Good fences make good neighbors.
~Robert Frost
Lock up your daughters and batten down the hatches...today is Border Guards' Day! If you were thinking about invading Russia, today might just be the optimal day to do it, since all of Russia’s border guards will be otherwise occupied:
photos courtesy of pics.livejournal.com/drugoi
Some Russian holidays we have seen, like the Day of the Defense of the Fatherland, are nation-wide extravaganzas where even the weather is micromanaged, while others, like yesterday’s All Russia Library Day pass with relatively little hoop-lah. Today, however, is the first of our massive-scale casual piss-ups and one of the best of the genre.
May 28th commemorates the day in 1918 when the Border Guards were officially formed during the chaotic days following the Russian Revolution. The holiday was first officially celebrated in 1958 in the Soviet Union, and confirmed as a fixture of the calendar of the Russian Federation in 1994. Though the window dressing of statehood may change, Border Guards and Border Guard Day traditions have remained. The day is spent in watching formal displays of the border guards military prowess, evening witnesses fireworks Moscow and all of the “hero cities, and between those two events, the border guards hold mini-reunions around the fountains of parks of major cities. These are opportunities to hook up with friends one made during mandatory military service, share a few cocktails, and kick back. Sort of like a high school reunion…on steroids.
Russia’s border guards are responsible for patrolling and protecting the world’s longest border, which has very few natural barriers such as rivers, oceans, or mountain ranges to define them or add to the ease of protecting them, and thus the borders have ebbed and flowed over the centuries: retreating back in lean years, and expanding out in the flush years, such as after The Great Patriotic War, which, as we know, didn’t work out so well.
At the moment, Russia has 14 neighbors, and not all of them are the kind you could pop over and borrow a cup of sugar from. Some of them didn’t bring a casserole over when the borders shifted in the 1990s. Here they are in metric, because, as we agreed last week, metric is the way to go: Azerbaijan 284 km, Belarus 959 km, China (southeast) 3,605 km, China (south) 40 km, Estonia 294 km, Finland 1,340 km, Georgia 723 km, Kazakhstan 6,846 km, North Korea 19 km, Latvia 217 km, Lithuania (Kaliningrad Oblast) 280.5 km, Mongolia 3,485 km, Norway 196 km, Poland (Kaliningrad Oblast) 232 km, Ukraine 1,576 km.* Thanks to the Bering Strait and the Tsars needing a quick cash influx, Russia does not share a border with the US, but let’s not forget that Sarah Palin can see them from her house…which is always a cause for concern.
The Border Guards have a mixed agenda: some years ago, they were assiduously focused on keeping their own citizens inside the borders, which I, for one, feel they might want to revisit as a key concern. Border Guards are always concerned with the wrong type of people getting in to Russia: invading armies, undocumented workers, people who have spelled “Saint Petersburg” incorrectly on their three page visa applications, and, of course, people with leprosy.
But all in all, I like Day of the Border Guards. It’s nice to see so many people who have so many concerns kicking back and enjoying themselves. It’s nice to see them act human for a change…with unbridled frivolity and mirth. It makes a change, as anyone who has ever waited in line at passport control knows…Border Guards don’t always roll out the welcome mat with unbridled enthusiasm…even for VIP guests like these…(this video is highly highly highly recommended and you need no Russian to understand it, the title reads, "Long Awaited Burger King")
Happy Border Guard Day to all those who patrol and protect Russia’s borders!
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This post is part of The Stunt
Author’s Note:
*information on Russia’s borders courtesy of www.nationmaster.com
photo credits above
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Dear Reader:
Do you have a border-crossing story? Of course you do! Share it with all of us by clicking on the comment button below, and the one who can claim the longest wait at passport control will win a guest blogging gig here on Dividing My Time…until I stock up on those Russian Christmas Tree ornaments to dazzle the mommy bloggers with, that is. Then we’ll be in warp factor nine! Thanks, as ever, for dropping by on another Russian holiday!