Kuwait Times

In Russia, Women’s Day piles pressure on men

-

In offices across Russia, the countdown to Internatio­nal Women’s Day is a whirl of last-minute meetings and dashes for gifts as men race to prepare festivitie­s for their female colleagues. “We’ve sent out loads of emails, we’ve analysed the market, we’ve pooled ideas, and we’ve just got one more meeting ahead of the launch of Operation Women’s Day today,” confided Sergei Krakhmalye­v, who works at Rosbank, a major Russian bank. “This year we’ve decided not to spend money on gifts that are useless, shall we say, but to organize a buffet,” he said.

Krakhmalye­v, who is in his 40s, works in a team of eight men and 35 women. He calculates that this year’s celebratio­n will cost about 25,000 rubles ($430). “It’s expensive,” he says, “but it’s a Soviet tradition that I think it’s important to keep up.” A public holiday in the Soviet Union since 1965, March 8 is an opportunit­y for Russian men to “remember the importance of women” in society, he says. Internatio­nal Women’s Day is also a public holiday, so office celebratio­ns are held the day before.

This year’s events are expected to be relatively low-key in comparison to the oilboom years, when many companies spared no expense. “The company used to allocate a big budget for this holiday and took as many as 500 women out to a restaurant,” recalled Irina, who works in human resources at a major Russian company. “That was before the 2008 economic crisis,” said Irina, 40, who asked not to disclose her surname. “Now the men have a whip-round to buy us flowers and chocolates.” Neverthele­ss the holiday “cheers up the atmosphere in the team,” she said.

In Russia, it is also widely seen as a counterpar­t to the Day of the Defender of the Fatherland, on February 23, which is nominally for those who served in the army but is considered the male equivalent. In offices, this holiday is often an occasion for celebratio­ns that take an unreconstr­ucted approach to gender roles. “This year we organized a fake army recruitmen­t drive” for the defender holiday, Irina said. “We gave our colleagues a medical and some of us were dressed up as sexy nurses.” “Now the men are under pressure. They have to try to do better than us, even if we know that’s impossible,” she added with a smile.

Bonanza for florists

Some men, however, including Vitaly Konyayev, a project manager in the southern Russian city of Saratov, find it hard to get into the holiday spirit. “This year my colleagues didn’t give me anything for February 23, so they can whistle for a gift on March 8,” he said. The March 8 holiday “only means something if you give flowers to a woman you love and respect-not those you are forced to rub along with at work,” he said. He complained that he had to pay almost 1,000 rubles for a bunch of flowers for the holiday, which brings a bonanza for florists.

Flower prices often double ahead of the March 8 holiday-and orders double as well, said Florence Gervais d’Aldin, a French flower grower and importer who has worked in Russia for more than 20 years. Her business, which specialize­s in scented roses, sells more than 8,000 roses on March 7 and 8, compared with her usual sales of 600 per day. “It’s a day for mothers, for sweetheart­s, for colleagues, all together,” Gervais d’Aldin said, with its popularity “far higher” than that of St Valentine’s Day, on February 14.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait