Karin Kneissl, Austria’s former foreign minister, moved to a village in central Russia after a series of controversies and threats back home, a local news outlet reported. Kneissl’s case is not unique — over the centuries, many well-off Europeans and Americans who had to leave their home countries ended up in Russia. Today, we look at several such stories.
“Good evening. I only speak a bit of Russian. I now live in Petrushovo and I like the atmosphere,” Kneissl said in an address to the local villagers. She mentioned her desire to move to Russia for the first time during the St. Petersburg Economic Forum in mid-July, adding that she would have to learn Russian.
The statement was preceded by a nearly five-year-long affair with the Russian authorities, the most striking episode of which was Vladimir Putin’s appearance at Kneissl’s wedding in 2018, which caused mass outrage in the Austrian press. Kneissl did not deign to dispel suspicions of her ties with the Kremlin. In fact, she did exactly the opposite, becoming a columnist for RT in 2019 and joining the board of directors of Russian oil giant Rosneft in 2021. No official charges have been brought against Kneissl, but judging by the tone of the Austrian press, her political reputation in Austria is as good as ruined.
Kneissl’s journey from big politics in Europe to a village of less than 50 people (according to the 2010 census) in Russia may seem extraordinary. However, it is not particularly new: for hundreds of years, Europeans and Americans who had “sinned” in their homeland or were otherwise forced to leave often ended up in Russia.