Rusty and I arrived in Dushanbe on an aged
Tu-154, and settled into the Hotel Tajikistan, which was a typical Intourist
hotel for Central Asia: new, with the basic amenities, but nothing fancy such
as decent food. It was snowing in Dushanbe , but it rarely
got very cold there even in the wintertime, so we were quite comfortable
walking around town. The first day, we
hit every major bookstore in town, under the watchful eye of our numerous
surveillants. We also kept an eye out
for anything that might be of interest to our Defense Attaché colleagues, and
took a few pictures of structures that looked like they might have been
underground bunkers. In those days,
there was quite a craze to find out if the Soviets were still busy preparing
for World War III, so we looked for such signs wherever we went.
In addition to collecting publications,
one of our primary activities involved distributing USIA’s “Америка” magazine. “Америка” was much sought after, as it was one of
the few ways the average Soviet could see an uncontrolled view of life in the
United States. Normally, we would take
at least 50 copies of “Америка”
with us, and would usually distribute them all in no time flat. They were always in great demand.
Rusty at the Rohat Tea Garden |
The next day we decided to be a little
adventurous, and forsook our hotel for lunch at the Rohat (Pleasure) outdoor
restaurant. We sat at picnic tables
outside, with the snow all around us, and ordered soup and green tea. The soup arrived with a layer of frozen fat on
top -- a sort of Tajik version of Onion soup, but, of course, completely
unpalatable. The green tea was somewhat
better, for at least it arrived hot and stayed that way for a little while.
We were about halfway through our meal
when another diner sat down at our table.
He was an ethnic German, who had been resettled with his family from
European Russia
as part of Stalin's internal exile of “undependable” nationalities during the
Second World War. He and his family had
remained in Dushanbe
after the war, and, like many German POWs, helped with reconstruction projects
until the late 1950s. He was older, and
retired now, and looked as if he might have been of draft age during the
war. I wondered whether he was really a
Volga German, or just a prisoner who never went back to Germany after the war, for whatever
reason. In any case, his plight was
truly unenviable. We treated him to a bowl
of our execrable soup, which he lapped up, and I gave him a pack of Juicy Fruit
gum, which he accepted with a resigned expression (gypsies were selling
Spearmint gum at the local market for a ruble a stick). We talked for a while longer and then we said
our goodbyes. I never saw him again.
The next day, Rusty and I made the long
return trip to Moscow . We were supposed to take a direct flight, but
in the event, we were diverted to Aktyubinsk , a
city in Northern Kazakhstan 's “virgin lands.” While we waited for the Moscow weather to clear, we had the run of
the dilapidated airport, which looked more like a reinforced concrete hanger
than an air terminal, and after several hours of waiting, were eventually
escorted back to our plane. Everyone had
to go through the metal detector to get on board, but the guards made a point
of allowing us to bypass security, thus emphasizing to everyone else boarding
the plane that we were foreign diplomats, and therefore people to be
avoided. We arrived at Domodedovo
airport without further incident. I was
glad to be back in Moscow .
I never travelled with Rusty again, but I
did keep up contacts with him after we left Moscow .
Rusty subsequently went on to a very successful career in the Foreign
Service. He wound up in the 1990s as
Ambassador to Burundi . His final tour of duty was as Consul General
in St. Petersburg 2002-2005. He would
frequently come down to Moscow for consultations when I was Political Counselor
there, and we would often have fun reminiscing about the good old days, when we
drank green tea in Dushanbe, and passed out our cherished magazines.