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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Russia
Homeless Russian boy raised by stray dogs
By Richard Tyler
23 July 1998
Such are the appalling conditions facing homeless Russian children
that six-year-old Ivan Mishukov preferred to live with stray dogs.
The child told social workers, "I was better off with dogs.
They loved me and protected me."
His parents abandoned Ivan when he was just four years old.
The boy survived by begging for food, which he then shared with
the dogs that roamed the streets with him. In return they protected
him and found warm places to stay in Reutova, west of Moscow,
where the winter temperature can reach minus 30C. The bond that
developed between Ivan and the dogs was so strong that it took
police nearly a month to separate them.
The article in the July 16 edition of the Guardian newspaper
that reports this story is one of the rare occasions when the
press gives a glimpse of the real situation in Russia today. Tom
Whitehouse, the story's author, writes, "the conditions outlined
in Dickens' Oliver Twist are like Disneyland in comparison
with the lot of an average homeless Russian child."
He reports how some 10 percent of teenagers thrown out of orphanages
when they are considered able to look after themselves later commit
suicide. Last year 17,000 children were the victims of attempted
murder and 200were actually killed by their parents.
Today the Russian economy has all but collapsed, with millions
of workers receiving no wages for months on end. By 1995, prices
had increased over 10,000 times, while wages had risen just 1,500-fold.
The pressure this has placed on ordinary Russian families is enormous.
For those unfortunate children who have no family to care for
them, the state-run homes and orphanages, starved of money and
resources, offer only the barest minimum provision. Ivan Mishukov
is just one of 2 million homeless children in Russia that are
left to fend for themselves.
The fate of children and attitudes towards them can be regarded
as a fundamental measure of the health of any society. What has
befallen Ivan Mishukov shows that the once-vaunted rebirth of
capitalism in the former USSR has produced the greatest social,
economic and indeed moral collapse that has occurred in any country
during peacetime.
See Also:
IMF protected US banks in Russian bailout
[21 July 1998]
A balance sheet of capitalist
restoration in Russia
[2 May 1998]
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