Friday, October 20, 2017
October 16, 2017 Issue
Pick of the Issue this week is Joshua Yaffa’s absorbing
“House of Shadows,” an exploration of the rich, tragic history of an old Moscow
apartment building called the House on the Embankment. Yaffa writes, “No other
address in the city offers such a compelling portal into the world of
Soviet-era bureaucratic privilege, and the horror and murder to which this
privilege often led.” The House on the Embankment is massive, “a self-contained
world the size of several city blocks.” Yaffa describes it as “a mishmash of
the blocky geometry of Constructivism and the soaring pomposity of neoclassicism.”
Yaffa speaks from personal knowledge of the place; he lives there. In his
piece, he describes his apartment (“Successive renovations had left the place
without much of the original architectural detail, but as a result it was airy
and open: less apparatchik, more IKEA. Tall windows in the living room looked
out over the imperious spires of the Kremlin”), talks to friends and neighbors
(“We spoke about the atmosphere in the building back then, what Tolya’s
grandparents must have been thinking as the bright and just world they thought
they had built began to cannibalize itself”), and recounts the building’s
nightmarish history:
Volin, I learned, kept a suitcase packed with warm clothes
behind the couch, ready in case of arrest and sentence to the Gulag. His wife
burned an archive of papers dating from his time as a Bolshevik emissary in
Paris, fearing that the work would brand him a foreign spy. They gave their
daughter, Tolya’s mother, a peculiar set of instructions. Every day after
school, she was to take the elevator to the ninth floor—not the eighth, where
the family lived—and look down the stairwell. If she saw an N.K.V.D. agent
outside the apartment, she was supposed to get back on the elevator, go
downstairs, and run to a friend’s house.
Interestingly, even though Yaffa lives in the House on the
Embankment and is intensely aware of its traumatic history, he’s not weighed
down by it. When a former tenant says to him that the building “stands on
mournful ground, and its residents are doomed to carry a very difficult
sorrow,” he writes,
I, like many of my acquaintances in the building, don’t
necessarily feel the burden of such heavy symbolism. A friend of mine, Nina
Zavrieva, a consultant and tech entrepreneur, grew up in an apartment that
first belonged to her grandfather, a lawyer who worked in the Politburo
secretariat. Nina, who is thirty, told me that from a young age she was
familiar with the building’s rich history. “I knew all this in theory, but I
never really felt it,” she said. “I never internalized it.” I asked her if
anything about the building felt different after all these years. She said that
she wasn’t sure, then remembered something: the color of the façade had
changed. “At some point, it was pink, then it became bright gray, but really I
don’t think I notice anymore.”
I never really felt
it. I find this detachment from the traumatic history of the building they
live in fascinating. Unlike, say, W. G. Sebald, in The Rings of Saturn, immersed in melancholy contemplation of the
past (“Everything is constantly lapsing into oblivion with every extinguished
life,” etc.), Yaffa and his friend Nina show a tonic pragmatism. The House on the
Embankment isn’t a ruin; it’s a functioning apartment building. Life goes on.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment