Over two years have passed since the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, and despite the situation for the country’s fragmented political opposition looking bleak, with the exile, imprisonment or murder of all leading Kremlin critics and the threat of long jail sentences brandished at every turn to silence dissent, beneath the surface a different story unfolds.
From the quiet defiance of green ribbons and online gatherings to a burgeoning network of underground workshops and printing houses, a decentralised civil resistance movement is quietly taking root in Russia. This movement, fuelled by a belief in a free future, provides a crucial counterpoint to the prevailing Kremlin narrative and attracts those who want to remain in Russia and fight for change from within.
Amid whirring 3D printers and the glow of computer screens in a Moscow coworking space, a camera offers me a glimpse of the bustling workspace in the background as a young woman welcomes me to one of these groups’ “little shelter”. She assures me that while they may look like a ragtag lot, their actions — that run from organising lectures to engaging in cyber espionage — are driven by one common goal: empowering others to fight for a better future.