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Russia: The Continuing Rehabilitation of Stalin

An attendee offers flowers during a ceremony marking the 66th anniversary of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin’s death at Red Square in Moscow, Russia, 2019. (Maxim Shemetov/Reuters)

Can you imagine a “respectable” party in Germany putting up “Hitler centers” around the country?

And yet, as the Daily Telegraph’s James Kilner explains, that’s tantamount to what’s underway in Russia:

“Stalin centres” are popping up across Russia as Vladimir Putin tries to rehabilitate the reputation of the Soviet dictator.

The centres are being built in Russia’s biggest cities to reposition Joseph Stalin as “a great man of history” and boost support for Putin’s war in Ukraine.

In mid-December, at the opening of Russia’s second Stalin Centre in the city of Barnaul in Altai, Sergei Matasov, the regional Communist Party leader, credited Stalin with modernising the world during his 1924-53 rule over the Soviet Union.

“Stalin’s economy, Stalin’s politics, Stalin’s culture gave the whole world an impetus forward. Such a sharp, qualitative leap,” he said.

The Communist Party, an opposition party that works within parameters set by the Kremlin, opened its first Stalin Centre in 2023, near Nizhny Novgorod. Like the Barnaul project, it aims to inspire visitors with its collection of Stalin photos, speeches, busts and other trinkets.

The Kremlin is welcoming the renewed praise of Stalin . . .

They say that they are fighting Nazis now in Ukraine, the Great Patriotic War 2.0, as it were. So Stalin being the man who defeated Nazism is a good image for the regime,” said Dr Stephen Hall, an associate professor of Russian politics at Bath University.

Putin praised Stalin as a “great man” in a speech to mark Russian nationhood in 2022 and in 2016 Vladimir Medinsky, then the culture minister but now a presidential adviser, travelled to the Tver region, north of Moscow, for the unveiling of a monument to Stalin.

According to an analysis carried out by the Tochka website, of the 110 monuments to Stalin currently in Russia, 37 were erected after Putin became president on New Year’s Eve 1999.

It is interesting to note how many monuments to Stalin were already standing before Putin took office. It is another reminder that the current direction of the Russian state, repressive at home and a threat to its neighbors, comes from more than the whim of one man.

Kilner:

Tochka said that since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, around half a dozen Stalin monuments have been erected with each new statue “accompanied by a repetition of Z-propaganda”, a reference to the pro-Ukraine invasion narrative pumped out by the Kremlin.

Not only are monuments honoring Stalin being erected, others, commemorating his victims, are coming down.

Kilner:

Activists have accused local authorities of ripping off plaques to victims and destroying 22 monuments.

“The campaign to disappear monuments is going on throughout the country, and, in most cases, the perpetrators of vandalism are not caught, and the police are inactive,” said Alexandra Polivanova, a researcher at the Memorial human rights group.

 

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