海角大神

Russians shouldn鈥檛 bury Lenin until they uncover his lies

Russians must face up to Lenin鈥檚 brutal legacy 鈥 as Germans did Hitler鈥檚.

Vladimir Lenin鈥檚 embalmed body has been on display in Moscow鈥檚 Red Square since 1924. Today, momentum is building to finally bury the man-god of Soviet Russia in a plot of common ground. Russia鈥檚 leading political party even hosted an online poll recently allowing Russians to vote on the idea. About two-thirds backed it.

Burying Lenin would be terribly dishonest. It would risk erasing the brutally violent communist legacy he spawned. His strain of socialism bankrupted Russia morally and economically, leaving it in many respects a third-world country 鈥 even today. It saddled the Soviet Union with an economy designed in the 1920s, symbolized by a hammer and sickle, trying to compete in the age of the microchip.

The Leninist promise of a new international world order became a stratagem as well as a devious excuse for restoration of the old Russian imperial empire. Lenin鈥檚 new communist world order promised to abolish colonialism and imperialism but it perpetuated both shamefully, enslaving millions beyond Russia鈥檚 borders.

It may be the Russian tradition 鈥渘ot to take your garbage outside the hut,鈥 as one peasant proverb says, but it is important for present and future generations of Russians to understand that mere mortals never become gods. The Roman emperors never pulled it off; neither could Joseph Stalin or Mao Zedong.

Reminders of dangerous personality cult

When new nationalist saviors like current Prime Minister Vladimir Putin appear on stage, flaunting the same arrogance Lenin practiced with his messianic vision, Russians ought to be able to look at Lenin鈥檚 tomb for a chilling reminder that rigid, intolerant ideologies are usually flawed and destructive beyond imagining.

The cult of personality that Lenin and his heirs promoted led to gulags, mass famine, genocide, and other unspeakable evils. Russians need visible symbols like that granite mausoleum in Red Square to remind all of us of the crimes committed by leaders who are certain that there is but one true vision 鈥 theirs.

Learn history's lessons

History can be swept under the rug temporarily but it doesn鈥檛 stay there forever. Only recently did historians learn that Mao Zedong killed 45 million Chinese in a forced famine in the four years between 1958 and 1962.

Modern societies, if they are to remain civilized and cultured, require healthy doses of introspection, self-criticism, and atonement to prevent backsliding into medieval darkness and savagery.

Why Westerners have a say

The Russian poet Alexander Pushkin is credited with having said, 鈥淚f you want to hear something stupid, ask a foreigner what he thinks of Russia.鈥 Perhaps, but the Soviet Union was also my home for five years and Lenin and his heirs shaped so much of the 20th century beyond Russia鈥檚 borders that today non-Russians have a right and an obligation to weigh in on Lenin鈥檚 legacy.

To Westerners who witnessed the Soviet Union鈥檚 sunset years, there was little illusion but that Lenin鈥檚 legacy was intellectually thin and tattered. My former colleague Andy Rosenthal used to jokingly call him 鈥淒ead Fred the Head Red.鈥 This was heresy and sacrilege to generations of Soviet citizens. But it was a welcome alternative to obsequious verses like this from Russian poet Demian Bednyi, 鈥淟enin! O Lenin! Your immutable fate has shown the world a resplendent path.鈥

As this year鈥檚 online poll shows, Russians appear to be gaining some healthy skepticism about Lenin. As recently as 2004, a survey showed that 63 percent of Russians had a positive view of Lenin鈥檚 role in history 鈥 though younger respondents had a much lower impression. Most young Russians I meet in the US today are indifferent to Lenin鈥檚 legacy. But therein lies the rub, for those who forget the past are often condemned to repeat it.

Condemned to repeat it?

So much of Lenin鈥檚 Soviet Union was a bald fabrication, and hundreds of millions of Russians dutifully lived the lies. It was a terrible betrayal of the Russian people who were themselves complicit.

Ivan Turgenev once wrote, 鈥淩ussians are incorrigible liars, but there is nothing they like more than someone who will tell them the truth.鈥

Societies are corrupted by the lies their leaders tell. The greater the untruth, the more corrupt the society becomes. But nations cannot airbrush their history. Interring Lenin beside his mother in St. Petersburg may paper over, but will not expunge, the bloody Bolshevik past. Shakespeare reminds us that 鈥渢he evil men do lives after them.鈥 Modern Russia would dishonor communism鈥檚 victims if Lenin鈥檚 corpse is smuggled out of town on a moonless night.

Speaking about Lenin鈥檚 impact on Russians, Winston Churchill put it best: 鈥淭heir worst misfortune was his birth ... their next worst 鈥 his death.鈥

Russia must still have its reckoning, not a confession or a mea culpa, but an honest educational curriculum in schools that teaches students how Lenin seduced their great-grandparents into serving a totalitarian state. The Germans came to terms with history after World War II, and are the richer because of it. Younger Russians today deserve no less than the same truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

Walter Rodgers, a former senior international correspondent for CNN, writes a biweekly column.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to Russians shouldn鈥檛 bury Lenin until they uncover his lies
Read this article in
/Commentary/Walter-Rodgers/2011/0315/Russians-shouldn-t-bury-Lenin-until-they-uncover-his-lies
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe