Sergej Sumlenny Profile picture
Mar 13 8 tweets 4 min read
I visited this exhibition in Berlin. I cried with tears streaming over my face. I started to cry again hours later trying to tell my friend about the exhibition. It was one particular piece of art which rolled over my soul. 196 names of deported Kalmyks sewed on handkerchieves /1 Image
A Kalmyk artist Boova Sarangova created this art. She found, that 196 Kalmyks with the same surname were deported by the Soviets. She started to sew their names and what happened to them. "Sarangova Bulgn Kichikovna. Deported on ethnic reason (Kalmyk). Died on transport 1943". /2 Image
"Died in Siberia 1954". "Died on transport 1943." "Died in Novosibirsk 1944". This artwork is full of death notes. And of respect to the people. One needs to understand: sewing handkerchieves was a typical way to protect one's dignity. To let others know what happened to you. /3
This way of sewing was typical for many deported nations in totalitarian regimes. The deported Ukrainian women sewed icons, their names, wishes for their children. (Read more in a great book by Oksana Kis "Survival as Victory"): /4 ImageImageImageImage
The arrested in the USSR used this way to let their dear ones to know what happened. That they love them. That they have not "disappeared". That they want to say the last farewell. It was the last message. Thrown out of a window in a hope, that someone will find and bring it. /5 Image
In the case of Kalmyk remembrance, another layer is added. In the Kalmyk tradition, memorial places are being marked with flags. These handkerchieves with the sewed names make the basis for such memorial. I cannot imagine a way more moving and precise to honour the killed ones /6 ImageImage
I highly recommend everyone who is in Berlin to visit the exhibition. The art I described above is just one of dozens of incredible objects presented there. The story of the Kazakh genocide by famine (like Moscow did with Ukrainians amid Holodomor)... /7
museumsportal-berlin.de/de/ausstellung…
...the destruction of the Bashkir culture or of the Komi nature, the rob of the land, endless deportations, oppression, imperialist exploitation. You will see everything there. You will be be the same after that. Come and see. /END

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More from @sumlenny

Mar 15
OTD 140 years ago Karl Marx was born. His economy theory is questionable, but his views on Russia are amazing. Let me quote him:
"There is only one way to deal with a power like Russia, and that is the fearless way."
(New York Tribune on the Crimean War, 7 April 1853) /1
"When the Russian forces first crossed the Pruth, the Tsar had no doubt – as we happened to know and took occasion to state at the time – that he could bully all Europe, and reap laurels at small expense." Ibid
"The Russian bear is certainly capable of anything, so long as he knows the other animals he has to deal with to be capable of nothing."
New-York Daily Tribune, No. 3819, July 14, 1853 Russian Policy Against Turkey /3
Read 8 tweets
Mar 15
It is scary to witness how @ischinger endorses one of the craziest, most stupid, pro-Russian, and probably pro-Chinese “plans” to effectively destroy Ukraine. THREAD /1 ImageImageImage
The plan white-washes “pressing” (!) of Ukraine into Russia-dominated military CSTO: the topic which is obsolete by 2014 at least. Probably this part is added to be later abandoned as a “compromise”. But the rest is still terrible and is a condition for destruction of Ukraine. /2 Image
(I still cannot ignore the sweet part as the plan speaks of “post-Soviet states”. It is you who are post-Soviet, dude!)
Further, it plays with the idea of “referendum” and de-facto abolishing of Ukrainian sovereignty over the occupied territories. /3 Image
Read 11 tweets
Mar 14
In early Feb 2022, I published a call to 🇩🇪 FM @ABaerbock, who looked to be the sanest person in the GER government and was an author of the “feminist foreign politics”, showing that rape is a part of the Russia’s military doctrine. I urged Annalena to send weapons to Ukraine. twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Before publishing this call at @StopFakingNews, I asked @SZ if they were interested in a text about how Russia weaponised rape in its wars in 1990-2022, and why we need to arm Ukraine. @SZ declined. We could have prevented Bucha and other cases. We failed. stopfake.org/en/arming-ukra…
One can remember the general consensus in Germany even days before the full-scale invasion:
1) It will not happen;
2) If it happens, nothing can be done about it;
3) We need to think about the future (aka Minsk 3, diplomacy, change through trade, etc.)
I was like a nightmare.
Read 5 tweets
Mar 12
I was asked today, if Belarus will send its troops to Ukraine. I said: this will be the last thing Lukashenka would do. Belarus' army has 45,000 soldiers. They can send top 15,000 (w/out any war experience since 1991). This is what Russia loses within 2 weeks at the current rate.
Belarus is important for Putin as a territory which he uses to attack Ukraine with ground- and air-launched missiles. It also binds a certain number of Ukrainian troops located along the border. Belarus also sends some of its equipment to Russia. This is way more important.
Of course, Putin demonstrated his ability to undertake steps which led him to no success. So I would never totally exclude the option of an attack from Belarus (or using BY troops). But I believe that the chance for that is extremely low, AND this would bring RU nothing.
Read 4 tweets
Mar 10
The Russia's dissolution is way more realistic than you think. european-resilience.com/analytics/what…
Starting from July 1991, 15 regions of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) also declared their independence, including the regions of Bashkortostan, Tatarstan, Chuvashia, Komi, Mari El, Kalmykia, Sakha, Buryatia, Tuva, and Udmurtia. Regional constitutions of… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
The biggest share of Russian natural resources, which are largely sustaining Moscow’s public budget, are located in Russia’s ethnic minority regions. The Yamalo-Nenets autonomous region has the largest reserves of natural gas amounting to 40trln cm, followed by Astrakhan region… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Read 6 tweets
Feb 19
THREAD My top 10 of Ukrainian sightseeings, recommended to visit after the war.
🚨very subjective!
1. Chernihiv old town, incl: a cave monastery, the oldest UKR cathedral with ancient Greek pillars, the replica of Friday Church, and the manson of Mazepa elected prince of Ukraine
2. Ivano-Frankivsk western city. The best city governance, which improved the city infrastructure and made the historically rich city absolutely comfortable to be visited and explored by walking.
3. Vinnytsya in Central Ukraine. One of the most green cities, with amazing South Bug river, and a rich cultural heritage (also visit the towns Berdychev and Bar in a radius of 100 km from Vinnytsya - you will never forget them).
Read 12 tweets

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