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Moscow: Willing Darling of the Hateful

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  • Moscow: Willing Darling of the Hateful

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    July 28 2005

    Willing Darling of the Hateful

    By Masha Gessen

    Alexandra Ivannikova is a busy woman these days. Just in the last
    week she has had to attend two ceremonies at which she received
    awards. At the Golden Palace Casino on July 21, she was handed a
    voucher for a tour of a country of her choice, awarded to her by a
    jury of journalists who named her their news hero. A few days later,
    Ivannikova attended the third-anniversary celebration of the Movement
    Against Illegal Immigration, where she received 50,000 rubles
    ($1,700) "for courage in defending her honor."

    So who is this hero? She is a 30-year-old Moscow housewife who is
    facing trial on charges of killing a man. Some facts of the case are
    not in dispute: She admits that she stabbed a man with a knife she
    carried in her purse. She hit an artery, and he died of blood loss.
    There were no witnesses. She stabbed the man in his car, after, she
    claims, he tried to force her to engage in oral sex in exchange for a
    ride. She maintains that as soon as she stabbed him, she jumped out
    of the car and screamed for help. The police who detained her say in
    fact she was trying to run away from the scene of the crime and told
    them what happened only after they questioned her about the blood
    stains on her clothing. As often happens with Russian court cases,
    the investigators did such a sloppy job that teasing out the facts --
    a very difficult task in the absence of witnesses under any
    circumstances -- seems next to impossible.


    But the facts of the case have become unimportant to Ivannikova's
    public persona, which emerged in the spring as a result of her
    lawyer's and supporters' publicity efforts. In May, Ivannikova became
    a media star, giving several interviews a day. Demonstrations in
    support of Ivannikova took place in front of the courthouse where she
    was tried. (She was found guilty and given a suspended sentence, but
    her conviction has since been overturned by a higher court and now
    she faces a new trial.) Television and radio personalities called her
    a hero. Ultimately, even the City Prosecutor's Office, in apparent
    violation of procedure, said that the case should be dropped. Here
    comes the really ugly part: The single biggest reason Ivannikova
    garnered all this support is that the man she killed was an ethnic
    Armenian. Here is what the Movement Against Illegal Immigration
    writes in its announcement of Ivannikova's award: "This young
    beautiful woman should serve as an example of what should be done to
    brazen foreigners who attack the honor of a Russian woman."

    About a month ago, I spent several hours interviewing Ivannikova. I
    asked her in detail about what she thought of the sort of supporters
    she had attracted. She explained that she couldn't be choosy: Before
    these people came along, no one would step up to defend her, and she
    had begun to fear that she would actually go to jail. And then she
    and her husband added something that has stayed with me ever since.
    They explained to me that every political organization has its own
    platform. That her supporters just happened to be ultranationalists,
    and this was their prerogative. Hey, she said, if feminists had come
    out in her support, she would have taken all comers.

    This is what I find most frightening about the Ivannikova story.
    Every country has a certain quantity of political scum. But what
    really measures the health of a nation is the number of people who
    are willing not only to tolerate the existence of hateful
    ultranationalist organizations, but to go along with them when it
    becomes expedient, accept their support and even their money. I am
    pretty certain that Ivannikova is just a very ordinary woman who
    carelessly got herself into a stupid situation that turned horrific.
    But then she became the willing darling of the worst kind of people
    there are in this country. What I fear is that many, many people in
    this country are just like her -- and when hateful ultranationalist
    politicians offer them an alternative to their current bleak
    existence, they will easily, even happily, go along.


    Masha Gessen is a contributing editor at Bolshoi Gorod.
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