostling for elbow room with the person beside you. i have a bed all to myself and i can do nothing but relax for the next five hours. i watch siberia sail by through the window – it is all wilderness and snow for hundreds of miles. it is hypnotic, and eventually i overcome my fear of falling out of my bunk and fall asleep.

i am reluctant to get up, or down, when my five hours is nearly up, but russian trains are as punctual as the swiss and when the time comes i have to move. i am unable to think of a dignified way to get down for some reason, and so i launch myself off the top as if i were doing parachute training and land on the man sitting opposite. i immediately apologise. the young woman then translates his reply. we all begin to talk in halting english and russian. almost instantly, there is a small crowd. they quiz the young woman. as i am secretly fluent now, i understand they are asking her if she understands me. she says she does a bit but boy, does he speak fast compared to my teacher – and that accent! you don’t hear that on the tapes. then they have a brief competition to see who can imitate me the best. unflatteringly, they all sound like ducks, but still i smile graciously while they wet themselves laughing. i am offered food and drink but it is time to disembark. as we shuffle off, i wonder if this is how it is if you are a foreigner travelling on british trains. if it is, i can’t imagine that the equivalent journey, london-aberdeen, would cost just £4. but then you get steps and a platform in britain and obviously they don’t come cheap.

01 февраля 2007

i am standing on the roof...

…of the tallest building in yekaterinburg. it is the middle of the night. it is icy. it is windy. there is no railing. and there is no guard. it is a beautiful sight and i am reminded once again of the little freedoms the russians enjoy that we don’t.
- you would never be allowed to do this in britain, i say to my friend.
- why not? he asks.
- for health and safety reasons. plus, people would jump off.
- they would jump off? why?
- because they could.
- o, he says, pausing to think about this strange idea, in russia we would only jump off if they told us we couldn’t.