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It's hard to be me, says First Lady of Russia [Lyudmila Putin is Christian; home schools daughters]
The U.K. Times ^ | Saturday December 29 2001 | Clem Cecil

Posted on 12/30/2001 3:40:05 PM PST by SlickWillard

SATURDAY DECEMBER 29 2001

It's hard to be me, says First Lady of Russia

FROM CLEM CECIL IN MOSCOW

LYUDMILA PUTIN stepped firmly into the ranks of world leaders’ wives yesterday with an interview demonstrating her religious faith, her charity work, her devotion to her husband and her recipe for soup.

In her first interview to a Russian newspaper, Mrs Putin, 43, also provided glimpses of her home life, admitting that she sometimes argued with her husband even now he was the President and saying that her new role made it “very hard to remain myself”.

The whole family are active Russian Orthodox believers. On her birthday, Vladimir Putin, 49, gave her a golden chain and cross. “When I woke up it was lying on the bedside table,” she said. “He had bought it two months earlier in Jerusalem. His self-control and patience always amaze me. When I buy presents I have to give them straight away.”

She told Komsomolskaya Pravda: “We go to church about once a month. I don’t like to talk about my faith in public. It is a very personal thing, but I do believe faith can unite people.”

When asked if she meant that faith could only unite Orthodox Christians, she replied: “I think that in order to achieve the harmonious and bright future that we all dream about, humanity must unite under one faith. Or at least we must respect the existence of other faiths without war or spite. Russian Orthodoxy advocates first and foremost love and tolerance of your fellow man.”

The Putins met 21 years ago when he was a student and she was an air hostess. She used to fly to St Petersburg from her home town of Kaliningrad to meet him for dates. Mr Putin courted his future wife with characteristic caution, proposing to her 3½ years later. They have two daughters, Masha, 16, and Katya, 15.

“Vladimir said in his autobiography that he grew up in a loving atmosphere,” Mrs Putin said. “I would add that he was raised with a strong work ethic and we try to instil this in our daughters. A child must be fully occupied in his spare time. For example, our daughters have been taught the violin since they were tiny.

“I also worry about the girls’ health, and make sure that all the hard work doesn’t take its toll on them. I have never demanded that they get high marks. I think the main thing is knowledge.”

Katya and Masha study at home and a bodyguard joins them when they go out. Mrs Putin emphasises how much her husband loves them, saying that he always goes to say goodnight to them even if he comes home late.

She insists that her relationship with him has not changed since he became President. “To me, the President of Russia is first and foremost a husband,” she said. “I have many daily worries, and as a wife and a woman discuss them with Vladimir when he has spare minutes.

“It is hard of course — nearly all the President’s time is devoted to work. But when we have a problem to discuss, I tell him what I think and I even argue with him sometimes. However, I value the opinion of my husband and we agree on most things.

“I am seen as the ‘female face’ of the country. Onlookers judge my appearance, clothes, what I say and how I receive guests in the same way as they judge the state itself, and the conditions for women in our society. To be honest, in my situation, it is very hard to remain myself. Yet I think this is our main aim in life. Every person has his own cross to carry, and its size depends on how strong the person is.”

Mrs Putin also finds time for social work. After she visited a penal colony for female offenders in Mozhaisk, the Russian Duma pardoned ten women and children who were convicted for petty crimes. “My principal aim is to attract the attention of society to the problem of child crime. We need to fight this problem together. People call it a social problem, which it is to a certain extent. But I would like every one of us to take responsibility for it, everybody in the world, not only in Russia.”

As to how she dresses, Mrs Putin says she relies on her own intuition. “I try to be true to my own understanding of beauty, fashion and style rather than use stylists,” she said. “I have clothes made for me in Russia, but I am not against buying ready-made items. I don’t follow fashion. I love bright, stylish and unusual clothes.”

When visiting the Bushes on their Texas ranch in November, Mrs Putin wore a white sleeveless jumper, covered in speckled feathers, which stood out beside the conventionally dressed Laura Bush.

