Russia's holiday soup 
By Steven Lee Myers The New York Times Sunday, November 7, 2004

MOSCOW: Russia celebrated a holiday on Sunday that under the Julian calendar 
was in October, that commemorates the beginnings of a state that no longer 
exists. It used to be called the Day of the Great October Socialist Revolution, 
but is now the Day of Accord and Reconciliation, or sometimes the reverse. 
Anyway, neither was much in evidence. 
.
Tens of thousands of Communists and their supporters marched in Moscow and 
other cities to honor the 87th anniversary of the revolution that swept the 
Bolsheviks to power. They were energized this year not only by revolutionary 
nostalgia and ideological zeal, but also by concern over a proposal that would 
legislate away the holiday itself. 
.
Placards reading "Hands Off Our Glory - Nov. 7!" joined the more familiar ones 
like "Down with the Bourgeois Counterrevolutionaries!" as marchers formed a 
river of red that coursed slowly from Lenin's statue on October Square to 
Marx's on Theater Square. 
.
"A new epoch began after the Great October Socialist Revolution," Lilya 
Timoshkova, one of the marchers, said. "The memory of this holiday is not 
something you can sweep away." 
.
But a bill in Parliament, drafted by pro-Kremlin lawmakers, would dispatch Nov. 
7 the way of the Soviet Union itself, calling the day "a source of tension in 
society." In its place would emerge the Day of National Unity on Nov. 4, the 
anniversary of an event that hardly races to mind, even for Russians. It was on 
that day in 1612 that Kozma Minin and Prince Dmitri Pojarsky led the uprising 
against the Polish occupation of Moscow. 
.
National holidays, of course, reflect any country's history and identity, but 
few countries have a more conflicted sense of both than Russia - and as a 
result a more convoluted calendar. 
.
Christmas, banned in Soviet times, is now officially celebrated on Jan. 7, 
since the Russian Orthodox Church, unlike the Soviet Union, did not adopt the 
Gregorian calendar. (That has added benefits, since "old" New Year's Eve, is 
also celebrated on Jan. 13, in addition to the "new" one on Dec. 31.) 
.
Russia, as the Soviet Union before, still celebrates May Day, or the Day of 
International Workers' Solidarity, but calls it the Day of Spring and Labor. 
.
There is still, for now, Constitution Day, though not as before on Dec. 5, 
honoring Stalin's Constitution, but on Dec. 12, the anniversary of the one 
adopted after President Boris Yeltsin ordered the shelling of the Parliament in 
1993. 
.
Some Russian holidays manage to avoid politics. New Year's - which, much like 
Christmas elsewhere, involves decorating trees and exchanging gifts - is safely 
nonideological and very popular. 
.
March 8 is International Women's Day, which has socialist roots but is 
celebrated now not unlike Valentine's Day (which is also catching on here), 
with flowers and chocolate. 
.
Of course, Women's Day raised the question of what to do for the men. In 2002, 
President Vladimir Putin elevated Feb. 23 (formerly Day of the Soviet Army and 
Navy, but not a day off) to a holiday known as Day of the Defenders of the 
Fatherland, or informally as Men's Day. That is also the anniversary of the day 
in 1944 when Stalin ordered the Chechens deported to Siberia, an event whose 
reverberations are felt today. 
.
May 9 is Victory Day, which marks the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945 and is, 
mostly, unambiguous. Chechnya's separatists chose it this year to assassinate 
the republic's Russian-backed president, Akhmad Kadyrov. 
.
June 12, since 1994, has been Independence Day. In the calendar's most patent 
paradox, Russians on that day celebrate the 1990 declaration of independence 
from the country whose revolutionary beginnings they celebrate on Nov. 7. 
.
The Communists, in keeping with recent tradition, turned their annual marches 
on Sunday into anti-government protests, which almost certainly is why the 
government would like to stop making it an official occasion. Across the 
country, from Yakutia in Siberia to Voronezh on the Volga, as many as 300,000 
people marched, according to the Interior Ministry. 
.
That Nov. 7 remains a holiday at all reflects the delicate balance between past 
and present that has persisted since the Soviet Union collapsed. 
.
Yeltsin may have been a democrat, but he was a weak leader who could not risk 
inflaming his main opponents. It was easier to keep the old holidays, while 
adding new ones like Christmas or changing the names. From his hospital bed 
after heart surgery in 1996, he issued a decree renaming Nov. 7. 
.
Putin has not addressed the proposal, but the official view became clear on 
state media. The state-owned Rossiya network, like the official Russian 
Information Agency, led not with the Communists marches, but rather with a 
smaller, government-sponsored parade marking the 63rd anniversary of the 
mythologized march of the Soviet Army through Red Square to meet Hitler's 
advancing armies on Nov. 7, 1941. That date has never before given such 
prominence. 
.
Vladimir Ryzhkov, a liberal in Parliament, said in an interview that it was 
time to rethink a calendar rife with absurdities. He favors abandoning Nov. 7, 
but opposes Nov. 4, since that date, too, would commemorate a violent struggle, 
not unity. Dropping Dec. 12 - Constitution Day - would be "one more signal that 
we do not support Constitutional law," he said. 
.
He plans to propose instead Oct. 17, which next year will be the 100th 
anniversary of Nicholas II's October Manifesto, granting basic rights and 
empowering Parliament following a wave of unrest. Another choice, he said, 
could be April 23, when Nicholas published the Fundamental Laws in 1906, 
outlining those rights. Those, he said, would "symbolize Russian democracy." 
.
"Unfortunately," he added, "Russian history is very complicated. Many dates 
divide society."

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