Kiev
or
There And Back Again
21. - 28. 7. 2005
The narrative presented below is not a work of fiction. All the characters, places and events are real and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely intentional.
***
Day Zero – Great Expectations
Arrival at Prague Ruzyně airport full two hours before the departure of the plane. Usual airport buzz. Time stretches, travellers are being called to check-in desks, but the Kiev flight remains inactive, the only dormant line on the vividly blinking screen. Time stretches further. Travellers from flights departing after 6 p.m.are being called to check-in. Kiev flight – departing at 5 p.m. – doesn’t wake from its slumber. I’m beginning to weave wild images of arriving to unknown places in the dead of the night. Finally the saving "check-in" sign comes to life. Procedure undergone and my fate sealed.

Just a bit more waiting and I will be on board... on board of what? That’s the question. My air ticket claims that the aircraft is Boeing. The website of the Czech Airlines claims that the aircraft is Boeing. The website of Kiev Boryspil airport adamantly insists that the aircraft is Belfast. I have no objections against promoting the glory of Ireland high in the sky. I have no objections against changing planes up in the air in the middle of my journey. But I would like to solve the mystery and brace myself for the inevitable. Well, no shamrocks or IRA bombers for me. When I step into the hall before the gates, the sight of an ordinary Boeing bearing the logo of Ukrainian Aerosvit Airlines greets me. So Ukrainians call Boeing "Belfast". Simple as that. First in a long chain of signs that they are more Irish than the Irish themselves. [MacRua: Maybe we think that Boeings are as dangerous as Belfast? Or any planes? So we call any plane Belfast...]


More waiting. A flight which should have departed before mine is delayed for several hours. I watch the irritation and helpless fury of its passengers and consider the possibility of sleeping on an airport bench. But I’m robbed of the unforgettable experience by a boarding call. So good-bye, Prague, the town I love so well...

After some lovely turbulencies (which delayed the eagerly awaited moment of serving meal), the plane journey settles into a monotonous lull. Sparse blanket of clouds blocks the view and obscures the sight of the crucial step – crossing the border to unknown eastern lands. But there is the plane captain, who rushes to inform us about the glorious moment and in fluent Russian and wobbly English announces that we have just entered the Ukrainian territory. In the next second, our flare of enthusiasm is dampened – the essential info wasn’t given to us as a welcome but in order to inform us about the necessity for everybody without a wine-coloured Ukrainian passport to fill in a suspicious little paper which demands the most secret information about each passenger (such as specification of the dirty purposes of our visit and of exact location where they can come to nick us). Hearty welcome, indeed. But if I had known back then that it was one of the rare glimpses of sweet English language I’d be able to enjoy in the forthcoming week, I’d have been more tender-hearted.

As the plane breaks through clouds, all injustices are forgotten. Magnificent sight of a river as wide as sea comes into view, broken here and there by islands, spliting into countless branches, surrounded by swamps with lakes. The surface of the water glints off the orange sunlight, glistening like a mirror. Rays of light pierce the clouds and stream down like shiny waterfalls. It’s wonderful beyond words.

Landing, passport control (nobody seems to mind that the dark blurred thing in my passport doesn’t resemble a photo of a human being), picking up my bag (I’ve already accepted the fact that I’ll never see it again, so I consider our reunion a very good sign). The door to the main airport hall opens and even before reaching it, I spot my waiting host. Hooray, no desperate lonely wandering through dark streets of Kiev for me tonight. After my host silences my suggestion that I’ll exchange green dollars for local currency at one of the airport exchange offices (muttering something about "thieving bastards"), we leave the safe haven of the airport and I hit the harsh Kiev reality with no hrivnas in my pocket and no Ukrainian or Russian language on my tongue.

