Observing Memories Issue 3 | Page 74

OVERVIEW Lenin’s Mausoleum: A Haunted House on Red Square 1 Siobhan Kattago PhD, New School for Social Research of the University of Tartu “Lenin lived, Lenin lives, Lenin will live!” Vladimir Mayakovsky M uch has changed since the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991. An empire has vanished from the maps, while economic and social changes have proceeded quickly but unevenly. Yet, in spite of such turbulence, one of the most iconic places of Soviet memory still remains. Vladimir Lenin, the first leader of the Soviet Union, died in 1924 and has been lying in an open coffin in the centre of Moscow for over ninety years. More than a Soviet curiosity for the occasional tourist; Lenin’s Mausoleum, as the literal embodiment of state sovereignty, demonstrates the uneven patterns of commemorating and dealing with the Soviet past in contemporary Russia. Before he died, Lenin asked to be buried in a cemetery next to his mother in Petrograd. Immediately after his death, opinions were divided as to where and how to bury him. Although Lenin’s widow was opposed to embalmment and public viewing in Red Square, Stalin prevailed. Lenin’s body was embalmed and prepared for his unusual afterlife. The idea of a temporary mausoleum changed in an unprecedented way when the Funeral Commission was renamed Commission for the Immortalization of the Memory of Vladimir Ulyanov Lenin. With this bureaucratic change in July 1924, Lenin’s body was transformed This is a shortened version of «Haunted House: Memory, Ghosts and Political Theology in Lenin’s Mausoleum,» that was published in Constellations: A Journal of Critical and Democracy Theory, Vol 24, No 4, December 2017, 555-569. 1 72 Observing Memories ISSUE 3