“For the workers to arise and break the chains of capitalist oppression was unexpectedly easy work in 1917 but those chains were gossamer compared to the cast-iron shackles of a Russian tradition that has so far outworn every idea of the new.”
Murray
Kempton is writing in 1988, on the cusp of a promising change in Russian
tradition. Three years earlier, Mikhail Gorbachev had become General Secretary
of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Soon after, I was covering a speech
by the late Richard Luger, then a U.S. Senator from Indiana. I don’t recall his
precise words but Luger confidently dismissed Gorbachev as just another Commie despot.
Within a few years some of us found ourselves in the unlikely position of
rather reluctantly rooting for the Commie.
Kempton
filed his column after a visit to Moscow. His final conversation there was with
a Soviet journalist and former son-in-law of Nikita Khrushchev, Alexi Adzhubei,
who asked Kempton if he was a Sovietologist. The American replied: “To me, the
only Sovietologist who is always up to date is Anton Chekhov.” Adzhubei reacted
with “a knowing smile.” Kempton goes on:
“None of us
could be so bold as to advance a particular Chekhov story as the greatest of
all but ‘My Life’ would be a splendid candidate. At one juncture, its hero
marries a young woman of wealth, who is transiently possessed by an itch to go
back to the land. They go off to convert her estate into a working farm and
spend a horrid few months until, disgusted by the crafts and coarseness of the
peasants, she abandons all lofty notions and flees to London to study singing.
“From there,
she writes to ask for a divorce and to report that she has bought herself a
ring engraved in Hebrew, ‘All things pass away,’ and that it would be her
talisman against future infatuations. And he reflects: ‘If I wanted to order a
ring for myself, the inscription I should choose would be, “‘Nothing passes
away.’”
“And nothing
seems ever to pass away in Moscow. Russian history asserts itself there as all
but immutable and immovable, and so it asserted itself for Chekhov in 1900. The
on-again, off-again harryings of Andrei Sakharov and Boris Pasternak would have
been for him the oldest of tales.”
I think of
Kempton and Chekhov after reading a recent article portentously titled “What classic Russian literature can tell us about Putin’s war on Ukraine.” The
author cites Putin’s much publicized admiration for Tolstoy and Dostoevsky. Of
course, when politicians issue lists of favorite or most-influential books, we’re
skeptical. Richard Nixon recalled a youthful dalliance with Tolstoy, especially
Resurrection. In the article, the
author makes passing references to Putin’s other alleged favorites, Turgenev, Lermontov,
Sergei Yesenin, Pushkin and Nikolay Karamazin. Conspicuously absent, though it’s
no surprise, is Chekhov (and Babel, and the Mandelstams, and Nabokov, and so
on). Kempton writes in his column:
“The czars will never be back but, after seventy years, their style of command has yet to pass away, perhaps because tradition is so stubborn in Russia that the techniques of journalism, wondrous as they are, come to appear so inadequate for dealing with her development year by year, let alone day by day.”
[Kempton’s
column, published in New York Newsday
on June 19, 1988, is collected in his Rebellions,
Perversities, and Main Events (1994). I clipped the column and saved it.]
I wonder how many people remember Murray Kempton today. To be rapidly forgotten is the fate of political journalists, but Rebellions, Perversities, and Main Events sits proudly on my shelf and is still worth returning to, if only for The "Underestimation of Dwight Eisenhower", in which Kempton lays to rest the lazy assessment of Ike as a goofy, slow-witted dullard.
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