Following my conversation with Boris Grebenshchikov on the Novaya Gazeta Europe YouTube channel, an administrative protocol was issued against me for collaborating with an undesirable organisation.
While I wouldn’t like to indulge in excessively flattering parallels, of course, it gives me great pleasure to respond by quoting Tolstoy’s 1901 reply to his excommunication from the Russian Orthodox Church: “The synod’s edict is altogether very bad, and the statement at the end, that those who signed it pray that I may become such as they are, makes it no better.”
In his ironic, good-natured and quite proper response, Tolstoy writes that the edict was “an incentive to evil feelings and deeds, for, as was to be expected, it evoked in unenlightened and unreasoning people, anger and hatred against me, culminating in threats of murder expressed in letters I received”.
While I’m writing this from Fair Lawn, New Jersey, a literal English translation of Tolstoy’s ancestral home of Yasnaya Polyana, I’ve thankfully yet to receive any such letters myself — probably because they don’t know my current address. Nevertheless, feted murderer-turned-politician Andrey Lugovoy, the prime suspect in the poisoning of former FSB officer Alexander Litvinenko, has promised those who left Russia over the war in Ukraine that they’ll die a dog’s death, while Vyacheslav Volodin, the speaker of the State Duma, wishes them as much on a regular basis.