What one Moscow square says about Russia’s worsening relations with West

What one Moscow square says about Russia’s worsening relations with West Watch: Moscow’s Europe Square renamed Eurasia Square Moscow’s Europe Square is no more. The city’s mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, has signed an order renaming this place Eurasia Square. It’s a little change that says a lot about the direction in which Russia is moving: away
What one Moscow square says about Russia’s worsening relations with West

What one Moscow square says about Russia’s worsening relations with West

Watch: Moscow’s Europe Square renamed Eurasia Square

Moscow’s Europe Square is no more.

The city’s mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, has signed an order renaming this place Eurasia Square.

It’s a little change that says a lot about the direction in which Russia is moving: away from the West.

It’s not the prettiest square in the Russian capital. It’s certainly no match for Red Square, with the breathtaking onion domes of St Basil’s Cathedral and the Kremlin.

Eurasia Square is built beside the bustling “Kyiv Railway Station” and a hotel, where the BBC’s Moscow Office was once located. There’s a fountain and an unusual composition created by a Belgian sculptor entitled “The Abduction of Europe”.

I remember when this square was constructed just over 20 years ago. It was built as a symbol of unity on the continent of Europe. There were once dozens of flags of different European countries flying here.

They were removed last year, and now the name’s gone too.

Goodbye Europe; hello Eurasia.

But what exactly is Eurasia?

Different countries have different concepts of Eurasia. President Vladimir Putin officially terms Russia a Eurasian power. He uses the word to mean Russia is geographically in Europe and Asia but civilisationally distinct from both.

Reuters Moscow's Red SquareReuters
Eurasia Square is no match for the onion domes on Moscow’s Red Square

Europe Square’s commemorative plaque still stands. It reads:

“As a token of stronger friendship and unity between the European countries, the government of Moscow has decided to create the ensemble of the Square of Europe in the Russian capital.”

The reality is that Russia’s war in Ukraine and Western sanctions have put enormous strain on relations between Moscow and Europe. The Russian authorities talk constantly now of the need to tilt east and look towards China, North Korea, Asia as a whole.

Europe isn’t just out of fashion – it is portrayed by the Russian authorities as the enemy.

It’s not the first time that the Moscow authorities have played politics with street names after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

In June 2022 the street where the US embassy is located was renamed “Donetsk People’s Republic Square,” a reference to the self-proclaimed breakaway region of Ukraine, which Russia later claimed to have annexed.

In similar fashion, the following month the area around the British embassy became “Luhansk People’s Republic Square”.

‘I don’t want to be in Europe’

Back on (former) Europe Square, what do passers-by make of the change to Eurasia?

“It’s the right decision,” Olga tells me. “We’re not friends with Europe right now. I don’t want to be in Europe.”

“Eurasia is good,” says Anna. “Russia borders Europe and Asia. I was born in Kazakhstan, so this is fine with me.”

“Europe has different standards now,” Pasha tells me. “They think in a different way. We’re gradually splitting away.”

But Yevgeniya is disappointed. She sees the name change as “a sign of conflict between different countries.”

“It’s so sad,” she adds.

But at the end of the day, does a name really matter?

Following the 1917 Russian Revolution so many streets and squares in Russia were renamed to feature the word “communism”. Did it help the Soviet Union build communism? Not in the slightest.

The decision to ditch the word Europe from a square doesn’t mean that Russia won’t one day, once again, look West.

Total
0
Shares
Leave a Reply
Related Posts
Think you could win these Minor League between-innings contests? Probably notThink you could win these Minor League between-innings contests? Probably not
Read More

Think you could win these Minor League between-innings contests? Probably notThink you could win these Minor League between-innings contests? Probably not

Think you could win these Minor League between-innings contests? Probably not August 5th, 2024 Josh Jackson @JoshJacksonMiLB Share share-square-617670 Some days, nothing comes easy. On Friday night, the Double-A Altoona Curve celebrated the tough times with "Extreme Difficulty Night," a promotion that tested the limits of human speed, strength, intelligence and willingness to embrace futility. "It
BREAKING NEWSWhy the latest inflation figures are bad news for Aussies struggling with the cost-of-living crisis
Read More

BREAKING NEWSWhy the latest inflation figures are bad news for Aussies struggling with the cost-of-living crisis

Home borrowers face yet another interest rate hike with inflation climbing again. The consumer price index grew by 3.8 per cent in the year to June, putting it even further above the Reserve Bank's 2 to 3 per cent target. The latest headline inflation numbers, released on Wednesday, are even worse than the March quarter's 3.6 per
EXCLUSIVEVile Muslim extremist with his own ‘ARMY’ plans to create an Islamic homeland under Sharia law on island near US border – and reveals why he saw Canada as a good ‘base’
Read More

EXCLUSIVEVile Muslim extremist with his own ‘ARMY’ plans to create an Islamic homeland under Sharia law on island near US border – and reveals why he saw Canada as a good ‘base’

A firebrand Muslim clerk eyed up an island on the border of the United States and Canada to purchase and turn into an Islamic state.   In a video to his followers, Sheikh Yasser al-Habib, 45, an extremist scholar who already runs military-style training camps, revealed he is in advanced talks to buy an island off the