By Sergey Chernov
The St. Petersburg Times
The Russian language is believed to be rich and highly
nuanced.
This made foreign journalists think hard about how to
translate the worddvushechka, used by President Vladimir Putin in reference to
the two-year sentences the imprisoned women of the feminist punk collective
Pussy Riot were given in August for an anti-Putin performance in a Moscow
cathedral.
“The whole case ended up in court and the judge slipped them
a dvushechka,” Putin said when interviewed for his 60th birthday
television special, which aired Sunday.
Dvushechka is a vulgar diminutive of “two,” and so news
agency Agence France-Presse translated it as “a little two,” while the
Associated Press news agency chose to avoid the subtleties and translated the
word as a plain “two years.”
This is a pity because the Russian word says a lot about the
person who uses it. It sounds loutish, somewhat tender and almost lustful,
giving the idea that a man who has it in his vocabulary has a certain amount of
power, finds nearly sexual pleasure in imposing it on those who cannot defend
themselves and does not care what others think about it.
In classic Russian literature, diminutives are frequently
used by the most repulsive characters.
Using the word about prison terms for anybody — even if they
were not young women, two of whom have young children — suggests a sinister
background and evil frame of mind.
After dropping his dvushechka, Putin, however, was
quick to remark, “I have nothing to do with it.”
According to Putin, Pussy Riot’s performance was not political,
but pure hooliganism, for which they “got what they asked for.”
If anybody had any doubts about his direct involvement, now
they should not.
Maria Alyokhina, 24, and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, 22, were
arrested March 3, while Yekaterina Samutsevich, 30, was arrested March 16. The
three have been held in a Moscow detention center since then.
Their crime consisted of entering the church when there was
no service being held and trying to videotape a music performance, which was
stopped by the church’s guards after less than 60 seconds.
Like Pussy Riot’s other performances, it was directed
against Putin and was called “Holy Mother of God, Drive Putin Away.”
Putin expressed his satisfaction about the verdict three
days before a postponed appeal hearing, scheduled for Wednesday, Oct. 10. The
women’s defense team said it sees his remarks as applying pressure on the
court.
But quite frankly, an official of such stature has many
other, more discreet ways to give orders to the court than via television.
A number of protests are planned around the world Wednesday,
but not in St. Petersburg, where a rally was held Oct. 1. Check Pussy Riot’s support
websites for times and locations.
Meanwhile, in a videotaped birthday card that resembles a
deliberate and total inversion of Pussy Riot’s brief performance in the Moscow
cathedral and their entire short career prior to that, the “women’s movement”
Otlichnitsy (“Teacher’s Pets”) invoked a frequent and irritatingly cutesy-pie
play on words whereby den’ rozhdeniia (“birthday”) is turned into den
vareniia (“jam day”) and presented the so-called Russian president with
several jars of jam, including orange jam (by the woman on the right in the
back row) “so that our country is never shaken by orange revolutions and there
is more vitamin C in our politics.” (Thanks to Comrade Olga for the heads-up.)
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