'Russia was in charge of its own fate in 1991'

Deutsche Welle
'Russia was in charge of its own fate in 1991'

25 years have passed since the events of August, 1991, in Russia. According to sociologists of 'Levada-Center', today, only 50% of respondents know anything about these events, 35% believe that the coup was just an episode of fight in the top leadership of the country, 30% - a tragic event with negative consequences for Russia and its people, and 8% - the victory of democratically minded citizens that ended the rule of the Communist Party. Remaining 27% were not able to assess those events. Vestnik Kavkaza presents an article of Deutsche Welle, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of those events.

On August 19, 1991, eight high-ranking Soviet officials declared a state of emergency. The coup plotters aimed to save the Soviet Union and to turn back the clock on Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's reform program. They placed Gorbachev under house arrest at his holiday dacha in Crimea and sent tanks to Moscow to storm the White House, the building housing the government of Russia, the largest and most influential of the Soviet Union's 15 republics. Thousands of people took to the streets to defend their newly found freedoms. Boris Yeltsin, who had recently been elected Russia's first president, addressed them from a tank outside the White House, condemning the coup as illegal. On August 21, the coup plotters pulled the troops and tanks out of the capital. Most of them were arrested the next day. The Soviet Union dissolved four months later.

Dmitry Bykov was out on the streets of Moscow at the time. He is one of Russia's most famous intellectuals - a journalist, writer and critic of Vladimir Putin's regime.

- How did you find out what was happening?

- I was spending the summer in Tallinn with my first wife - my fiancée at the time. One of my friends woke us up. We were usually hard to wake up. He shouted through the door: "Gorbachev has been dismissed - there are tanks in Moscow!" We decided that that was certainly reason enough to get up. By some miracle we managed to buy tickets to Moscow. We had a huge watermelon with us. And we ate it in the airplane, thinking it could be the last watermelon we would eat in our life. In the center of Moscow we saw that huge crowds were making their way to the White House with banners and flags. Opposition to the coup was already starting to form then.

- What was the atmosphere like on the streets?

That night we went to keep watch outside the White House. We saw so many people we knew. I heard Yeltsin's speech from the tank. We spent the whole night there. We formed a chain by linking arms so that they wouldn't be able get through. If the tanks had actually stormed the White House, they would have run everyone over. But I didn't feel any sense of panic. People were united, well-organized and well-meaning. There weren't any incidents, any fights, any brawls. There was a sense of victory. But my mood was mixed. I understood perfectly that there wouldn't be any radical change. The people on the streets hadn't actually changed. They had simply experienced a sort of national inspiration for three days.

- Has the way you see the events of the August Coup changed after 25 years?

No. I've understood since then that the point of those events wasn't to liberate Russia. No country can ever be totally free - not Russia, not Germany, not anywhere. But there can be several hours when the whole population is inspired. The whole thing was worth it just for that.

- Were there similar moments of 'inspiration' for Russia after 1991?

There were, at least for me. I had some sense of delight when [opposition politician and anti-corruption blogger Aleksei] Navalny nearly got a second round [in the 2013 Moscow mayoral elections] and won nearly 30% of votes in the first round. It was a happy moment. There will be more moments like that in the near future. I don't just feel the past radiating into the present. I can also feel some radiation from the future.

 

Dmitry Bykov is a prolific journalist, who works at media outlets including the newspapers Sobesednik, Novaya Gazeta and the radio station Ekho Moskvy. He has written a bestselling biography of Boris Pasternak and several successful novels. He is also known as a vocal figure in the Russian opposition. His "Citizen Poet" project, which brazenly makes fun of Russian politics in verse, has been watched millions of times online.

 

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