Sunday, September 9, 2007

Russian dogs (1991)


i was in a park in leningrad. i don't know the name of the park; all i know is that it was near the neva river. i don't read russian, let alone speak it. i had been walking for hours, i was tired, i hadn't been home in a long time, and i missed my dog. i was feeling lonely and immensely sorry for myself.

i had just come from finland, where i had been working for two weeks. the day before i had taken the train from turku, where i had been staying, to helsinki, and then to leningrad. later that night i would take the night train to petrozavodsk, where i would spend another 10 days or so, doing research. and then i had another three days in finland before i could fly home.

the train from helsinki to leningrad was packed with people who were much savvier than i was: they all carried food. bags of fresh bananas, and oranges, and chocolate bars, and bottles of mineral water, and sandwiches, and cans of strong finnish beer. i had assumed there would be a snack car on the train; i was wrong. as the seven-hour trip wore on, i got hungrier and hungrier. each car had a samovar at one end, and glasses for tea. i drank glass after glass of tea.

we chugged through the finnish countryside, passing golden fields of rapeseed and neat train stations that had been freshly painted. on the platforms, planters bloomed with petunias and geraniums. everything looked neat and orderly and clean.

when we crossed the border into russia, the geography changed. the fields were uncultivated; the grass grew wild and high. we passed stations with broken concrete platforms and station houses with peeling paint, topped by a red star. at one stop, i watched a man crawl out of the weeds toward the tracks, a bottle clutched in one hand.

by the time we got to leningrad, i was ravenous. somehow, i found my hotel--the Hotel Moskva--and set out in search of food. it was just past midsummer, and though it was nearly 9 p.m., it was still quite light out. the restaurant in my hotel was closed; the cafe was closed as well. so i started up the street, knowing i couldn't veer too far off course because i couldn't read the street signs and i was afraid of getting lost.

a few blocks away, three teenage boys ran up. "change money? change money?" they asked. now, how did they know i was american? my Nikes? or my clueless look?

"no," i said. "but i'm hungry. do you know where i can find something to eat?"

they didn't, and they crossed the street and walked away. but soon they were back, quite excited. "do you like milk?" they asked.

milk? sure. "follow us!"

they took me down one side street and then down another, to where a man was unloading triangular cartons of milk from the back of a small truck. i had some Finnmarks left, and i traded a few for a carton apiece.

i took a big long swig....buttermilk! the thick, sour taste nearly made me gag. but i was hungry, and i drank it. the boys looked delighted. i gave them each a couple of Finnmarks for their help, and they led me back to my hotel.

the next day, i walked for hours, waiting for evening, when i could head to the train station. i ended up in a park that had a graveyard at one end. the graves were mostly of heroes of what the russians call the Great Patriotic War and we call World War II. the markers had their faces engraved on them, and red stars. they looked well-tended. I wandered over and sat down on a bench. the thought of spending another two weeks away from home felt overwhelming. i had no one to talk to. i coudln't even read a newspaper.

up the path came two stout women in headscarves. they had dogs with them--dogs that lay politely at their feet as the women sat down on a bench and began to chat.

i decided to walk over and, using sign language and the only russian phrase i knew (Без перевода, which means "excuse me,"), make it clear i wanted to pet the dogs. maybe i could play with them--toss a tennis ball, watch them run. i missed Toby so much.

i got up and walked over. "Без перевода," i said. the women looked up, startled. they were wearing aprons over flowered dresses, and one of them held a large walking stick. up close, the dogs no longer looked appealing. they had red eyes, and one of them had a badly torn ear, maybe from a fight. at my approach they leaped up and barked.

the woman gave them a sharp hit with her stick and yelled. the dogs lay down again, but watched me, growling ominously. the women turned to me and let loose with a stream of russian words. i have no idea what they were saying; russian is a harsh language, and it sounded like they were yelling.

"Без перевода," i said again, and walked back to my bench. i sat down and stared out at the late June afternoon, and i began to cry. i had a 12-hour train ride ahead of me to Karelia, and two more weeks before i would be home.

25 comments:

willowtree said...

Yeah, Russia's a real treat isn't it. I was there in '78 when it was still communist.

Kaycie said...

You poor baby. I bet that was really hard. Those boys looked so sweet, though, and it did seem like they wanted to help you.

I have to admit I'm a tad jealous. I have never been to Finland or Russia, and I'd like to see both.

What kind of research were you doing?

laurie said...

it was still communist when i was there, too, willow. i was there in 1986 and again in 1991, shortly before the collapse.

later i'll tell the story about the mysterious man in the snakeskin boots who got me on my train back to helsinki.

kaycie, i was doing research on american finns who had emigrated to the USSR during the great depression. many of them later were killed in stalin's purges. i interviewed about a dozen of their children, now in their 70s and 80s.

jan said...

You were lucky with that buttermilk. When I was there I got food poisoning from some sour cream, almost didn't make the flight back to Heilsinki.

Beverley said...

An example of the kindness of strangers.

It sounds like it was a harsh regime the Russian people were under. When people are badly treated they tend to take it out on those less powerful than themselves, in this case the dogs.

Let's hope now conditions have improved animal welfare has also.

Sweet Irene said...

That's such a sad story, I can imagine you must have felt awful and very lost and homesick. The world is not an equal place for all creatures yet.

Akelamalu said...

