Hotel Moscow (32 page)

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Authors: Talia Carner

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About the author
Meet Talia Carner

TALIA CARNER
is the author of
Puppet Child, China Doll
, and
Jerusalem Maiden
, which won the Forward National Literature Award in the historical fiction category in 2011.

Her award-winning personal essays appeared in the
New York Times
,
Chocolate for Women
anthologies (Simon & Schuster),
Cup of Comfort
(Adams Media), and
The Best Jewish Writing 2003
(John Wiley). Her short stories have been published in
Midstream
,
Lynx Eye
,
River Sedge
,
Midwest Literary Magazine
,
Moxie
,
Lilith
,
Litro
,
Rosebud
,
Clackamas Literary Review
,
Two-Bridges Review
,
Confrontation
, and
North Atlantic Review
. Before writing fiction full-time, Carner worked for
Redbook
magazine, was the publisher of
Savvy Woman
magazine, and founded a successful marketing and consulting firm servicing Fortune 500 companies. She taught at Long Island University’s School of Management and was a volunteer counselor and lecturer for the Small Business Administration. In 1993 she was sent twice by the United States Information Agency to Russia, and in 1995 participated in the NGO women’s conference in Beijing.

Her addictions include chocolate, ballet, Sudoku—and social justice.

For a more detailed bio, reviews of the novel, and the author’s book tour dates and locations, please check the author’s website,
www.TaliaCarner.com
.

Discover great authors, exclusive offers, and more at
hc.com
.

About the book
Talia in Russia

October 1993: During Moscow uprising (Kremlin wall in the background). (Courtesy of the author)

May 1993: In Moscow’s Red Square. (Courtesy of the author)

Preparing for a women’s business conference. (Courtesy of the author)

At Troitsa-Sergyeva Lavra monastery, the ancient seat of the Russian Orthodox Church. (Courtesy of the author)

Russia Then and Now . . .

By Talia Carner
www.TaliaCarner.com

This essay was written in December 2011, twenty years after the fall of communism
.

W
HEN THE
I
SRAELITES
fled Egypt, they wandered in the desert for forty years until the generation born into slavery had died. According to God, only a people who had known a life of freedom possessed the strength to overcome the hurdles of building a new nation in the Promised Land, and would enter it.

I understood that wisdom when I journeyed to Russia twice in 1993 to teach women entrepreneurial skills. And I am reminded of my impressions at that time today when Russians are supposed to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of democracy. Instead they are taking to the streets to protest the autocratic regime that is all too similar to the totalitarian Soviet rule it had replaced.

In late April 1993, merely sixteen months after the fall of communism, I joined a group of American businesswomen to meet courageous Russian women who traveled to Moscow and St. Petersburg from areas as far as the Ural Mountains and from far republics whose names I had never heard. Suddenly we were no longer
The Enemy
. They watched with awe how we walked tall, strutted about with confidence, and punctuated our talks with smiles. (They asked why so many of us were in mourning or else why would we wear black when all the colors of the rainbow were available to us?) At the edge of their seats, they clung to every bit of information we could dole out. As we spoke through interpreters to groups and individuals about business plans, marketing strategies, and pricing policies or as we lectured about advertising, promotions, and selling tactics, they took furious notes. In turn, they asked tough questions to which we had no simple answers: from how to export their homemade, poor-quality products “to America,” to how to launch a women’s political party or start a women’s bank

As hopeful and valiant as these women were, we hit a wall when we introduced the concept of networking. “Both of you. face the same problem motivating employees,” I said to two students who had found themselves running bed and beer barrel factories, respectively, after a lifetime of working on the conveyor belt sawing and gluing lumber. But the two women glared at each other with suspicion. “Look, you live over six hundred kilometers apart,” I explained. “There is no risk, and you can both benefit if you share ideas about ways to deal with business problems. You are not even selling to the same consumers!” But the women only shook their heads at my naïveté.

In a city that had never published a phone book, one’s Rolodex equivalent had become a cherished commodity. It meant survival in a country that had never had aspirin or toothbrushes in its few stores. We soon learned that expecting our students to share any information—from a reliable printing shop to the name of an English teacher—was doomed. They balked at the notion that they should help a friend, let alone a stranger. They also asked why Americans smiled so much, finding this basic human gesture incomprehensible. And the idea of attempting to
connect
with strangers was outright frightening. It involved eye contact! Who could imagine what disaster a stranger might bring upon you?

It did not take long for me to grasp what had happened to the Russian nation on a deeper lever. Under a regime that glorified children turning in their parents to the authorities, where neighbors in hellish communal apartments spied on one another, where life’s basic needs were in such short supply that stealing had become the norm, Russians had been conditioned into deep distrust. For seventy years, stripped of not just the right to practice religion but the social and moral values that we refer to as Judeo-Christian, Russians were unprepared for democracy that respected the rights of others, that set boundaries between the individual and the collective, that held random kindness in high regard, and that viewed cooperation as the route to strength. Russians had become adept at navigating the system without ever negotiating truce between individuals. Taking a cue from the corruption that invaded every Soviet institution, where apparatchiks openly enjoyed preferred treatment and flaunted their leather shoes and Rolex watches, the Russian masses emulated the only methods proven to work. Thus the curator of a geological museum invited me to her cramped apartment and, over a table laden with Russian delicacies and vodka, proceeded to offer me a business partnership in which we would privately sell the museum’s semiprecious stones and rare geological rocks to American museums.

