Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and of course you should go to Berlin I think.
Germany is not engulfed in all encompassing communism hatred like the Baltics or Poland so it will give you are less biased picture
I cannot comment on specifics, but my spouse grew up in the USSR. Fascinated about the comment regarding bias. My sense from him and his family is that since the 1970's, day to day life was not bad (we got some exaggeration about certain things in the states), but that the 'meta' issues were bad. They all played games like paying people off bc it was the only way to do/get things. There were times shortages were terrible, and the communists/Communist party/the socialist parties killed a lot of his family, number of years earlier. This was a common story. They also could not speak freely and had real concerns about neighbors turning each other in. He has not been back bc he was so grateful to escape.
But, issues under communism in the USSR were quite real. They also varies based on location.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and of course you should go to Berlin I think.
Germany is not engulfed in all encompassing communism hatred like the Baltics or Poland so it will give you are less biased picture
I cannot comment on specifics, but my spouse grew up in the USSR. Fascinated about the comment regarding bias. My sense from him and his family is that since the 1970's, day to day life was not bad (we got some exaggeration about certain things in the states), but that the 'meta' issues were bad. They all played games like paying people off bc it was the only way to do/get things. There were times shortages were terrible, and the communists/Communist party/the socialist parties killed a lot of his family, number of years earlier. This was a common story. They also could not speak freely and had real concerns about neighbors turning each other in. He has not been back bc he was so grateful to escape.
But, issues under communism in the USSR were quite real. They also varies based on location.
Anonymous wrote:Oh and of course you should go to Berlin I think.
Germany is not engulfed in all encompassing communism hatred like the Baltics or Poland so it will give you are less biased picture
Anonymous wrote:PP. or you could also try Uzbekistan or Kazakhstan if you wanted to see some Soviet influences and are willing to go outside Europe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and of course you should go to Berlin I think.
Germany is not engulfed in all encompassing communism hatred like the Baltics or Poland so it will give you are less biased picture
Hmm, don't think so. I grew up there and still go there regularly. There's not too much in the way of discussion on communism. The Wall, sure. Not that much else.
Hm, interesting! Maybe it’s because they don’t politicize it much
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Belarus is the closest and is in many ways a relic, but it is not safe to go there. Maybe Serbia.
Why is it not safe? I mean sure don’t bring weed or loiter near classified factories or befriend KGB officers and ask them for your loans back. And these are Russia cases I am referring to as I don’t know any from Belarus. But otherwise nothing will happen to you in either country
Nonsense. You don’t have to be a spy for them to call you one. You could become a chip in their game.
Don’t get me wrong, I am not persuading you to travel thereI am simply saying that I don’t know a single case of a foreigner arrested for just being a foreigner. Heck, even in N Korea you have to actually steal a poster to be detained.
Anonymous wrote:Transdnistria
Anonymous wrote:Slightly later period (1985-1999) but I highly recommend watching The Trauma Zone documentary (used to be on YouTube and hopefully still there)
Also remember that this period in history is highly politicized. Eastern Europe is trying to break free from their socialist past and their museums will certainly be politically exaggerated, just as it is now en Vogue in say Russia to romanticize the past. You need to get a balanced view by getting acquainted with both sides.
It’s sad that Russia is perceived as too dangerous/bad form to travel RN, but the Leningrad siege museum in St Pete would be totally worth visiting.