"I feel very affiliated with Russia, what I see as its soul. Even with its landscape, that vastness that you can't grasp. Our history is violent and bloody: revolutions, war, turmoil. Even Peter the Great and Catherine the Great, they saw themselves as reformers but, on the other hand, they were brutal. Catherine used to write to Rousseau and Voltaire but then she had people's noses chopped off.
"I do have a melancholic side to my character, which is Russian. But what I feel no connection with at all is Moscow. It is a place that has become completely driven by money and power. There is no part of it that has not been destroyed to make way for architecture of diabolical design.
"The big problem with Russian culture is that it doesn't move forward. Lots of institutions are run by dinosaurs, people who have been there 30 to 40 years. The director of the Pushkin Museum has been there since Stalin was alive. If you are the director of a museum, you only leave in a body bag. I don't blame them for not wanting to leave but the young generation suffers." (...)
Lebedev finally rallies with a burst of optimism. "I feel Russia is ready for a change. But for change to happen, you need to struggle. A lot of people are afraid to struggle. That's why I so greatly respect and admire my father. He has the courage to say things, and to fight for them. He is always told to keep his mouth shut, but he wants to champion democracy and freedom. He wants to do something."


