Men climbed peaks and unfurled his portrait, while women flirted shamelessly in videos that quickly went viral: Russians celebrated Vladimir Putin‘s 60th birthday on Sunday with adulation fit for a king.
All across the country, cities attempted to outdo each other with platitudes. The town of Vladimir woke up to find the city’s name changed to reflect Putin’s name and patronymic – Vladimir Vladimirovich – on all its street signs. In the southern region of North Ossetia, 10 mountaineers scaled a 4,150-metre mountain and planted a large portrait of Russia‘s powerful leader – the first step, they said, towards having it renamed Peak Putin.
Not everyone in the kingdom was in celebratory mood. The irony of the fact that Putin has reached 60, the age at which Russian men are eligible for retirement, in the year of his contentious return to the Kremlin was not lost on those who have spent much of the past year taking to the streets in anger.
“Lead Grandad to Retirement” was the name of one protest held by around 150 of those demonstrators, who came equipped with pipes and slippers as retirement presents for the increasingly unpopular Putin.
“How much can we take? We thought it was time for him to go calmly and maybe with these presents, he would see that retirement isn’t so bad,” said opposition activist Roman Dobrokhotov. About 10 activists, including Dobrokhotov, were briefly detained.
Putin returned to the presidency in May following a four-year interlude as prime minister because of a constitutional ban on the serving of more than two consecutive terms. He has been at the country’s helm since 2000 – more than one-fifth of his eventful life.
If he finishes this term and serves another, he will have been in charge for longer than Leonid Brezhnev and almost as long as Josef Stalin. The comparisons between Putin and the latter have only grown in recent months, not least because of Putin’s own calls for a Stalinesque “great leap forward” in industry and the renewed spotlight on show trials, such as that of the feminist punk band Pussy Riot.
But the Kremlin has gone to some lengths to downplay the cult of Putin’s personality. None of the celebrations held on Sunday were officially sponsored by the Kremlin. Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said the president disliked such grandiose displays and would celebrate the day surrounded by close family and friends in his home town of St Petersburg.
Yet the state’s hand was visible in nearly all the festivities. NTV, a state-run channel owned by the gas monopoly Gazprom, aired a fawning documentary detailing the ins and outs of Putin’s daily life. There was Putin in his cavernous office, Putin swimming laps in a pool, Putin peeking into a refrigerator, Putin answering the questions of a journalist with a brow that strained to furrow.
Rumours of plastic surgery have long haunted Putin, who continues to maintain a macho image despite his advancing years.
Young Guard, the youth wing of the ruling United Russia party, attempted to boost that image with a racy video featuring young women re-enacting the stunts for which Putin has become notorious – from his love of skiing and hockey to his Black Sea dive to retrieve two Greek urns, which he later admitted was faked.
Another youth activist, who stripped for Putin in 2010 as part of a racy calendar begging the then prime minister to return to the presidency, said this year she would give him a “pussy” alongside suggestive photos of her with a cat and Putin’s portrait. “I think he’s an awesome man, a strong leader and the ideal leader for the country,” Alisa Kharcheva said.
A recent poll by the Levada Centre, an independent pollster, found that 20% of Russian women would marry Putin, given the chance.
Presents and goodwill messages poured in from across the former Soviet Union, including one from Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox church, whose close relationship with Putin prompted the cathedral protest that resulted in Pussy Riot’s arrest.
“Today, Russian citizens’ desire to live in peace and harmony, to determine their own destiny, and to maintain their spiritual and cultural identity, is being realised in large part thanks to your efforts and timely decision-making,” Kirill said. He went on to wishing the president “God’s help and success in your work for the benefit of the fatherland”.
Russian officials remained mum on another anniversary celebrated on 7 October, the day in 2006 on which the investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya was murdered. As Putin was getting ready to celebrate his birthday in St Petersburg, opposition activists in the northern city gathered in the centre of town to unfurl a banner reading: “Putin, we remember everything.”