Privatization meant that formerly state-run large and small manufacturing plants gave ownership vouchers to all employees, who were wholly unprepared to operate these ventures. In a coat factory where I was training a small, newly elevated team, I explained the math of pricing a single coat: the cost of materials, the number of hours it took to create it (based on the seamstress’s hourly salary, including benefits), and the fixed cost of running the place divided by the number of products expected to be manufactured. The suggested price I arrived at was by far lower than the thousands of dollars these women had expected
me
to pay for a coat. When I expressed to the interpreter that I was not buying one, she explained the team’s dismay: What other reason had propelled me to spend two hours “negotiating” a price? It dawned on me that these women had never imagined volunteerism. Why would anyone do something for strangers without expecting to gain something out of it?

I also realized that while our children in the United States learned the basics of market economy when setting up their lemonade stands, negotiating allowances, and later working in fast-food chains that taught them customer service, adult Russians were strangers to the simplest market concepts. At a brush-manufacturing plant, for which the state had paid the bills, provided the raw materials, and then “bought” the finished product at a price it had set, the manager now placed the entire sum of utilities and building maintenance into the price tag of the first item to be sold. That first household brush was priced at the equivalent of tens of thousands of dollars. Since no one was buying it, the factory was stuck.

One night, after our group had paid the local tour agent— one of our organizers—for tickets to a ballet performance at the famous Bolshoi Ballet, we were taken to an unadorned building whose sign in Cyrillic script we could not read. My impression of being in the wrong place was sealed when the dancers came on stage. Although they were talented, we were clearly at a ballet school performance. After being pressed, the enterprising tour agent claimed that “it was the same thing,” and acted indignant when we explained that not only she had committed fraud but also jeopardized her business’s future by developing a bad reputation. Bad reputation? The stupid Americans had handed her whatever cash she had asked for! Now confronted, she was unremorseful about raking so much money into her pocket in a single evening. “You wanted ballet, I gave you ballet.”

In spite of these experiences, there were women who admired what we did, who appreciated our gifts of lipsticks, condoms, and Tylenol in Ziploc bags. There were so many women desperate to provide for their children in a country where the majority of households were run by women because men often drank, beat their wives, and died of alcoholism at the average age of fifty-seven. I had never met as many bridge engineers as I encountered in one day in Moscow or as many female doctors as I met in one day in St. Petersburg. Yet bewildered by the fast-changing society, these highly educated women were isolated by the absence of a give-and-take social contract that could be fully relied on, and now lost after the state-run child care and meager medical services had been pulled from under them, leaving their children hungrier and sicker than ever before.

These brave women motivated me to accept an invitation by the U.S. Information Agency (USIA), which sent experts to all parts of the world, to return to Russia only six months later. Among other topics, I was assigned to conduct workshops about truth in advertising and ethical business practices and was given a budget for the translation of material to be printed in one hundred copies. Ironically, my Russian coordinator took the money for the translation, but it went up in smoke even before we left JFK Airport in New York City, my material never translated.

I landed in Moscow in October 1993, two hours after the uprising against President Boris Yeltsin had erupted. While our bus turned away from a bridge where peasants waved pitchforks and sickles, our Russian handlers insisted that we had misunderstood what we saw. As we watched the burning Russian parliament from a conference building’s windows, our handlers pulled us away into windowless classrooms. As we received frantic phone calls from home detailing CNN broadcasts, our handlers called it Western propaganda. As we were subject to curfew, our handlers “forgot” their English to answer why the hotel was surrounded by soldiers. As I told the group that I had heard tanks rolling down our street, our eavesdropping handlers accused me of enticing disobedience and set me loose to be chased by the Russian militia so that my only choice was to escape Russia.

Even as the country fought for democracy, these English-speaking translators and facilitators, who must have read English literature and magazines, were incapable of releasing their tight-fisted grip on their charges to stop controlling the flow of information—or even of thought—and to permit us to speak freely among ourselves. Moreover, they were not embarrassed by their obvious lies. After a lifetime of bankrupt ideology and empty slogans, insincerity had long become the norm; no one believed anything anyway.

Russians still harbored the souls of embittered, subjugated people, a dispirited nation that had known no freedom, privacy, or choices. They were unprepared for democracy, freedom of the press, personal choices, market economy, and assumptions about transactions—be they social, economic, cultural, or legal—that shared the common concept of decency, if not rule of law. The regime that bloomed after the fall of communism embraced the same mind-set as its predecessor, using the former K.G.B. under a new cloak, revering bureaucrats-turned-oligarchs, and exploiting brutal tactics to silence criticism and opposition. Not unlike the Israelites wandering in the desert for forty years, Russians needed time to shed the old mentality of the oppressed until the younger generation raised in a much more open world would be prepared to claim what is rightly theirs.

That younger generation is now taking to the streets in protest.

On November 3, 1993, at 2:48
P.M.
, three weeks after escaping Russia, Talia Carner started her fiction-writing career
.

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