You are on page 1of 3

Home

Conferences

Awards

Classifieds

Sustainability

About Us

LOG IN

News

Business

Opinion

Culture

Multimedia

Jobs

Real Estate

USD 70.2690 0.7526

SUBSCRIBE

Moscow
MIN

-8

MAX

REGISTER

-4

Clear / 09:08 PM / Traffic

Search

EUR 77.0500 1.0063

MICEX 1734.21 -0.490%

Today's Paper

Open Society and Its Enemies in Putin's Russia


(Op-Ed)
By Victor Davidoff

Dec. 22 2015 15:56

Last edited 15:56

Jason Reed / Reuters


George Soros, Chairman of the Open Society Institute, speaks at a forum sponsored by the New America Foundation in Washington.

What's going on in Russia? It's simple to understand if you remember history.


In 1921, the Soviet Union was experiencing a terrible famine, the likes of which hadn't been seen
since the Middle Ages. The Soviet government had to ask foreign governments and international
organizations for aid. The American Relief Administration, the precursor of USAID the United
States Agency for International Development responded with tons of food and medicine. In two
years the ARA provided $42 million of aid, a huge sum at the time, and saved almost 10 million
people from dying of starvation or disease. The ARA only stopped their work in Russia when
the situation ceased to be critical.
But instead of being grateful, the Soviet government began a campaign to discredit
the organization. First they declared it "a spy organization." Then members of the committee to aid
famine victims the Soviet organization that liaised with the ARA were arrested and exiled
some abroad, some to Siberia.
Fast forward to 1991. There wasn't a famine, but the country was deep in crisis, and once again
Western governments and private foundations came to the rescue.
The Soros Foundation's Open Society Institute was one of the first Western charities to begin work
in the Soviet Union. Activities began in 1987 with educational projects. In 1991, the foundation
switched to direct funding of people who had suffered most from the crisis what had been
the Soviet middle class. The new government had simply stopped fulfilling their responsibilities

Most Read

Most Shared

1. Moving Backward: Russia's Moral Decay (OpEd)


2. Why Expats Are Still Fleeing Russia
3. Taliban Says No Contacts With Russia Over
Islamic State
4. Cats React to the Worst Russian Quotes of
2015
5. 12 Things to Do on the 12 Days Of Christmas

Advertisement
The best business gifts
Foreigners Guide to Russia
trilogy:Russia for Beginners
Russia for the Advanced
Russia for Experts Photo album
Moscow.Times. 1992
2012.People.Events.CityLife
The best
business

Photo Gallery

to anyone dependent on the state budget. Hyperinflation had wiped away their savings,
and scientists, teachers, librarians, and doctors found themselves in dire economic straits. And so
the Soros Foundation initiated an enormous program to provide direct financial aid to Soviet
scholars and scientists.
I remember going into a bank in those years and seeing a line of scholars and scientists standing
at a special window for their "Soros checks." These people were once the Soviet elite, but now
they looked like a crowd of refugees who had lost their property and status. Their once stylish
Polish jeans and Romanian shoes looked pathetic next to the Christian Dior suits worn by the
fashion-forward New Russians.
The Academy of Sciences was in a state of permanent disintegration. Research centers
and universities paid their employees $5-$10 a month. One person couldn't survive on that salary,
leave alone support a family. But when they got those "Soros checks," scientists, scholars,
and professors could return to their universities and continue to do what they had done all their
lives: conduct research and teach students.
It's no exaggeration to say that those "Soros checks" saved Russian science in the early 1990s.
But they couldn't save everyone. I still recall a newspaper headline from the 1990s: "Math Teacher
Jumps Out a Window, Unable to Support His Family."

New Year's Holidays Through the Eyes of Old


Russian Orthodox Christmas Cards

Feel the Holiday Spirit:


Moscow gears up for
New Year's

Putin's Russia

And then Putin came to power and everything changed. The new regime began with an attack
on independent media, but its next targets were foreign charities. First the Soros Foundation was
unceremoniously kicked out of its office space in an old manor house that they'd leased for 49
years. Suddenly documents appeared showing that the owner of the house had sold it just a few
days before signing the lease with the Soros Foundation.
The new owner tore up the lease and locked up the house. For several days the Foundation's
employees had to climb in windows to get into their offices. In 2003, it finally closed its
representative office in Russia, but it continued to support civil society institutions.
Finally, at the very end of November this year, the Prosecutor General's Office declared the Soros
Foundation an "undesirable organization" on the territory of the Russian Federation. This ruling
does not just prohibit the Foundation's work in Russia. According to a new article in the Criminal
Code, Article 284.1, not only Foundation staff but also their grantees and even people who have
provided consulting services are threatened with prison sentences of up to six years. To put this
into perspective, the same sentence is prescribed by the Criminal Code for rape.
It's pretty clear why the Kremlin declared war against the Open Society Foundation. It's the same
attempt to turn the country into a closed system that obsessed Soviet leaders in the last century.
People are just waiting for the next measures taken against Soros grantees. The Sova Human
Rights Center has reported that for several years some books on history including books funded
by Soros have been removed from research and other libraries. And when they are removed,
the libraries and their directors have been forced to pay significant fines.
But fines aren't all. Since October Natalya Sharina, head of the Library of Ukrainian Literature, has
been under house arrest. In a search conducted of the library, they found two banned books
including one written by one of the leaders of the Maidan uprising in Kiev. Now she is facing up
to five years in prison for "inciting hatred or enmity."

Editors' Picks
Angry Russian Businessmen
Turn on Kremlin

In this situation, Russians have been trying to console themselves with the famous axiom Karl
Marx attributed to Hegel: History repeats itself first as a tragedy and then as a farce. But this was
said about Europe. In Russia, history repeats itself over and over again as tragedy.

Is Russia's Cheap Oil Nightmare


Coming True?

Victor Davidoff is a Moscow-based independent journalist and editor of the human rights
website Chronicle of Current Events (ixtc.org).
See also:

Back to the Uncertain Future for


Mikhail Khodorkovsky

Russia Has Political Prisoner Deja Vu (Op-Ed)


A New Iron Curtain Is Descending Over Russia
Russians Will Suffer in Putin's New Cold War
Facebook

Twitter

Google+

Newsletter subscription
Sign up for free newsletters and get more of The
Moscow Times delivered to your inbox

your e-mail

Also in News

Russian Officials Get


Quirky Holiday Gift: a
Book of Putin's One
Liners

Why Expats Are Still


Fleeing Russia

Moving Backward:
Russia's Moral Decay
(Op-Ed)

Kremlin Does Not


Rule Out Phone
Contacts on Ukraine
Crisis in 'Normandy
Format' Before YearEnd

Ecologists find
another cause of
antibiotic resistance

Russia's Supersonic
Bombers Will Be Here
Soon and They Are
Powerful

FIE chief speaks for


Russian fencers
doping testing at
WADA labora...

From the Web

Soviet New Year


memories

- 1
- . ,

THE MOSCOW TIMES

FOLLOW US

SUPPLEMENTS

TMT EVENTS

Sitemap

Mobile Site

Guides

Conferences

About Us

iPad & iPhone application

Country Reports

Work for Us

Print Editions

Awards

Privacy Policy

RSS

Advertise with Us

Facebook

Where to Pick Up MT

Twitter

Copyright 1992-2015. The Moscow Times. All rights reserved.


The Moscow Times


16 2015 .
77-62667. 16+

You might also like