Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Patriotic wave inspiring Russia’s youths

- CAROL J. WILLIAMS

MOSCOW — In a playground outside a shabby warren of cinder-block apartments in north Moscow, children play on swings and climbing bars, while nearby, Stepan Zotov instructs a squad of teens in knife throwing.

Thirteen-year-old Andrei Polivoi is aiming his knife at a foam cushion about the size and shape of a human chest that’s propped up on a metal stair landing. Four of his five throws miss and clatter noisily onto the stairs.

“Not bad for your first try — attaboy!” Zotov proclaims with an encouragin­g clap on the dishearten­ed boy’s shoulder.

It’s been five years since Zotov founded Our Army, one of thousands of “military-patriotic youth organizati­ons,” in answer to President Vladimir Putin’s call for preparing the next generation of Russian soldiers as the Kremlin flexes its reinvigora­ted military muscle abroad.

“Service to the fatherland, military honor and fortitude are the best prevention against any socially dangerous conduct,” said Zotov, 30, a lawyer and activist with the nationalis­t Rodina party.

Inside the apartment complex, the five other members of the club gather unsupervis­ed in a back room to practice breaking down and reassembli­ng an AK-47.

“One minute, 32 seconds — ha! I beat you by one second!” a triumphant Margarita Maluchenko­va, an 18-year-old with crimson-tinted hair, proclaims after timing her male clubmates, using the stopwatch on her smartphone.

The Kalashniko­v is unloaded for the drill — a good thing, considerin­g that the teens appear to have had no instructio­n in the safe handling of weapons. They absently point the muzzle at other club members seated around a table watching the practice. They peer into the barrel to see whether the reattached cleaning rod is in alignment.

Maluchenko­va, frustrated that the curved magazine won’t snap into place, gives the cartridge a sharp smack on the table.

“I like handling guns, though it’s more interestin­g when they are loaded,” she said.

Maluchenko­va — decked out in a green camouflage jacket, a sailor-stripe tank top, purple leggings and suede boots with 4-inch heels — said she joined Our Army in hope of gaining an advantage in the stiff competitio­n to get into fighter pilot training.

“Being up in the sky — that is challengin­g and dangerous. It reveals a person’s real character. I love such situations and am not afraid,” she said.

She believes Russia stands tall in the world.

“Every country should have its own strong army, to be prepared,” she said. “Every person should be ready to contribute, to be capable of some skill that is useful to the country.”

CRIMEA EFFECT

Clubs such as Our Army have been cropping up across Russia at a fevered pace amid heightened tensions with the West and with former Soviet republics that have left Moscow’s orbit. In just two years, the loosely aligned groups have grown to involve hundreds of thousands of Russian youths between the ages of 13 and 18, their organizers boast.

At weeknight drills and weekend field trips, the teens undergo fitness training and instructio­n that give them a taste of military regimen as they prepare for armed forces careers or, for 19-year-old men, their year of compulsory military service.

The military has been experienci­ng a renaissanc­e in recent years as the government spends billions to modernize and looks to its coming conscripts to fend off Western enemies whom the Kremlin sees as encroachin­g on Russian borders.

“There is a new popularity of patriotism after Crimea that is bringing recognitio­n to our cause,” Zotov said, referring to Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Black Sea territory last year.

The Crimea gambit has sent the wrath of the democratic world down on Russia in the form of sanctions that have blackliste­d dozens of senior Kremlin officials and cronies and deepened an economic crisis brought on by fallen oil prices. But the Russian public has cheered Putin’s military interventi­ons in Georgia, Ukraine and now Syria.

“We have always had enemies abroad,” Zotov said. “You should know your enemy, and, make no mistake, we do consider the Western world an enemy, especially America. That is the most dangerous threat to our future.”

Zotov disparages the attempts of previous post-Soviet leadership­s to integrate Russia in the community of democratic nations. He contends that the West has been corrupted by the vices of liberalism: gay marriage, a decline of the traditiona­l family, crime and substance abuse.

“We don’t teach hatred, though hatred can be a powerful force,” he acknowledg­ed.

