Over a century ago, Russian writer and former political prisoner
Fyodor Dostoevsky wrote, "The degree of civilization in a society can be
judged upon entering its prisons." Today, that assertion continues
to be valid, but the brutalities of the recent past have shown that
civilization should be judged by more than its attitude to just one
minority group of prisoners.
On the evening of Oct. 11, a group of about 20 people in masks broke
into a Moscow gay- and lesbian-friendly club called 7freedays, where
they were celebrating their annual coming-out party. The attackers
apparently knew how the club's alarm system worked. They immediately
held a gun that fired rubber bullets at the barkeep, who was the only
person with access to the police panic button. The attackers started
breaking the furniture and beating up the clientele. More than 10 people
were wounded, four of whom were hospitalized. Shards from broken
glasses damaged one woman's eye. The police were called after
the attackers left, and they arrived at the club, located in the center
of Moscow, only after 30 minutes.
Unfortunately, attacks on gays have become as much of a national
trademark as St. Basil's Cathedral. The first attacks on gay clubs took
place in the mid-2000s, and since then gay activists have been regularly
beaten up whenever they try to hold a gay-pride parade. Even foreign
activists have been hurt when they have come to support their
colleagues. Volker Beck, a deputy in the German Bundestag, was roughed
up right on Moscow's main street, Tverskaya Ulitsa, across from the
mayor's office. As gay activist Nikolai Alekseyev wrote
on his LiveJournal blog, "Not one person in Russia has been held
accountable for homophobic crimes, and the people who attack gay parties
know that very well."
There are, however, other opinions. Vitaly Milonov, a deputy in the
St. Petersburg legislative assembly from United Russia, is co-author
of the notorious law forbidding "promotion of homosexuality." He blamed
the incident in the club on gay people themselves. He said in an interview
with Snob.ru, that the incident was the "result of the obnoxious, crude
and permissive behavior of the gay community. … What other reaction
could there be when, in response to democratic actions, they run around
like jackals at consulates, beg for another grant and write letters
demanding that the authorities be punished? This is a warning to the gay
community so that they don't forget that they live in the Russian
Federation, a country with a healthy historical and cultural legacy."
Sergei Rybko, a Russian Orthodox priest, spoke out more forcefully.
"The Holy Scriptures instruct us to cast stones at all those guys with
nontraditional orientation. As long as that scum is not banished
from Russian land, I completely agree with people who are trying
to cleanse our homeland of them. If the government won't do it, then
the people will," he said an interview
with Pravoslaviye i Mir (Orthodoxy and the World). He added that he
regretted that because he is a priest, "he couldn't take part in actions
of this sort."
To be fair to the Russian Orthodox Church, not all priests agree with
Rybko. Archpriest Roman Bratchik, while not defending gays, considers
the incident to be contrary to the main precepts of the faith. "Sodomy
has existed in all eras, and we condemn this phenomenon," he wrote
in Pravoslaviye i Mir, "but I would like to remind people that Sodom
and Gomorrah weren't destroyed by people but by angels sent from God.
The attackers only bring harm to Christian teaching. They won't create
a country that lives a 'life of piety and purity'. With those methods
they can only create a fascist country."
These words ring out like an alarm bell. Laws against "promoting
homosexuality" — whatever that means — and the de facto absence
of protection for gay people fostered by law enforcement agencies
threaten everyone. This is a direct attack on the Constitution, which
declares that all citizens are equal. And if you take away that
cornerstone of equality, tomorrow the attackers might appear in a
synagogue or the office of an opposition party. And then who could stop
them from going out on the street and beating up anyone with different
hair color or anyone they simply don't like?
In the Middle Ages, every witch hunt involved repression of Jews.
In the 21st century, gays are the new Jews. They are visible, disliked
by many in society and a very convenient target for fascists of all
stripes. Countries with repressive political regimes are usually noted
for their intolerance of homosexuality.
This might be a good time to recall the famous words of Pastor Martin
Friedrich Niemöller, a prisoner in a German concentration camp: "First
they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for the communists, and I did not speak out because I
was not a communist. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did
not speak out because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for me,
and by that time there was no one left to speak out."
For Russians, who have suffered from such harsh repressions so many
times, it might be a good idea to inscribe these words above every
doorway — as a reminder.

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