ChrisO_wiki Profile picture
Jul 15, 2022 30 tweets 8 min read Read on X
What's a 'board of shame' and why is the Russian army using them? Since this topic has come up a few times in recent days, it's worth doing a short thread to discuss how this very old Soviet institution has reappeared in the Ukraine war. /1
The example above was reportedly put up in Budennovsk, southern Russia, at the base of the 205th Separate Cossack Motor Rifle Brigade. It lists around 300 soldiers below the caption "THEY REFUSED TO CARRY OUT COMBAT MISSIONS". /2
The text below says:

"On 24 February 2022, Russia launched a special military operation in Ukraine. The aim is to demilitarise and denazify, to bring to justice all war criminals responsible for the "genocide" of the civilians of "Donbass" [quotation marks sic]. /3
From the first days of its existence, the 205th Cossack Brigade has been taking part in special operations on the territory of Ukraine and has been successfully fulfilling its military tasks. /4
But there are servicemen of our brigade who refused to fulfill their military duty and left the combat positions in the place where they had lost their military oath - solemn promise, oath of allegiance to the Motherland. /5
They have forgotten that military service requires unconditional performance of the assigned tasks under any circumstances, even at the risk of death - they have abandoned their arms, betrayed their comrades, dishonored their families, their country, their dignity!" /6
'Boards of shame' have likely been put up elsewhere. In a talk to the families of soldiers from the 35th Separate Motorized Rifle Brigade, Colonel Oleg Korotkevich said that 261 soldiers from the brigade had been discharged for refusing to fight in Ukraine. /7
From the transcript of the extracts published by @SvobodaRadio:

[Question from the audience]: "Can I ask you, is there a board of shame?"

KOROTKEVICH: "There's a board of shame, but it's in the subdivisions. We're not putting it up in the city yet. /8
But we'll put it up, believe me, and we'll know everyone who's a disgrace, just like we'll know each of our heroes."

There were also indications at the start of the war, when many Russian soldiers were deserting, that boards of shame were being put up. /9
In April 2022, @RuslanLeviev of @CITeam_ru reported that a Russian unit on the Ukrainian border had put up blank boards for "bad men/good men". The grey board included spaces for displaying the photos of those who "betrayed their comrades, fled from the battlefield". /10
I have no idea how widely these are being used in today's Russian army, but the fact that they're being used at all is an interesting throwback to Soviet times. Let's look at the history of boards of shame. /11
Soviet society was heavily conformist, requiring citizens to abide by particular standards of behaviour at all times. Deviancy was punished. Even things like hair, music and clothes were policed by the state and by state-run youth groups like the Komsomol. /12
But there was only so much the state could do. Instead, it turned to encouraging a culture of shame (позор, pozor). What it couldn't police itself, it used social pressure to control. Which brings us to boards of shame. /13
They are actually part of a duality, as the bad men/good men boards show. In Russian they're known as the doska pozora (board of shame) or 'black board' and its mirror-image, the doska pocheta (board of honour) or 'red board'. /14
They were one of several mechanisms for public shaming, which included such things as comrades' courts - tribunals where neighbours or co-workers would sit in public judgement of someone accused of anti-social activity. The accused would have to confess and beg forgiveness. /15
Although the Soviet Union was nominally an egalitarian society, in reality status was all-important. Being featured on a red or black board could have significant consequences for your career, apart from the reaction of your peers. /16
Boards of shame or honour were used throughout the Soviet system, everywhere from schools to workplaces to collective farms and even in the camps of the GULAG, where getting food depended on meeting one's work quota. /17
The social pressure created by the boards was substantial: "Wives and children, friends and fellow workers, see there who has disgraced himself as a slacker. Children lecture their inefficient worker-fathers." /18
They could be used in other contexts too. These sailors aboard the Soviet cruiser Marshal Voroshilov in the 1980s compiled a 'board of shame' showing wives and girlfriends who had been unfaithful ("women who don't wait"). /19
In another example from one of Stalin's anti-religious campaigns in the 1930s, the names of children who have observed Easter have been written on a board of shame in their school. /20
Sometimes a special effort was made to humiliate people seen as particularly egregious offenders. When two women were caught by the People's Patrol fighting in a public toilet in the 1970s, they were given their own illustrated board of shame. /21
Soviet boards of shame and honour ranged in size and complexity from simple bulletin boards to grand, almost sculptural edifices in the centre of towns and cities, where passers-by would stop to see who had been misbehaving (or overachieving). /22
After the fall of the Soviet Union, boards of shame largely disappeared in Russia, but they appear to have continued in use in Belarus, which has continued to copy old Soviet practices. These boards of shame focus on drunkards (left) and debtors (right) respectively. /23
As Russian society has become more authoritarian under Vladimir Putin's rule, boards of shame have reappeared in many places to target debtors, corrupt officials, hooligans, underperforming private employees and even students who are late for a lecture. /24
Bringing the practice up to date, various public authorities have also created electronic boards of shame - or even searchable databases - listing corrupt officials or persistent driving offenders. /25
And boards of shame may become much more widespread in the future, if a draft law "On the Public Dissemination of Information on Socially Dangerous Persons" proposed in May 2022 by Communist deputy Yaroslav Kryukov is passed by Russia's parliament. /26
Kryukov proposes to reintroduced boards of shame in "squares, courtyards, squares, large shopping centers, billboards and city lights, as well as in the form of posters in public transport". /27
He suggests using them to denounce "persons convicted of participating in unsanctioned protests and writing negative comments on the Internet about the authorities and about the situation in the country". /28
And bringing things fully up to date with the information revolution, if you know someone who you think should be on a board of shame near you, you can report them through the 'My Denunciation' mobile app. Watch this space! /end

