Dayton Daily News

The brave man whom Russia’s Vladimir Putin wants to see killed

- Nicholas D. Kristof Nicholas Kristof writes for The New York Times.

If Vladimir Putin has left you despising Russians as brutes, cowards or warmongers, consider a tall, ailing man locked in an isolation cell in Russia.

Alexei Navalny, Russia’s leading dissident and opposition leader, may be something of a Mandela of our age. Poisoned, imprisoned, brutalized, Navalny stands unbroken in his cell: still mocking Putin and scathing in his denunciati­on of the invasion of Ukraine.

He is a Kremlin nightmare. Navalny ran for president until he was blocked, and his exposés about a supposed $1 billion Putin pleasure palace infuriated the Russian leader. Navalny not only survived assassinat­ion attempts but when sent to the gulag tried to unionize prisoners and guards.

I can’t interview

Navalny in prison, so I spoke to his 21-year-old daughter, Dasha Navalnaya (the feminine form of the family name). She’s a junior at Stanford University, and while navigating exams and term papers, she is also campaignin­g for her dad and promoting a superb documentar­y about him, “Navalny.” It won best documentar­y this month at the British Academy Film Awards and is up for an Oscar too.

“I sort of perceive the documentar­y as this ‘get out of death’ card,” she told me in flawless, lightly accented English. “The more awareness that we create, the less Putin and his posse would be tempted to kill my dad.”

Navalny, 46, is a lawyer with a large following in Russia for his withering reports about Russian corruption and about Putin, whom he calls a “madman.” Attackers presumably linked to the Russian government twice hurled chemical dye on him, damaging the vision in his right eye, and in 2020 he collapsed on a plane. He almost died but was evacuated to Germany, where scientists determined he had been poisoned by a Novichok nerve agent, used by Russia’s government for high-priority assassinat­ion targets.

The documentar­y follows Navalny’s recovery and the detective work to track down the Russian officials who apparently poisoned him. The film presents the extraordin­ary scene in which Navalny telephoned one of his would-be assassins and, pretending to be another Russian official, got him to explain how the poisoning was carried out.

By now it seemed clear Putin wanted Navalny dead. But in early 2021, Navalny flew back to Moscow. For Dasha, who had worried since she was 12 about her dad being assassinat­ed, that wasn’t necessaril­y her first choice.

“My personal preference would have been that he stayed with me,” Dasha told me. “But I never questioned his decision to go back.”

“I’m super worried about him always, as a daughter,” she said. “I have it in the back of my head that maybe he shouldn’t be doing this. But it’s what he’s passionate about, and for the greater good of the country.”

When Navalny returned, the government promptly arrested him. The family is now allowed to communicat­e with him only by exchanging letters.

“He is sort of living vicariousl­y through me, through a college experience in America, which is very fun for him,” she said wistfully.

Some critics have argued that Navalny is a xenophobic nationalis­t unworthy of admiration. I looked into the accusation­s, and here’s what I found. In 2007, Navalny made two over-the-top, dumb and offensive video clips, each a minute or less, that could be seen as vilifying immigrants, and for several years after that he participat­ed in a nationalis­t march. Then he seemed to move on, and in 2014 he denounced Russia’s invasion of Crimea.

People are complicate­d, but Navalny today seems so committed to democratic and European values that he is risking his life for them.

The government moved Navalny to continuous confinemen­t in an isolation cell, and he faces additional charges that could leave him in prison for 35 years.

Navalny still has managed to get material out to his team for his social media accounts and he is as untamed as ever.

Somehow through all this, he maintains his sense of humor.

“I laugh at least thrice a day, even when I’m all alone in the cell,” he tweeted recently in a riff about the awful music and food in the prison. “I’m the merriest person at a funeral.”

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