#1 - JRL 2008-38 - JRL Home
Pravda.ru
www.Pravda.Ru
February 22, 2008
Lenin’s body may finally be taken out of its Tomb
The body of Vladimir Lenin, the leader of the Great October Revolution, which
has been resting in Kremlin’s Mausoleum for decades, will be committed to earth
with all honours, the way a country’s leader should be interred.
The Federal Memorial Complex where greatest personas of Russian and Soviet
history will be interred is expected to be unveiled in Moscow by 2010 to
coincide with the 65th anniversary of the victory in the Great Patriotic War.
The cemetery will have several alleys. The main alley will comprise only 30
tombs.
“There will be Lenin’s tomb on the cemetery as well,” said Russian painter
and project leader Sergei Goriaev in an interview with Zhizn newspaper. “The
problem escalated long ago. At the session of the organizing committee devoted
to the building of the memorial complex they discussed the possibilities to
rebury Lenin and other great people interred on the Red Square. However, there
is no official decision yet.”
Vladimir Putin signed the decree “About the Federal Military Memorial
Cemetery” in 2001. But the place has been chosen only recently – a plot outside
the Moscow Ring Road. The field of 53 hectares will be laid out in 34,000 grave
sites.
“The Russian National Cemetery will be of the same national importance as the
Arlington National Cemetery for the USA,“ says Sergei Goriaev. “Now the
sculptures of the wailers are being finished, and they will be erected there.”
The memorial will be richly adorned. Architect Vitaly Chudnovtsev intended to
use red and grey granite together with bronze in order to underline the merits
of the people interred there.
The Federal Memorial Complex is designed for burying statesmen, heroes of
Russia, heroes of the Soviet Union and knights of the Order of St. Andrew the
First-Called, of the Order for Merits before Fatherland and of the Order of
Glory. Veterans of war, servicemen of the Ministry for Emergency Situations, of
the police and other security agencies, who were killed on duty may be buried
there as well.
Russian Democrats raised the subject of burying Lenin’s body in the early
1990s. An alternative place was Lenin’s home town Simbirsk (now called Ulyanovsk
, Lenin’s father is buried there). Then-mayor of St Petersburg, Anatoly Sobchak,
agreed to provide a location in St Petersburg’s renowned Volkovoe Cemetery, next
to his mother. But then-president Boris Yeltsin decided to leave Lenin in the
Mausoleum and let history resolve the problem.
Vladimir Ulyanov-Lenin, the chairman of the Council of Peoples Commissars of
the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, died in January of 1924. The
first wooden version of the Mausoleum was built on the Red Square seven years
after his death. In five years the leader’s shrine became marble and stone.
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