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with ChrisO_wiki

ChrisO_wiki Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @ChrisO_wiki

Apr 30
1/ @konrad_muzyka has published an excellent if rather gloomy thread on the current situation in Ukraine. In the interests of helping it to reach a wider audience, I thought an English translation would be useful.
2/ "I invite you to a short thread about the current situation on the frontline. In short, the situation looks very bad and is not expected to improve in the coming weeks.
3/ There are three reasons for the current state of affairs and in principle there is nothing revelatory here, as the problems on the Ukrainian side have been known for a long time: lack of ammunition, manpower, fortifications.
Read 17 tweets
Apr 19
1/ A memorial to the lost sailors of the Russian missile cruiser Moskva has been unveiled in Sevastopol, two years after the ship's sinking on 13 April 2022. However, many relatives and some of the surviving crew, including the captain, were not invited to the ceremony. ⬇️
Image
Image
2/ The memorial is dedicated to the sailors of the 30th Surface Ship Division. It was erected opposite the place in Sevastopol harbour where Moskva used to dock, and was unveiled on Saturday 13 April 2024. Most of those named on it were Moskva crew members.
3/ Photos of the memorial have recently been published. It comprises a slab two meters high and about five meters long, three stones with the names of 20 of the dead crew members and one other sailor at the foot of the slab, and a stone with an engraved image of the ship.
Read 7 tweets
Apr 16
1/ Units from Russia's 'Afrika Korps' are reportedly to be withdrawn from Africa and sent to Russia's Belgorod region on the border with Ukraine. Its organiser, GRU Lieutenant General Andrei Averyanov, is said to be under a cloud for failing to achieve his goals in Africa. ⬇️ Image
2/ The VChK-OGPU Telegram channel reports that preparations are being made to withdraw Afrika Corps detachments and dispatch them to Belgorod, the scene of recent incursions by the Ukraine-supported Russian Volunteer Corps. Image
3/ The Afrika Korps was created following Wagner Group leader Yevgeny Prigozhin's death in 2023, as a means of taking over Wagner's operations in Africa and bringing them under the control of the Russian Ministry of Defence.
Read 7 tweets
Apr 15
1/ Russia is considering a return to producing low-quality gasoline to make up for shortages caused by Ukrainian attacks on its oil refineries. However, this is likely to cause damage to vehicles, which owners may find difficult to repair due to a shortage of spare parts. ⬇️ Image
2/ Reuters and the Russian newspaper Kommersant report that the Russian government is considering temporarily suspending fuel environmental standards to enable gasoline to be produced at a lower quality, or to include environmentally damaging octane-boosting additives.
3/ Since 2016, Russia has only allowed the production of at least Euro-5 standard gasoline (a standard set by the European Union which is also in effect in a number of non-EU, Asian and South American countries). Modern vehicles are designed to run only on compliant fuel. Image
Read 14 tweets
Apr 15
1/ The companies formerly owned by Yevgeny Prigozhin are reportedly undergoing a financial collapse, losing over a billion rubles since his death last year. The Russian Ministry of Defence is no longer buying rotten food from his companies after years of complaints.⬇️ Image
2/ 'We can explain' reports that financial statements for the companies that belonged to Prigozhin – and are mostly now managed by his son Pavel – show that almost all of them fell into the red in 2023. They comprise a mixture of catering and construction firms.
3/ The heart of Prigozhin's business empire was Concord Management and Consulting LLC, the parent organisation of the Concord group of companies, which included catering, construction and media enterprises. CMC LLC and its subsidiaries lost nearly 104 million rubles ($1.1 m).
Read 9 tweets
Apr 2
I had been expecting something like this, but while this is absolutely a legitimate target, many of the workers are de facto enslaved teenage students and African girls who have reportedly been catfished via dating apps. /1
Read 5 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(