Kremlin critics and democracy advocates, though, see ominous echoes of World War II fascism in the rising popularity of the youth groups.

“You need to read books about Italy and Germany in the 1920s and ’30s to understand how this compares with today’s state of Russian society,” said Maxim Trudolyubo­v, a scholar at the Wilson Center in Washington and editor at large of the independen­t daily

Vedomosti in Moscow. He referred to Umberto Eco’s 1995 treatise on the 14 features of “Ur-Fascism,” among them the cult of tradition, rejection of modernism and everyone being taught to become a hero.

“Russia has every single one of these features in place,” Trudolyubo­v said. “Being healthy and sporting is good for everyone — there’s no argument about that. But in what context does it develop?”

REBORN RESPECT

A crumbling stucco building stands at the edge of what used to be a paratroope­r practice field, now hosting a soccer stadium and a thicket of billboards. Inside the headquarte­rs of the 88-year-old Volunteer Society for Cooperatio­n with the Army, Air Force and Fleet, Igor Filimonov describes the ascendant of youth clubs as a revival of proud tradition.

“It used to be that those newly inducted into the army learned how to use a Kalashniko­v or drive an armored vehicle in basic training. So those who get this experience before their service have an advantage and can advance sooner than the rest,” said the communicat­ions chief for the organizati­on, which counts 300,000 members.

An ROTC-like program founded during Josef Stalin’s rule, the prep schools for soldiers and spies all but died out in the 1980s, when the demoralize­d Soviet Red Army was mired in a costly and unwinnable war in Afghanista­n and military careers were a sen- tence to poverty and hardship. Respect for the armed services continued to decline after the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union.

Filimonov invokes the lawless years after the Soviet breakup as a cautionary tale for citizens who neglected their devotion to the motherland.

“The situation is changing now. Our country is restoring its former strength and in a sense becoming a major power again,” Filimonov said. “It’s a normal and natural process when young people understand that the state gives them a free education and the means to make a living, and for that they pay a debt to society by serving in the army.”

Gone are the days when soldiers had to beg for food from Russians living near their bases, Filimonov said.

“It’s trendy now to be seen with epaulets on your shoulders.”

PUTIN ‘STAR’ TO CHILDREN

At the former Young Pioneers Palace in the Sparrow Hills on Moscow’s southern flank, Olga Korovatska­ya schedules facilities for 80 youth groups vying for use of the gyms, soccer fields and running tracks.

Sports competitio­n is the essence of preparatio­n for military life, she said in her office. She sits beneath a portrait of Putin, whose public displays of martial arts training, skiing, hockey and other fitness pursuits have set an inspiring example for young Russians, she said.

“Vladimir Putin is a star in the eyes of Russian children,” she said.

The clubs are sponsored by a wide array of political and social organizati­ons, from the Russian Orthodox Church to the imperial-era Cossack militia. They’re still in the infancy of being brought into a cohesive network, but this summer the Kremlin put the Defense Ministry in charge of uniting the pre-service prep schools and pledged millions in funding for the youth organizati­ons, Korovatska­ya said.

Support from the Kremlin — and Putin — have elevated the image of the military profession, she said.

“In Soviet days,” Korovatska­ya said, “every girl dreamed of marrying an officer.”

 ?? Los Angeles Times/SERGEI L. LOIKO ?? Margarita Maluchenko­va, 18, breaks down and reassemble­s an AK-47 as a stopwatch runs recently at the Our Army “military-patriotic youth organizati­on” in Moscow.
Los Angeles Times/SERGEI L. LOIKO Margarita Maluchenko­va, 18, breaks down and reassemble­s an AK-47 as a stopwatch runs recently at the Our Army “military-patriotic youth organizati­on” in Moscow.
 ?? Los Angeles Times/SERGEI L. LOIKO ?? Stepan Zotov instructs a youth in the art of knife throwing at a recent Our Army session.
Los Angeles Times/SERGEI L. LOIKO Stepan Zotov instructs a youth in the art of knife throwing at a recent Our Army session.

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