Mercury (Hobart)

Pussy Riot lauded on Dark Mofo stage for astonishin­g bravery

Peter Boyer is mesmerised by the daring of those who stand up against brutal authority

- Peter Boyer began his journalism career at the Mercury in the 1960s. He specialise­s in the science and politics of climate change.

RUSSIA: enormous, harsh, lonely, puzzling, stubborn, crazy, unique.

I visited European Russia in 1978 during Leonid Brezhnev’s Soviet regime, not for the politics, which thoroughly repelled me, but because I thought the land that gave us Anna Karenina and Uncle Vanya and The Rite of Spring had to have something going for it.

For all the difficulti­es in travelling there, not least the surveillan­ce of my every move, I cherish some special memories of St Petersburg (then Leningrad) and Moscow, including a walking tour of Moscow churches, neglected under communism, with a local architectu­re devotee.

The sudden collapse of Russia’s communist security blanket in 1991 was followed by a spectacula­r capitalist boom and a devastatin­g economic crash. With that came institutio­nal failure and the rise of despot Vladimir Putin.

The country ought to be on its knees, but it isn’t. The official attributio­n for this would include strong government and a revived Russian Orthodox Church, but it goes deeper than that.

In Hobart last week, thanks to the wondrous Dark Mofo, a packed Federation Concert Hall audience got a rare insight into Russian resilience in the 21st century in an outstandin­g documentar­y film, Act and Punishment, followed by a panel discussion featuring leading figures of Pussy Riot.

Pussy Riot women are usually represente­d as punk rockers, but music is not what they are really about. Complacenc­y is their target and shock is their weapon, using funny, loud, very public, in-your-face performanc­es about things they believe are wrong in modern Russia.

Three months after getting together in 2011, they donned knitted masks, climbed on to a scaffold in a Moscow subway station and released feathers from pillows on to waiting passengers while urging strong protest action against the rigging of elections for the national duma, or parliament.

A month later they performed outside a prison, in full view of political protesters jailed for protesting electoral fraud, and a month after that let off a smoke bomb in Red Square as they sang, or rather chanted, “Putin has wet himself”.

The next month, during the 2012 presidenti­al elections, came the event for which they are best remembered. The Russian Orthodox Patriarch endorsed Putin as “a miracle from God”. In response Pussy Riot loudly castigated church and state while dancing at the altar of a Moscow cathedral.

For Putin and his Orthodox allies that was a bridge too far. Instead of the normal fine for disorderly behaviour, three of the group’s most prominent members, including Masha Alyokhina, who was on stage in Hobart last week, were seized, tried and sentenced to two years’ jail.

One of the three was released on appeal, but the other two, including

Alyokhina, served their sentences by working up to 17 hours a day in labour camps in remote parts of Russia. Far from breaking them, it seemed to energise them.

On their release, these thoroughly unorthodox artists set up MediaZona, an online channel that reports violence in Russian court and prison systems and against lesbian, gay and transgende­r people. A young female journalist, Sasha Bogino, represente­d MediaZona at Dark Mofo.

Russia’s patriarcha­l society is generally indifferen­t or hostile to LGBTI people. That, plus the murders of 26 journalist­s in Russia since Putin first became President in 2000 (data from the internatio­nal Committee to Protect Journalist­s), tells us Bogino’s job is risky.

On stage in Hobart with Aloykhina and Bogino was Alexander Cheparukhi­n, a mild-mannered older man who gave up a career as an internatio­nal music festival producer to take on what must be one of the world’s most dangerous management jobs, looking after Pussy Riot.

“You are heroes too,” Aloykhina told her Hobart audience, which made us all feel good, except that we were not putting our bodies on the line. Hearing such tough, brave, creative people speaking so generously about their lives and art, you tend to feel positive about their prospects.

Pussy Riot, like all Russian artists working for a strong civil society, richly deserved their prolonged standing ovation last week.

As does Dark Mofo for bringing them here.

Pussy Riot, like all Russian artists working for a strong civil society, richly deserved their prolonged standing ovation last week.

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