The Black And Orange Ribbon Of Putin's Army
Russian propaganda avows that the ribbon — known as the St.
George ribbon in Russia — symbolizes the Soviet Union's "Great
Victory" in World War II. Yet, the connection between President Vladimir
Putin and "Putinism" to that victory remains unclear, especially
because the St. George ribbon first gained use as a propaganda tool as recently
as May 9, 2005. That was when the pro-Kremlin youth group Nashi had college
students and school children hand out a huge amount of the ribbons to
passers-by in honor of the 60th anniversary of the Soviet Union's victory in
World War II.
That initiative set off an unexpected wave of patriotism across
the country: Russians everywhere tied the ribbons to their jackets, cars and
apartment balconies, and this fervor continued for a full year after the
anniversary had passed. Those ribbons made headlines for a second time
following the rigged State Duma elections in 2011, which sparked a series of
mass anti-Putin demonstrations in Moscow.
For whatever reason, the protesters
wore white ribbons as the symbol for their movement. This prompted Kremlin spin
doctors to come up with the brilliant idea of using the St. George ribbons to
oppose the white ribbon. They organized counter-demonstrations by bussing in
thousands of state employees from all over and tying a St. George ribbon on the
arm of each. Then Putin himself made an appearance wearing a St. George ribbon
at one such rally on Red Square. The message was clear: bad, unpatriotic people
wear white ribbons but good people wear St. George ribbons in memory of those
killed in war.
The authorities also dug up the few remaining World War II
veterans and paraded them before the cameras, decked out in so many St. George
ribbons that they looked like wedding cakes with legs. And now, as we have seen
with Ilya Ponomaryov, in order to discredit a member of the opposition, the
authorities need only claim that he does not respect the Great Patriotic War.
In fact, officials shut down Russia's only opposition television channel,
Dozhd, on that pretext.
This cult of the St. George ribbons and war veterans has
taken on grotesque proportions. Not only are officials and ordinary citizens
ready to take offense at any passing remark, but they seem to have forgotten
the far more obvious and important question of the veterans themselves. For
example, this year marks the 69th anniversary of the victory in World War II.
It happens that the average lifespan for Russians is also 69 — and for men it
is even shorter. The point is, if any veterans are still alive, they must be
very few in number. Every year the city honors its veterans of the Great
Patriotic War and posts its reports online. In 2004, Moscow had 108,000
veterans. Five years later, in 2009, the number had more than doubled to
272,000. In another three years, in 2012, the original number had tripled to
340,000 veterans.
Did officials falsify these figures, just as they do with
election results? Not at all. Over the course of his years in power, Putin
issued several addendums to the law on veterans, effectively granting veteran
status to all the people who "labored on the home front." That means
it now extends to everyone who worked in the defense industry during the war,
every man, woman and suckling child who survived the blockade of Leningrad.
As veterans, all of those people now receive discounts on
utilities fees, free public transportation and so on. All of those people are
extremely grateful to Putin as their benefactor, and they enthusiastically vote
for him in elections. So when the war with Ukraine began, the "Putin
Patriots" already knew how to distinguish themselves from ordinary people:
with a black and orange ribbon.
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