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<text id=91TT2023>
<title>
Sep. 16, 1991: "Those Days Were Horrible"
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Sep. 16, 1991 Can This Man Save Our Schools?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 37
SOVIET UNION
"Those Days Were Horrible"
</hdr><body>
<p>Raisa Gorbachev describes her fears during the coup--and
discloses new details about her personal life
</p>
<p>By Susan Tifft--Reported by Ann M. Simmons/Moscow and Nancy
Traver/Washington
</p>
<p> Raisa Gorbachev has not been seen in public since Aug.
22, when, looking haggard and pale, she walked down the steps
of the plane that carried her and her family back to Moscow
after 72 hours of house arrest in the Crimea. But last week the
world did get a chance to read what the 59-year-old wife of
Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev had to say about her ordeal
and, in a newly released memoir, about her earlier foreboding
of what lay ahead.
</p>
<p> In her first postcoup interview, Raisa told the Soviet
trade-union newspaper Trud she was so terrified that the
plotters would kill her and her family that she suffered speech
problems and an "acute bout of hypertension" for which she is
still being treated. "Those days were horrible," she said.
</p>
<p> She first learned of the putsch at about 5 p.m. on Sunday,
Aug. 18, when an agitated Gorbachev told her that a group of
men had arrived from Moscow to see him and that all the phone
lines were dead, including the "red phone" that links the
President to the Minister of Defense. The whole family quickly
agreed they would stick by the President at all costs. "This was
a very serious decision," Raisa told Trud. "We know our
history." This may have been a reference to the Bolsheviks'
grisly execution of the last Russian Czar, Nicholas II, and his
family.
</p>
<p> During the attempted coup, the Gorbachevs took frequent
walks outside the dacha so that they could talk without fear of
being bugged. By showing themselves, they also hoped to disprove
the plotters' assertion that the President was ill.
</p>
<p> Raisa told Trud, "I never thought such a thing [as the
coup] could happen to us." But in her autobiography, I Hope
(HarperCollins; $20), completed four months before the failed
putsch, the Soviet First Lady says she has long been anxious
about the "fierce struggle now going on between loyalty and
treachery" in the Soviet Union. In the book, actually an
extended interview with Soviet writer Georgi Pryakhin, Raisa
discloses for the first time that her grandfather was executed
under Stalin, an experience that made her both fearful and
contemptuous of apparatchiks who act one way "when it is to
their advantage" and another when it is not. "Sometimes I feel
that they are not faces but masks," she says. "And the masks
will suddenly disappear and I can see quite clearly the faces
of the people who informed on my grandfather."
</p>
<p> Gorbachev anticipated the threat from communist
hard-liners as early as August 1990, during a vacation in Yalta.
It was then, Raisa recalls, that her husband told her, "We've
got the most difficult time ahead of us. There is going to be
political fighting...it's very alarming...[But] we
mustn't give in to the conservatives...We mustn't surrender
the fate of the country to cowboys. They would ruin everything."
</p>
<p> In I Hope, Raisa describes her early years as one of three
children of a railroad engineer in Siberia. Money was so tight
that she did not own a real overcoat until she went to college.
"Everybody remembers the coat," she says. "It really was a
milestone in the family history."
</p>
<p> Materially, life at Moscow State University was not much
better; the Soviet First Lady admits she economized by beating
fares on the subway and trams. But romantically, her world
blossomed. She speaks poignantly of meeting Mikhail Gorbachev
at a student dance and of their love, which deepened on long
walks and ice-skating dates in Sokolniki Park. Soon after
marrying in 1953, the Gorbachevs moved to Mikhail's birthplace
of Stavropol, where Raisa taught college and her husband began
his climb through the party ranks.
</p>
<p> In 1978, at 47, Mikhail became a Secretary of the Central
Committee and the couple moved to Moscow, where Raisa felt very
much the outsider among the spoiled communist elite. Once, at
a gathering at a state dacha, she warned the children not to
break the chandelier. "I was told: `Not to worry. It's
government property, it can be written off.'" By March 10,
1985, the night before he was chosen to replace Konstantin
Chernenko as General Secretary, Gorbachev was so frustrated with
the party's self-satisfied sclerosis that he told his wife,
"[The country] just can't go on like this." Despite her
commitment to her husband's reforms, Raisa admits that so far
perestroika "has given us much and very little."
</p>
<p> Raisa paints the Soviet leader as a hardworking man who
likes to sing and kid his sometimes prissy mate. She
acknowledges her unpopularity in her own country and scoffs at
the criticism from some quarters that she has put on airs. And
she points to continuing threats from both the left and the
right. "In the center of this gigantic whirlwind is the person
closest to me," she says. "Will we be able to come out of the
whirlwind with honor?" There is now some hope.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>