I observed a lot less shame about the body in Europe than in the U.S. 

One of the loveliest things I've seen is a middle-aged mother sunbathing 
topless next to her teenage daughter on a beach in Valencia. (1991) 

There's a lot of bullshit that just drops away when you take all your clothes 
off. Unfortunately, nakedness is always sexualized in the U.S. 

Swimming naked is heaven. 

Joanna 

----- Original Message -----
http://stalinsmoustache.wordpress.com/2012/04/26/lenin-the-nudist/ 

Lenin the Nudist 
Posted by stalinsmoustache under anatomy, Another world is possible, 
hairy creatures of God, swimming | Tags: nudism, reading Lenin | 
[3] Comments 
A lesser known aspect of the Russian Revolution is the flourishing of 
… nudism. After the revolution, the famous actress, Ida Rubenstein, 
played naked on stage. The poet Goldschmidt would appear naked on the 
streets. A movement called ‘Down with shame’ would walk the streets in 
Soviet cities, catch trams, go about their daily lives wearing nothing 
but a red sash over their shoulders. A White Army newspaper joked in 
1919 that the price of suits must have skyrocketed, since so many 
people were going around naked. At international nudist conferences in 
the 1920s, the Soviet delegates far outnumbered those from other 
countries. Over the summers, rivers, beaches and lakes witnessed 
millions of old people, children, families, singles in the prime of 
their life gathered to play games, picnic or enjoy the sun – all 
naked. 

How did it begin? It appears that during his long exile before the 
Revolution, Lenin visited a nudist beach in Austria and was favourably 
impressed. It was not so much the naked bodies everywhere, but the 
emphasis on healthy living. Given that Lenin was – as many noted – a 
muscular man with a love of outdoor activities, nudism was a natural 
extension of that passion. Soon enough both he and Krupskaya were 
regularly tossing their clothes in a corner and diving into the 
nearest river, lake or sea completely starkers. I’m not sure whether 
they also hiked and rode their bicycles naked (ice-skating might be a 
little tricky), but in this light one of Lenin’s favoured phrases, 
‘tearing off the fig-leaf’, takes on a whole new meaning. 

As do regular observations in the letters concerning swimming. For 
instance, Krupskaya writes about their stay at Pornic in France in the 
summer of 1910, ‘He went sea-bathing a lot, cycled a good deal – he 
loved the sea and the sea breezes – chatted gaily with the Kostitsins 
on everything under the sun’. Of course, one can enjoy the breeze much 
more when naked, even while chatting away with all and sundry. It 
mattered not where they were, for they would swim naked – in 
Longjumeau or in Pornic on the French coast, or in Stjernsund in 
Sweden, or in swimming pools in Munich, or in Poronino or in the 
Vistula River in Krakow. Nor were they alone, for other Bolsheviks 
were also given to stripping down whenever possible, among them 
Anatoly Lunacharsky, Nikolai Bukharin, Alexander Bogdanov. 

After his return to Russia in 1917, Lenin bemoaned the fact that 
people still gathered in summer and swam in costumes, so he asked why 
they couldn’t do so without clothes: ‘We have much work to do for new 
forms of life, simplified and free’, he observed. 

Why? As one of those early communist nudists observed, ‘In nudity 
class distinctions disappear. Workers, peasants, office workers are 
suddenly just people’. An image of a classless society, perhaps. 



Lenin addressing a nudist convention in the Kremlin. 
_______________________________________________ 
pen-l mailing list 
pen-l@lists.csuchico.edu 
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l 
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
pen-l@lists.csuchico.edu
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to