Following Alexey Navalny’s tragic death in prison, I found myself thinking of his fellow prisoners, some of them also known to the world, others faceless, last making it into the Western media when Yevgeny Prigozhin began recruiting them en masse to do a stint on the frontlines in Ukraine in return for freedom.
And I was thinking of Spartak, named after his sisters’ favourite football team. He was 14 when I first met him. A good-hearted but directionless kid, one of the millions growing up without a father, and with a mother busy trying to survive. The mother, back in the years of Soviet industrial enthusiasm, had left her native Tatarstan to build the Baikal-Amur railway in Russia’s Far East, a young woman eager to contribute to her country’s development who had ended up stuck in a mining town in southern Yakutia. Spartak was her son from a second marriage to a Ukrainian who died young, and when his older half-sisters left to conquer the capital, he soon followed, went to school, tried to settle down.
He didn’t really settle. He went to live with his father’s parents for a time, but rural Ukraine wasn’t his thing and he returned to Moscow. He drifted, until the army called him up for military service. After a bumpy start, he blossomed, discovered new talents, motivation, a sense of structure and discipline. He was stationed in Ingushetia, amid the simmering conflict in the North Caucasus. He was a conscript, not a professional soldier, but they sent him to a hotspot, and later gave him a document to prove it.