Stalin's Image Returns to Moscow's Subway, Honoring a Brutal History
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/28/world/europe/stalin-image-moscow-subway.html
Stalins Image Returns to Moscows Subway, Honoring a Brutal History
The Kremlin has increasingly embraced the Soviet dictator and his legacy, using them to exalt Russian history in a time of war, but he remains a deeply divisive figure in Russia.
By Ivan Nechepurenko
May 28, 2025, 5:00 a.m. ET
A new statue of Joseph Stalin in a Moscow metro station reflects Russias efforts to rehabilitate the memory of a bloody ruler. (Alexander Nemenov/Agence France-Presse Getty Images)
After a nearly six-decade absence, the face of Joseph Stalin, the Soviet dictator who was not known for sparing lives to achieve his goals, is once again greeting commuters in one of Moscows ornate subway stations.
A new statue was unveiled by the authorities this month, showing Stalin gazing sagely into the distance, flanked by adoring workers and children holding out flowers to him. A replica of one that was removed in 1966 during a de-Stalinization campaign, the new relief quickly became an attraction, with people leaving flowers, stopping to pose for pictures, including with their children, or just watching pensively.
The sculpture is part of the gradual rehabilitation of a brutal leader who still has the power to divide Russians, 72 years after his death. The Kremlin has revived parts of his legacy in its effort to recast Russias history as a series of glorious triumphs that it is determined to continue in Ukraine.
Among those admiring the work on a recent visit was Liliya A. Medvedeva, who said she was very happy that our leader got restored.
We won the war thanks to him, said Ms. Medvedeva, a pensioner born in 1950, adding that she was grateful that Stalin didnt send her father to the Gulag even though he was taken prisoner during World War II something that was equated with treason at the time. Yes, there were many mistakes, but everybody makes mistakes.
In a country where criticizing government action can be dangerous, it is unclear how many people disagree with Ms. Medvedevas positive view, but some are dismayed, even enraged, by what they see as revisionist whitewashing of history.
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