http://english.pravda.ru/society/stories/25-03-2010/112699-grigory_perelman-0

25.03.2010
Russian Mathematician Grigory Perelman Must Give His Million away to Communists 

Reclusive Russian mathematician from St. Petersburg won the Millennium Prize - 
$1 million - from the US-based Clay Mathematics Institute. Will the Russian 
genius accept the prize? There is still no answer to this question.  
      Grigory Perelman 


Many Russian media outlets say that Mr. Perelman will most likely decline the 
million-dollar-bill since he had previously refused from the prestigious Fields 
Medal and the $7,000 award that came with it. Perelman said in 2006 that he did 
not want to become a public persona. He also expressed his concerns about 
dishonest methods which many scientists use in their work. 

"I am not a hero of mathematics. I am not successful at all, and I do not want 
to be observed by everyone," the Russian genius said in one of his interviews 
to a Western publication. 

Perelman has never communicated with the Russian press. 

"We do not want to talk to anyone and we are not giving any interviews!" 
Perelman's mother said through the door of her apartment to a correspondent of 
the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper. "Don't ask us any questions about the award 
that that money!" the woman also said. 

Reporters of Britain's The Daily Mail were a bit luckier. Grigory Perelman did 
not open his door for them either, though. 

"I have everything I want," he said through the door. 

The Daily Mail concluded that Perelman was not going to take the money. 

James Carlson, the president of the Clay Institute, said in an email that 
Perelman would let him know of his decision. 

The Institute plans to hold a conference dedicated to the solution of the 
Poincare Conjecture in Paris on June 8-9. Perelman could come to Paris to take 
part in the conference. However, it seems that the Russian mathematician dos 
not have a passport for traveling abroad. His previous passport, which he used 
in 2003 to travel to the USA to read lectures, expired a long time ago. 

It is not known how Mr. Perelman maintains himself and makes his living. Rumor 
has it that he works as a private tutor. His mother is a pensioner. Perelman 
stopped working with the Mathematical Institute Named after Steklov in 2005. 

A neighbor of the Perelmans told The Daily Mail that the mathematician lives in 
a bare apartment. The woman said that he only had a table, an armchair and a 
bed with an old mattress, newspaper wrote. 

In the meantime, communists of St. Petersburg already know how to solve the 
problem of Perelman's million. They want the mathematician to give one million 
dollars to them. 

The communists plan to spend the million on building academic townships for 
talented Russian scientists. The rest will be used to maintain Lenin's Tomb on 
Moscow's Red Square, they said. 

"They often threaten to close the Mausoleum claiming that it takes a lot of 
money to maintain it. We could solve this problem with the help of a part of 
Perelman's award," the leader of the communist movement in St. Petersburg 
Sergey Malinkovich said. 

Komsomolskaya Pravda

Russia Today: Mathematician turns down $1million prize he doesn't need


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