Aw how awful that must have been for you. I would hate to be alone in a foreign country - you were very brave!

Swampwitch said...

How did you type in those characters in Russian? If you tell me HTML, I'm going to roll in the floor and have a screaming meany fit. Thanks for the Travels today. so interesting. I've never been to Finland or Russia.

merry weather said...

I'm interested in your book Laurie - cool. I wonder if I can order it from England?

merry weather said...

Me again - yep, I've ordered it from Amazon here - I'll look forward to reading that.I'll let you know when I've started... how interesting!

laurie said...

jan, i want to hear that story! i ate a lot of sour cream once i got to petrozavodsk. everywhere i went, people served me tomato salads--which, basically, was a bowl of chopped up tomato slathered with sour cream. i gained so much weight in my 10 days there that i outgrew my jeans and had to buy a skirt at a flea market, once i got back to helsinki.

beverley, that's an excellent point. those dogs weren't pets, clearly. they were there for protection, and maybe for fighting.

irene, akelamalu: it was a great, great trip, despite my bout of homesickness. once i got to petrozavodsk i was so busy and meeting so many people i was no longer lonely. but that halfway point., in leningrad... that was a self-pitying day.

swampy: i cheated with the cyrillic letters. i had no idea how to spell the word--i just knew that it was pronounced "poo zha wa sta." so i went on google and found an online translation, and just cut-and-paste.

merry: the book is the memoir of one woman who emigrated with her family when she was a child.

she told me her story, i went to finland and russia and researched it (and interviewed surviving members of her family, among others), and then i wrote it. but it's her memoir. that's why you'll see two authors listed. she talked, i wrote. and i did my best to sound like her.

Crystal Jigsaw said...

Crikey! That doesn't sound nice at all. Fancy hitting a dog with a stick like that, I'd have gone mad. Your blog was extremely interesting. I would love to see parts of Russia, one of my favourite films is The Russia House with Sean Connery and Michelle Pfeiffer (sorry about spelling) and the scenery is amazing.

Crystal xx

laurie said...

i can't believe nobody has made fun of my glasses yet.

Beverley said...

I haven't because I've still got some like that which I still use. Big round yuppie glasses(we called them in England)which were very popular in the eighties

The Rotten Correspondent said...

I was in Russia in 1987 myself. I've spent a fair amount of the day looking for the diary I kept, which has been (hopefully temporarily) lost in our move. The only two cities we were in were Moscow and Leningrad, but we were there for three weeks. Absolutely fascinating place, but very disorienting with that alphabet.

Thanks, laurie...now there's another book I have to order!

The Rotten Correspondent said...

okay...I'll be the first. Nice glasses. You should see my passport picture from that era. I looked like half of Duran Duran.

laurie said...

i want to know what you were all doing in the soviet union! willow? jan? Rc? what are your stories?

it's funny, at the time it felt perfectly normal to travel there alone. now, i'm not so sure i'd be up for it...am i wiser now? or just more cowardly?

and RC i imagine by duran duran you mean the hair, right? ah, that 80s hair.... mine was cut in a sort of mullet, albeit a very curly mullet.

Pondside said...

You were brave!! I never got to Russia when it was communist, but I was there for three weeks last September. What really struck me was the utter lack of dogs and children. No one could explain it to me - just said that the children were in school - but everywhere across Europe one sees grandmothers with fat babies in prams - but no where in St Petersburg or Moscow or any of the cities I visited in between. I think that people are too busy at this point in time just trying to keep themselves fed - I saw a lot of Babushkas selling tiny bunches of flowers, a few carrots, jars of preserves but no fat babies in prams with happy grandmas - no chattering, laughing school children running along the streets. No dogs playing fetch in the parks.
Thanks for your comment on my blog - coal fires 'get' to me because I come from a coal mining region (Cape Breton Island) and people still burn coal in their fireplaces.

Flowerpot said...

blimey - what a trip. how was the return journey?

wakeupandsmellthecoffee said...

You've made me hungry reading about your train trip. Fascinating post. But I've read about your book before. On your other blog?

laurie said...

pondside, that's pretty interesting. i've read that the birthrate in russia has plummeted, and life expectancy has dropped, too, in the last 20 years or so. when i was there i saw lots of little kids in the parks, plus we visited a lot of schools and Palaces of Young Pioneers, where they often go after school.

the girls all had big white filmy bows in their hair, and they all looked well-cared-for. but that was 15 years ago.

flowerpot, i think i'll post two more entries about my trip. including the trip home, which had its own very strange adventure.

coffee: me, i'm always hungry anyway. writing about food just makes it worse.

Dumdad said...

This is fascinating stuff. More please.

Amy said...

Two things struck me here:

Your glasses. What a stitch. My first glasses were enormous and owly like those.

This post was, well, depressing. I'm going to go eat some chocolate now. When I buy a skirt at a flea market, I'm blaming you.

laurie said...

dumdad, i will! check back tomorrow!

amy, depressing? i'm sorry. it was sort of a grim afternoon.... but the trip got better. stay tuned.

nightskyspy said...

hello Laurie. it's an interesting post! i have nevere been to russia. i have only visited lithuania and went to latvia on an overnight train. i was with my friends and it waw good not to be alone. i am not sure if i would go alone. you are brave.
***
when i think of those eastern european countries, i think they are magical in a way but i realize, in this case magical means different.