Europe’s worst barbarian
Vladimir Putin has combined neo-Stalinism and religious fervour, with all the absurdities that entails

Photo: ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICHENKO / POOL
The Kremlin rarely surprises me. When I read George Orwell’s 1984 in the 1970s, at age 10, I immediately recognized our Soviet life. By then, everyone was used to the state insisting that everything was becoming “better and more joyous”, as Stalin had claimed in 1935 when people were dying of hunger and being imprisoned for fictitious crimes.
Trading their new freedoms for the promise of renewed imperial glory seemed like a good deal. They were duped.
His actual “crime” was no secret: as Memorial’s regional branch chief in Karelia in northwestern Russia, he had uncovered Stalin’s “killing fields”, the mass graves from the Great Purge of 1938.
If there is a close contemporary analogy to this project, it is that of the Taliban, which also rejects modernity in favour of divinity.









