The Boston Globe

Navalny’s mourners also grieve for a democratic Russia

Braving the police at grave, they speak of fear and despair

- By Francesca Ebel

MOSCOW — In the weeks since Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny died suddenly in an Arctic prison, the simple act of laying flowers — at his graveside or makeshift memorials — has become an act of political defiance.

Wartime Russia brooks no dissent.

When he was alive, Navalny, an anticorrup­tion and pro-democracy activist, had urged his followers not to be afraid as they struggled for what he called a free and “happy” Russia of the future.

On Saturday, one day after he was laid to rest at a Moscow cemetery, mourners, many of them carrying bouquets, were still braving the police to pay their respects.

But in today’s Russia, freedom and happiness have never seemed further away.

“I want to scream in anger,” said Tamara, 34, who visited the grave Saturday, only to be quickly ushered away by police. “But I have hope,” she said, declining to give her full name out of fear of reprisal by authoritie­s. “Of course there is hope.”

Navalny, who died in prison on Feb. 16 at age 47, mobilized a younger generation to take to the streets and demand a better Russia.

As such, he was despised by President Vladimir Putin and ultimately jailed on an array of spurious charges, including extremism, for his role as the head of a foundation that exposed corruption.

For many of those who trekked to his graveside Friday and Saturday, Navalny was Russia’s last democratic hope, at a time when the country was plunging deeper into authoritar­ianism.

In the two years since Russia invaded Ukraine, initiating a bloody war against its neighbor, the state has grown increasing­ly repressive and paranoid as it cracks down on dissent. Thousands have fled to neighborin­g countries, and the rest of the population has been terrified into silence.

Navalny, an ordinary, middleclas­s Russian, had galvanized a mass movement under the simple slogan, “Russia will be free.” He led nationwide protests in an extraordin­ary challenge to Putin, who has ruled Russia either as president or prime minister for 25 years.

But now, Navalny is gone, dying mysterious­ly at one of Russia’s most isolated prisons, where authoritie­s suggested he died of natural causes. Navalny’s wife, family, and friends say that Putin is responsibl­e for his death.

“I do not see any light in this darkness,” said Anna, 47.

On Saturday, she caught the metro and then a bus to the Borisovsky Cemetery, nestled in the Moscow suburb, Maryino, where Navalny grew up. She prepared a backpack of water, snacks, warm clothes, and her passport in case she was detained.

“It is even more difficult to live in Russia now without him,” she said, also declining to give her full name out of fear of reprisal by authoritie­s. “Nobody wants to talk about how bad the situation is, everyone is scared, and they are trying to maintain a fragile balance within themselves.”

After a strong show of force at Navalny’s funeral on Friday, where law enforcemen­t hemmed in mourners and divided the crowds, police were back at the cemetery Saturday. They had rearranged their barricades and set up metal detectors fitted with cameras — a signal to those at the gravesite that their faces would be logged in the government’s sprawling surveillan­ce system.

Masked police officers staffed the entrance, checking people’s bags. Plain clothes security agents hustled the procession along and anyone standing for longer than a couple of minutes was ordered to leave.

“No, you can’t light candles here, they will cause a fire,” one police officer barked at a mourner.

Most people there were openly weeping, some breaking down upon seeing Navalny’s portrait on his tombstone, submerged by heaps of roses and carnations. One couple held each other. Another person wiped away the tears of a friend, making sure her makeup didn’t smudge.

One older man stood to the side with his face to the wall, hiding his tears.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Friends and family of Alexei Navalny comforted each other by his grave in Moscow Sunday after his funeral.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Friends and family of Alexei Navalny comforted each other by his grave in Moscow Sunday after his funeral.

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