Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
April 1999 | Volume 50, Issue 2
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
April 1999 | Volume 50, Issue 2
In the fall of 1961 I was practicing law in Springfield, Illinois, and feeling restless. The thought of running for Congress passed through my mind more than once. We were in the Cold War with the Soviet Union, a conflict that seemed on the brink of turning hot. I decided to go see for myself what was going on. It was not difficult to make reservations for Moscow; for good Cold War reasons the route was hardly crowded with tourists. I arrived on the afternoon of October 28, and the next day my In-tourist guide took me to Red Square, where she inserted me near the front of a long line of people slowly shuffling toward the entrance to the tomb where Lenin and Stalin lay. The line stretched clear out of the square almost to the monument of the Soviet Unknown Soldier, and I objected politely to what I considered rudeness to those who had been waiting, but my guide insisted this was a courtesy regularly granted foreign visitors. Then she left for the day. The tomb, about a story and a half high, had been built in 1930 on the site of a temporary crypt erected soon after Lenin’s death. It was made of large blocks of porphyry, a very hard dark purplish or red rock, and black granite. On May Day Soviet leaders would stand on top of the building to review their military might. Behind the tomb, just outside the Kremlin Wall, was a narrow grassy strip with a few special burial plots for top Communist leaders. The American Communist John Reed is buried nearby, in the wall itself. When the line in Red Square came even with the tomb’s doorway, it made a ninety-degree turn and headed straight for the entrance, above which, engraved in the stone, were the names LENIN and STALIN . At each side of the door an armed soldier stood at attention. In a brief, snappy ceremony the guard changed every hour (every half-hour in bad weather). When the big clock in the Spassky Tower struck, the new guards would goose-step out of the Kremlin. They turned left toward the tomb and proceeded up a couple of steps to the entrance. What impressed me most was that they did not carry their rifles on their shoulders. They marched holding the rifles upright, with the butt balanced in the palm of the left hand. That is not easy. I made it into the tomb without a glance from the guards. Once inside we went down a flight of about thirty steps. At the bottom we turned right into a small dimly lit chamber. It reminded me of my grandmother’s root cellar, a room with a stone floor and stone walls under the kitchen of her old Midwest farmhouse. The only difference was that she was storing milk