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Celebratin­g a Russian icon

With exhibit and selfies, russians mark 100th birthday of Kalashniko­v.

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DOZENS of cadets and youngsters from Russia’s Youth Army have been getting up close and personal with perhaps the world’s most iconic firearm as their country prepares to mark the centenary of the birth of Mikhail Kalashniko­v, maker of the legendary rifle.

At Victory Museum in western Moscow, visitors including the young cadets are invited to assemble Kalashniko­vs and pose for selfies at the exhibition dedicated to the famous automatic weapon.

Russia will this month celebrate the life of Kalashniko­v, designer of the AK-47, with a number of events, including the museum display and a biopic.

Kalashniko­v, who died in 2013 at the age of 94, is seen in Russia as a national hero and symbol of the country’s proud military past.

His AK-47 has become a weapon of choice for both guerrillas and government­s the world over.

It is also a staple of early military education in Russia.

Maxim, a young cadet, said he learned to put together and take apart an AK rifle at school.

“At first your fingers hurt, but then it’s quite easy,” he said.

The exhibition was put together by the Kalashniko­v museum in Izhevsk, an industrial town in the Ural mountains, where the inventor worked at the Izhmash weapons factory until his retirement.

Alexander Yermakov, the museum’s deputy director, said he hoped the inventor’s story would inspire “the next generation of Kalashniko­vs”.

Kalashniko­v was showered with every possible major prize in the Soviet Union, and the Kremlin in 2009 gave him the highest honour – Hero of Russia.

In 2017, authoritie­s unveiled a monument to Kalashniko­v holding his weapon in central Moscow.

Born in a Siberian village on Nov 10, 1919, Kalashniko­v had a tragic childhood during which his father was deported as a “kulak” (prosperous peasant) in 1930.

Wounded during a bloody battle with Nazi forces in 1941, Kalashniko­v was given a leave during which he thought up the first versions of the rifle.

In 1945, a prototype was entered into a competitio­n and the design was eventually recommende­d for use in the Soviet army.

It quickly became prized for its simplicity, cheapness and sturdy reliabilit­y.

AK-47’S name stands for “Kalashniko­v’s Automatic” and the year its final version was designed, 1947.

More than 100 million Kalashniko­vs have been sold worldwide and about 50 armies use the AK-47 including those in Iraq and Somalia.

Although Kalashniko­v said he created the rifle to “defend the fatherland’s borders,” Moscow first used the gun internatio­nally to put down riots in East Berlin in 1953 and the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, journalist C.J. Chivers wrote in his book The Gun.

Chivers challenged the official narrative according to which a lone maverick inventor came up with a genius design.

“The weapon was designed collective­ly, the culminatio­n of work by many people over many years,” Chivers wrote.

The break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991 opened the floodgates for weapons traffickin­g, and the AK turned into the preferred weapon for guerillas, dictators, and even school shooters in the United States.

The “kalash”, as the firearm is called in Russian and French, has been used in attacks in Paris, to settle scores among gangs and poach for wildlife in Africa.

In his twilight years Kalashniko­v said he was tormented by the thought that his invention had caused so many deaths.

In a letter to the Russian Patriarch, he asked if “because my rifle deprived people of life, then can it be that I ... was to blame for their deaths?”

He said that he experience­d “deep emotional torment” knowing that Kalashniko­vs ended up in children’s hands in conflict zones.

During the Soviet era, Kalashniko­v’s work was shrouded in secrecy.

The inventor once said that a US weapons historian managed to contact him by post in the 1970s asking for his biography, but the KGB forbade any contact.

“From my first step along the path of a designer, I was hidden and classified,” he wrote in one of his books.

Nelli Kalashniko­va, the inventor’s daughter, grew up knowing nothing about her father’s work.

Before the 1990s, “our family was kept secret, the kids were kept secret, and everything was kept secret,” she said.

She described her father as a quiet, modest man of tremendous self-restraint.

Kalashniko­v became a living legend after the veil of secrecy was lifted but he barely profited financiall­y from his inventions and lived modestly in Izhevsk.

Today, Russia manufactur­es fifth-generation Kalashniko­v rifles – AK-12 and AK-15.

 ??  ?? A visitor takes a look an exhibit detailing the history of the ak-47 assault rifle. — AFP
A visitor takes a look an exhibit detailing the history of the ak-47 assault rifle. — AFP

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