Mrs Putin divulged that she would be following a tradition of reading the horoscopes to decide what to wear on New Year’s Eve. “In general I don’t pay any attention to astrology, but I like to more or less go by the recommended colour to wear on New Year’s Eve,” she said. This year astrologists advise wearing black, red or white.

Her own new year prediction was: “I think that Russia and every one of its citizens will feel a new surge of strength and energy.”

In the interview she reveals her personal recipe for Ukho, a traditional Russian fish soup. Mrs Putin’s recipe is an international take on a national dish, which includes exotic spices and fruits.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
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The whole family are active Russian Orthodox believers.

They have two daughters, Masha, 16, and Katya, 15 ... Katya and Masha study at home

The nation of Russia is led by a devout Christian who home-schools his daughters? Will wonders never cease?

1 posted on 12/30/2001 3:40:06 PM PST by SlickWillard
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To: JMJ333
Bump.
2 posted on 12/30/2001 3:40:27 PM PST by SlickWillard
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To: SlickWillard
You said it! Bump from over here, too...
3 posted on 12/30/2001 3:43:13 PM PST by redhead
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To: coteblanche
Hey! This is interesting, isn't it?

Things are not the way they were.

4 posted on 12/30/2001 3:47:21 PM PST by Miss Marple
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To: SlickWillard
[Lyudmila Putin is Christian; home schools daughters]

You can always tell when there's a holiday. Just by the stories/headlines that manage
to surface when the head censors at the journalistic enterprises are off on vacation.
In a few more days, this type of article will get killed, once the head censors
sober up and get back to work.
5 posted on 12/30/2001 3:48:12 PM PST by VOA
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Russian Ded Moroz (Grandfather Frost) applauds while Russia's first lady Lyudmila Putin congratulates children on the coming New Year in Moscow's Kremlin during a New Year theatrical performance for children, Friday Dec. 28, 2001. Lyudmila Putin made a public debut of sorts Friday with a greeting to underprivileged Russian children and a newspaper interview in which she says she sometimes argues with her husband. (AP Photo/ ITAR-TASS/Presidential Press Service)
6 posted on 12/30/2001 3:54:17 PM PST by Hipixs
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To: SlickWillard
"When asked if she meant that faith could only unite Orthodox Christians, she replied: “I think that in order to achieve the harmonious and bright future that we all dream about, humanity must unite under one faith. Or at least we must respect the existence of other faiths without war or spite. Russian Orthodoxy advocates first and foremost love and tolerance of your fellow man.” "

What I see here is the ecumenical spirit, desiring a one world religion, incrementally achieving that goal, precursing the anti-Christ. I suppose some people are happy about this report.

7 posted on 12/30/2001 4:00:37 PM PST by knarf
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To: SlickWillard
I believe that Russia and America are at opposite ends of the civilizational cycle. They are emerging from the long nightmare of universalistic socialism. For almost a century, the history, traditions, and heritage of the Russian people were savagely suppressed by a fanatical leftist ruling class. It was overthrown a decade ago, and Russia is starting to bloom again. Her people have returned to their roots and are beginning to show signs of viatality.

America, on the other hand, is cycling into the sort of intellectual and social poison that tortured Russia for so long. They are renewing their confidence in their roots, religion, and heritage while ours are being repressed by an elite that is not too different from the one that the Russian people so recently overthrew.

8 posted on 12/30/2001 4:06:24 PM PST by quebecois
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To: SlickWillard
I believe that Russia and America are at opposite ends of the civilizational cycle. They are emerging from the long nightmare of universalistic socialism. For almost a century, the history, traditions, and heritage of the Russian people were savagely suppressed by a fanatical leftist ruling class. It was overthrown a decade ago, and Russia is starting to bloom again. Her people have returned to their roots and are beginning to show signs of viatality.

