Buy a Radical T-Shirt and Support Solidarity Zone!

It’s May already! Are there enough T-shirts with radical slogans in your cupboard? Maybe Abolish and Derail the Empire work for you. By buying these T-shirts from us, you support Solidarity Zone, a human rights initiative that defends imprisoned members of the Russian anti-war resistance.

👕 Sizes:

— Abolish! print from XS to 2XL

— Derail the Empire print from S to 2XL

If you need another size, get in touch — we will see about arranging that the next time we print up the T-shirts.

💶 Price: €20 + delivery

✍️ To order, fill in this form.

The T-shirts are delivered by post from within the EU. For security reasons we do not send merch to the Russian Federation or the republic of Belarus. We also can not guarantee delivery to Georgia, due to the way the postal system there works.

✊ Funds raised from the sale of this merch go to support Solidarity Zone—a horizontal initiative providing support to those arrested in Russia for anti-war actions.

#merchandise #tshirt #solidarity #support #merch

Source: Solidarity Zone (Facebook), 12 May 2024. The original text has been edited slightly for sense.

A Long Happy Life

“Grazhdanskaya Oborona (Civil Defense). A Long Happy Life.” Images courtesy of RedBubble

A Long Happy Life
No to commotions and celebrations
No to horizons and celebrations
No to inspirations and celebrations, no, no, no
No fish in the golden polynya
Omnipresence of petty intrigues
Evil twilight of an immortal day
A long and happy life
Such a long and happy life
From now on a long and happy life
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
Ruthless depths of wrinkles
Mariana trenches of eyes
Martian chronicles of us, us, us
Among the identical walls
In the faraway coffin-like houses
In the impenetrable icy silence
A long and happy life
Such a long and happy life
From now on a long and happy life
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
No to temptations and celebrations
No to crimes and celebrations
No to exceptions and celebrations, no, no, no
On the seven sharp drafts
Through the swamps, through the deserts and steppes
Through the snow piles, through dirt and through land
A long and happy life
Such a long and happy life
From now on a long and happy life
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
A long and happy life
Such a long and happy life
From now on a long and happy life
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
A long and happy life
Such a long and happy life
From now on a long and happy life
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
A long and happy life
Such a long and happy life
From now on a long and happy life
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
A long and happy life
Such a long and happy life
From now on a long and happy life
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us
For every one of us

Source: Lyrics Translate

 

Grazhdanskaya Oborona (Civil Defense), “A Long Happy Life” (2004)

 

_______________________

Victor looked out the window at the barge passing by, thinking that everything was still ahead of him, and that the most important thing that should happen in every person’s life would happen to him. And he was convinced of this, although each time he lost more than he found.

Source: Gennady Shpalikov, “A Long Happy Life” (screenplay)

NB (23.10.22). The version of the film on YouTube that once occupied this space seems to have disappeared, so for now I recommend watching it here on VK, although you might need a VK account to do so. There is a hideous “colorized” version of the film freely available on YouTube, but I can neither recommend it nor defile what I regard as a masterpiece by sharing it here. I did, however, find this clip of the “twist” scene from the film in the original black and white:

Gennady Shpalikov (director), A Long Happy Life (1966)

Gennady Shpalikov’s first movie as a director, based on his own script, went down in the history of Soviet cinema as an absolutely unique phenomenon. Socialist propaganda seemed to have no power over Shpalikov’s work. Free from cliches, it was like a breath of fresh air in a country that was tightly closed off from the whole world by an iron curtain. A Long Happy Life resembles the films of the French New Wave rather than other Soviet films that were shot at the time. 

Returning from an expedition, a geologist named Victor finds himself in a small provincial town, where he meets a girl named Lena. What is commonly called love at first sight arises between them. Sensing that they are kindred souls, they spend the evening and night together, sharing all the most intimate things: thoughts about life, happiness and love. However, either the morning or their inner fears of this selfsame long happy life cancel out all their plans and dreams.

Source: IVI

Mashed up and (partly) translated by the Russian Reader