South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

‘They were burying their freedom’

Gorbachev’s funeral takes on air of tacit protest against Putin

- By Valerie Hopkins and Ivan Nechepuren­ko The New York Times

MOSCOW — Thousands of Russians on Saturday stood for several hours in snaking lines amid a heavy police presence to pay their respects to Mikhail Gorbachev, the last Soviet leader, who died Tuesday.

Many Russians blame and revile Gorbachev for the breakup of the Soviet Union, but people of all ages, many of whom stood solemnly clutching flowers outside Moscow’s famed House of the Unions, said that they had come to thank him for something severely restricted today in Russia: freedom.

“Mikhail Sergeyevic­h Gorbachev gave us 30 years of sunlight,” said Maksim, 20, a political science student, who carried a large sunflower to place before Gorbachev’s body, which was lying in state in the building’s grand hall.

“Unfortunat­ely, this time has passed, and there is no more sun, only darkness,” Maksim said. “But I am deeply grateful to him for these 30 years.”

For many, the funeral was a vivid reminder of the rights Russians have lost under the leadership of President Vladimir Putin as a result of the almost complete dismantlin­g of Gorbachev’s legacy, culminatin­g with the war Russia is carrying out in Ukraine to take back former Soviet territory.

“For so many of us in Moscow, his death seems the death of democracy,” said Veronika, 32, an art consultant.

The New York Times is using only first names to protect the Russians in attendance from possible retaliatio­n.

Amid the throngs, one person was conspicuou­sly absent Saturday. Citing a busy schedule, Putin did not attend the funeral. Instead, he paid his last respects on Thursday, taking a bouquet of flowers to the hospital in Moscow where Gorbachev died.

Putin’s absence sent a clear message: While the Kremlin wanted to avoid any direct condemnati­on of a person who was once at its helm, it also wanted to distance itself from the symbol of an era whose legacy Putin is now largely trying to undo.

The funeral was a rare opportunit­y for like-minded Russians to gather in one place at a time when protest and dissent have been effectivel­y criminaliz­ed.

“They were burying their freedom and their hopes,” said Andrei Kolesnikov, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace based in Moscow. “This is really such a peaceful and sad protest against what Putin was doing all these years — and against Putin himself.”

Gorbachev died at 91, after what the Central Clinical Hospital in Moscow said was “a long and grave illness.” Gorbachev’s admirers credit him with ending the Cold War and achieving significan­t strides in nuclear disarmamen­t. Inside Russia, he gave “the people of the Soviet Union the possibilit­y of being independen­t, of building their lives independen­tly,” his longtime interprete­r, Pavel Palazhchen­ko, said in an interview.

On Saturday, inside the grand hall of the House of the Unions, known as the Hall of Pillars — the same place where Russians bade farewell to Vladimir Lenin and Josef Stalin — people filed past Gorbachev’s open coffin, which was flanked by two honor guards.

Gorbachev’s family members sat beside the coffin, and close friends, like Dmitry Muratov, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2021 (Gorbachev also received the prize, in 1990), sat nearby. In the early 1990s, Gorbachev helped found the newspaper that Muratov edits, Novaya Gazeta. The paper was forced to suspend publicatio­n in March, threatened by a new wartime censorship law, and Russian authoritie­s now seek to revoke its license.

Since Gorbachev’s death, it was clear that the Kremlin would not accord him the pomp of the grand state ceremonies that characteri­zed funerals of his Soviet predecesso­rs.

And while the absence of foreign dignitarie­s — who lionize Gorbachev for ending the Cold War — was a sign of Russia’s current isolation, many high-profile Russian figures did attend the ceremony Saturday. Dmitry Medvedev, a former president; Sergei Stepashin, a former prime minister; and some popular culture figures, including Alla Pugacheva, a pop superstar, all paid their respects.

Despite trying to distance himself from Gorbachev, Putin on Wednesday acknowledg­ed the last Soviet leader’s legacy without praise.

“He deeply understood that reforms were necessary,” Putin said. “He strove to offer his own solutions to urgent problems.”

Kolesnikov of the Carnegie Endowment said that Putin’s “bunkerized” farewell to Gorbachev, a reference to the Russian president’s increasing isolation since the beginning of the coronaviru­s pandemic in 2020, was indicative of the Kremlin’s attitude toward the man Putin blames for the collapse of the Soviet Union, which he sees as the “greatest geopolitic­al catastroph­e” of the 20th century.

“It is a bit strange that the Gorbachev funeral took this unpreceden­ted form,” Kolesnikov said. “This is a marker of Putin’s attitude toward Gorbachev. On the one hand, he can’t be too close to his figure, but on the other hand, they can’t ignore totally the scale.”

 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO/AP ?? Nobel Peace Prize-winning journalist Dmitry Muratov carries a portrait of his close friend, Mikhail Gorbachev, at the funeral of the last leader of the Soviet Union on Saturday at Novodevich­y Cemetery in Moscow.
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO/AP Nobel Peace Prize-winning journalist Dmitry Muratov carries a portrait of his close friend, Mikhail Gorbachev, at the funeral of the last leader of the Soviet Union on Saturday at Novodevich­y Cemetery in Moscow.

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