America, on the other hand, is cycling into the sort of intellectual and social poison that tortured Russia for so long. They are renewing their confidence in their roots, religion, and heritage while ours are being repressed by an elite that is not too different from the one that the Russian people so recently overthrew.

9 posted on 12/30/2001 4:08:00 PM PST by quebecois
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To: quebecois
Agreed.
10 posted on 12/30/2001 4:12:04 PM PST by SlickWillard
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To: knarf
What I see here is the ecumenical spirit, desiring a one world religion, incrementally achieving that goal, precursing the anti-Christ. I suppose some people are happy about this report.

Perhaps you prefer continuing the history of religious wars that have plagued mankind. Personally, I'd opt for the OTHER alternative that Ms. Putin stated: "...at least we must respect the existence of other faiths without war or spite."

Those who have a problem co-existing peacefully with people of other faiths are, by definition, the perpetrators of religious conflicts and wars.

11 posted on 12/30/2001 4:39:01 PM PST by LiberalBuster
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To: SlickWillard
On her birthday, Vladimir Putin, 49, gave her a golden chain and cross. ?When I woke up it was lying on the bedside table,? she said. ?He had bought it two months earlier in Jerusalem. His self-control and patience always amaze me. When I buy presents I have to give them straight away.?

What a charming personal anecdote! I suppose some will find this contrived, but I find it a lovely little insight into a woman and her husband who seem to have a good marriage, a plan for raising good children, despite having tremendous responsibilities.

Prayers for the Putins, Bush's and all other leaders and their families to strive to set a good example for all.

12 posted on 12/30/2001 4:53:03 PM PST by zgirl
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To: quebecois
What's amazing to me is that no matter how long a religion is banned, and no matter how much religious people are persecuted, the faith ALWAYS LIVES ON. We will survive.
13 posted on 12/30/2001 4:55:03 PM PST by kitkat
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To: SlickWillard
A trophy religion, familial love, mixed with a little new-age mythology. And her husband was the head of the KGB. Sounds like the Gotti's or the Clintons. Masterful PR and look at all the above eating it up. Pathetic.
14 posted on 12/30/2001 5:09:44 PM PST by baxter999
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To: baxter999
Sounds like the Gotti's or the Clintons.

The Clintons never pretended that they home-schooled Chelsea; she was shipped off to Sidwell Friends.

15 posted on 12/30/2001 5:22:01 PM PST by SlickWillard
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To: SlickWillard
Thanks! Nice post!
16 posted on 12/30/2001 5:54:11 PM PST by JMJ333
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To: baxter999
So let me guess, you are the only one to judge the hearts of men and their faith in God....what a tremednous responsibility God has bestowed upon you....hmm, was your coming mentioned anywhere in the Bible, oh judge of men's hearts?
17 posted on 12/30/2001 6:49:16 PM PST by Stavka2
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To: knarf
You misunderstand the Orthodox notion of tolerance. We exiled heretics hoping for their repentence rather than burning them as the West did. Constantinople was model of tolerance in comparison to the rest of medieval Europe: Jews, Muslims, even Manicheans were given tolerance, even while the Church held the line absolutely against doctrinal deviations. The Orthodox and among the Orthodox the Russians are among the least afflicted by ecumenical delusions of all Christian confessions.
18 posted on 12/30/2001 7:01:01 PM PST by The_Reader_David
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To: knarf
When he is revealed, people will be begging for him to be world ruler. Even many of the 'I guess you like it the other way' crowd. I do not believe it is an issue of what one likes, but just a factual observation. Very good observation.
19 posted on 12/30/2001 7:06:21 PM PST by Delta-Boudreaux
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To: Miss Marple
This is simply amazing! Perhaps this is the reason that our President Bush said he could 'look into Putin's soul' and feel he could be trusted?

Also understand that both of them had named their daughters after their mothers & mothers in law.....and thus joked about their diplomacy.

20 posted on 12/30/2001 7:15:18 PM PST by JulieRNR21
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