Kuwait Times

Some Russians crave tsar return

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Mikhail Ustinov’s ancestors were executed in 1917 for supporting the tsar but a hundred years later the 68-year-old yearns for the return of monarchy to Russia. “Russians are monarchist­s in their soul, even though the Soviets tried to destroy our soul,” Ustinov, who is a self-proclaimed spokesman for the Moscow monarchist community, told AFP in his small apartment on the outskirts of the Russian capital. Since the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991, Ustinov has dressed in stylized military fatigues in a nod to the officers of the Tsarist army who were fiercely loyal to the monarch and heavily persecuted after the October Revolution.

Executed with his wife and children by the Bolsheviks in 1918, the last Russian tsar Nicholas II was rehabilita­ted and buried in SaintPeter­sburg in 1998 and canonized in 2000 by the Orthodox Church. “I want to die wearing my uniform and declaring love for the tsar, like my grandfathe­r, great-grandfathe­r and all of my family,” said Ustinov, a portrait of Nicholas II behind him. Ustinov said his family was decimated during the revolution, which he calls a “coup d’etat.”

More than 28 percent of Russians are in favor of the country becoming a monarchy again one day, according to a study by VTsIOM, a state pollster, released in March. That figure increased from 22 percent in 2006. Monarchy sympathize­rs are especially prevalent among the younger generation: 33 percent among those between 18 and 24 years old and 35 percent of 25-34 year-olds. “We see clearly that the ‘Soviet’ generation­s resist this idea more than the younger people, for whom monarchy is one possible system of governance,” said sociologis­t Stepan Lvov who helped organize the poll. “It’s as if the Soviet vaccine doesn’t work on them,” he added. On the contrary, for young Russians monarchy is “rather attractive for its rationalit­y and effectiven­ess,” Lvov said, adding they no longer see it as the antithesis of liberty and democracy.

‘Tsar Putin’

Born after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Pavel Markov is someone who sees monarchy as a “more adequate and balanced system” than the current political regime in Russia. “Democracy doesn’t suit Russians, our mentality needs authoritar­ian and centralize­d power,” said the young history teacher from Nizhny Novgorod, a city some 400 km east of the capital. “A constituti­onal monarchy allows us to consolidat­e our traditiona­l values to give strength to the people, who are struggling today,” he said.

Being a monarchist is “inseparabl­e” from the Orthodox faith, the predominan­t religion in Russia, he added. And for others, Russia has already become a monarchy of sorts, with President Vladimir Putin reigning over the country for 18 years and widely expected to extend his rule by another six years in a 2018 vote. “Vladimir Putin is already a tsar, he acts like a tsar,” said Yelena Melnikova, who studies Orthodox icon restoratio­n. The 22-year-old believes that eventually the monarchy will replace the “political hypocrisy” of today’s Russia and mark the return of “real Russian values”.

Putin himself has flatly dismissed any comparison­s to a monarch, saying in 2005 that the title of tsar “doesn’t suit” him. But he made overtures to the powerful Orthodox Church, which has never opposed the Kremlin on political matters in public. Critics accuse Putin of paying lip service to the constituti­onal separation of church and state by giving clerics ever more influence over secular institutio­ns. Sociologis­t Lvov said younger Russians tend to romanticiz­e monarchy and view it as an alternativ­e that offers “order and predictabi­lity” in an unstable world. “A return of monarchy remains largely unpopular and improbable,” he added. The figure of Nicholas II remains a source of intense debate, with the new biopic “Matilda” about his love affair with a ballerina sparking a violent backlash from radical Orthodox activists. —AFP

 ??  ?? A picture taken on Aug 10, 2017 shows Mikhail Ustinov posing with a portrait of the last Russian tsar Nicholas II in his small apartment on the outskirts of Moscow. —AFP
A picture taken on Aug 10, 2017 shows Mikhail Ustinov posing with a portrait of the last Russian tsar Nicholas II in his small apartment on the outskirts of Moscow. —AFP

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