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TIME Magazine: Garry Kasparov

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  • TIME Magazine: Garry Kasparov

    GARRY KASPAROV
    by Michael Elliot

    Time Magazine
    May 14, 2007
    U. S. Edition

    TIME 100; Heroes & Pioneers; Pg. 94 Vol. 169 No. 20

    The wizard of chess now battles for Russia's lonely democrats

    Garry Kasparov likes to say he has been in politics all his life. In
    the Soviet Union, the nation in which he grew up, chess was a way of
    demonstrating the superiority of communism over the decadent West,
    and a chess prodigy was inevitably a political figure. Kasparov never
    dodged that fate; in 1985 when he took on and eventually defeated
    Anatoly Karpov, the darling of the Soviet chess establishment,
    his image as a prominent outsider--Kasparov is half Jewish, half
    Armenian--was fixed.

    Kasparov's status has been maintained in post-Soviet Russia. His
    organization, the Other Russia, a coalition of those opposed to the
    rule of President Vladimir Putin, has held a series of demonstrations,
    often broken up by the police. For Kasparov, Russia today, dominated
    by a combination of huge energy enterprises and former security
    apparatchiks (such as Putin), is a betrayal of those who dreamed of
    democracy in the early 1990s.

    Putin's foes are fragmented and run from old-fashioned nationalists
    to modern liberals; Kasparov, 44, insists he is just a moderator, not
    a leader, of the movement. But by giving a voice to those who believe
    that Russia can develop in a way different from the authoritarianism
    that has always seemed to be its fate, the retired grand master shows
    that he has not yet made his last move.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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