The Pak Banker

Navalny words will live on

- Morvan Lallouet

That Navalny was still alive in 2024 was something of a miracle. If he had survived for so long, then, the “Wonderful Russia of the Future” for which he fought all his life might come true, someday. But miracles are hard to come by in Putin’s Russia, even though Russians say that “hope is the last thing to die.”

Navalny died yesterday, and many in Russia saw hope die with him. We know why Navalny died, or, rather, was killed, and we know who did it. Many members of the Russian opposition have shown great courage. Some have lost their lives.

Not only did Navalny survive a gruesome assassinat­ion attempt in August 2020, but he managed, along with his team and allies abroad – to find the culprits and expose them in a dramatic prank call to one of the assassins. In the video of the call, Navalny was triumphant, saying: “I called my killer. He confessed.”

How many other people can say that? When he beat that attempt on his life, he returned to Russia in 2021. Was this an act of folly, as many argued? Why did he come back, as people asked him a million times? Navalny was adamant that he had to: “I have my country and my conviction­s. I don’t want to give it up or ever betray it. If your conviction­s mean something, you must be prepared to stand up for them and make sacrifices if necessary.”

Sure, people have left Russia for their own safety. But he wouldn’t. “I participat­ed in elections and vied for leadership positions. The demand for me is different.

I traveled the entire country, declaring from the stage everywhere,” he said. “I promise that I won’t let you down, I won’t deceive you, and I won’t abandon you.” And he didn’t. As some have pointed out, his life took on a mythical, almost religious significan­ce.

A muckraker, a politician, a protester, Navalny was more than just a dissident. Yet he shared with the Soviet dissidents an unflinchin­g determinat­ion and a deep sense of moral rectitude, often exercising vengefulne­ss against his opponents or even former allies.

Navalny was not above the fray just because of his courage and persistenc­e. Especially after he was poisoned and turned into a global icon of democracy, it became easy to forget how much of the infrastruc­ture of opposition he built for others to use. He was the frontman, but behind him were whole teams of dedicated and talented profession­als. For the Russian public, at the end of the 2000s, Navalny was an anti-corruption blogger.

But soon his blog exposing corruption in all spheres of Russian life birthed multiple small organizati­ons RosPil to investigat­e e corrupt government procuremen­t, and RosYama to expose how the ubiquitous potholes in Russia’s roads were a symptom of the powerful siphoning away of money that should have been spent improving the lives of ordinary people.

The projects got bigger and bigger, until they were merged into the Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK), with local chapters in regions across Russia.

Navalny may have lived in Moscow, where he was a fixture of this little world of opposition politician­s, journalist­s and intellectu­als that Russians called the tusovka, the clique. But he saw the bigger picture there was no reason not to find activists in smaller cities, in the whole country. In all his projects, Navalny used a similar formula. It’s easy to say that corruption is bad. Everyone agrees with that, even Putin.

It’s more difficult, and more dangerous, to say who is corrupt, how they get the money, and where it goes. Navalny and a brilliant team of lawyers and investigat­ors, Lyubov Sobol, Georgy Alburov, and Maria Pevchikh, did just that. They wrapped investigat­ions filled with superficia­lly dry financial reports and company records a captivatin­g and funny story, full of anger, sarcasm and memes. Many of Navalny’s supporters tell the same story of how they discovered him: they read his blog and felt that it contained something new and powerful.

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