Bus ride through forests (first observation: they seem as friendly as the Czech ones), through Kiev suburbs (second observation: they seem as grey and monstrous as the Czech ones). Getting off the bus at the main train station (Advice from MacRua: "Remember this place, that’s where you’ll be getting on the airport bus next Thursday." Soon I’ll regret not paying more attention to these words.) [
MacRua: Who pays attention to tour manager's words, yeah?] And then on, to explore the underground world of Kiev metro.
Cute blue metro tokens – not bad. [MacRua: Tokens are green!!! - tour manager with a very specific colour perception, it seems.] Cold metal turnstiles – a bit worse. They remind me of my childhood fears of being caught in the iron claws, smashed, grinded, trapped forever. Prague has got rid of the threatening machinery, turning the metro into a paradise for stowaway passengers. My heart jumps for joy when an old Russian train roars into the stop – it brings nostalgic memories of times not-long-gone when these heavy iron caterpillars roamed the black corridors below Prague. The next impression – deafening noise. As my tormented ears try to come to terms with it, I ponder how is it possible that in mere few years I’ve forgotten how terribly loud metro can be. What an opportunity to pepper visual impressions with some auditory ones. Feast of senses.
We get out to a wide avenue, busy even in this dark hour. After a few minutes of walking [MacRua: of fighting for the bag! and walking...], a black silhouette of a tank looms out of the darkness. Well, why not. It’s getting late and the pacifist in me has already fallen asleep. Turning here and there, and finally we find ourselves in front of a towering hotel. I take a deep breath. The hotel personnel have already made it clear that it was a hard nut for them to book a room for a foreigner, a matter which had to be discussed by the directorate. [MacRua: After endless discussion I booked it! I swear, I checked it the day before by phone!] Let’s see. Anyway, it’s a warm summer night and Kiev is famous for countless cozy parks... Negotiations between my host and the receptionist drag on for a while, I’m able to catch perhaps every tenth word. Then a hand reaching under the desk and coming out with a registration form. Victory! Double-room for the price of a single one. I’m in good hands, indeed. Good sign number... how many? However, one glimpse at the piece of paper, and I see I will need assistance once again. Maybe they are so afraid of foreign guests because there is nobody who would be able to translate the impenetrable mess of cyrillic-lettered mysteries for them. But they forget about guests with native tour managers... [MacRua: With efficient ones! It was a piece of cake to persuade them to reduce the price from full pay for the second bed to free-of-charge.] Finally I hold a key in my hand. Elevator ride to the eleventh floor (the top one – maybe they’ve eventually acknowledged that they are hosting a V.I.P.?), opening the door (by myself as my tour manager lost the battle with lock and key – are they all spoiled by electronic cards or what?) and I sigh a relieved sigh. Bed! Bathroom! Balcony! What else could one wish for?

I revel in the sight, then open my backpack and proceed to gifts-giving. With a furtive smile, I take out a bottle of moonshine Moravian plum liquor. Slivovice, our liquid gold. MacRua eyes it with suspicion - well, the bottle looks suspicious, unlabelled and coloured with a blueish tint. My prodding to him to try it meets with lame excuses about soft drinks being needed to wash down strong stuff like this. I promptly pull a plastic bottle of Czech mineral water - lemon flavoured - out of my backpack. No more evasions, my friend. MacRua sets both the bottles on the wooden table, ponders them for a moment, then takes a tentative gulp of the mineral water, immediately followed by a resolute gulp of slivovice. I muse over the fact that it might not be the wisest thing to murder my guide on the very first day of my stay. But one more gulp of mineral water and MacRua doesn’t seem like dying - he even manages some neutral comments, which can mirror either relief that the the dreadful experience is behind him, or the first sign of recognition that this beverage has the right to exist. [MacRua: Liquor? Liquid gold? The latter is closer, it really goes down as liquid metal... It's home-brewn evil venom. And smells like acetone, I gave meself four or five shots of it at home later that evening, so I can say it for sure. Great stuff if consumer doesn't bother to smell it. And it supplies hours of totally black sleep.] We say our farewells, I admire the lights and shades of night Kiev for a while and then surrender to well-deserved sleep. I guess I’ll need it.

Day 1 – To Boldly Go Where No Man Has Gone Before
***
I wake up to a flow of sunshine. The room’s window is turned to the east and the pale grey curtains do little to block the nosey rays. Going to the balcony, I cherish the sight of the swifts darting past and screeching like involuntary inhabitants of the chamber of torture. I wonder whether to wait for my host up here or go down to the reception. Do they let suspiciously looking strangers inside? Unlikely. Better try my chances with the reception.

I sit on the sofa down in the lobby, and for having the lack of anything better to do, I settle to watch the running TV. A soap opera, obviously. In Ukrainian, obviously. Fortunately, my host appears in the doorway before my mind can suffer a serious harm from the intellectual challenge. I’m greeted with an amicable "What are you doing here? Why on earth haven’t you stayed upstairs?" Nothing like warm human words to start the day with... [
MacRua: I greeted the reception girl politely and asked if I could get up to you, "to whom? she is siting right here, behind you!" The girl looked at me as at an idiot...]

We depart to have breakfast. Sitting in the pleasant shade and cool breeze of an outer terrace of a small bistro, I’m given a menu. Eagerly I open it – and a tangled mess of Ukrainian smiles up at me. I can toss a coin to decide what to choose (the problem being I’m coin-less) or stab a finger randomly. My host spews a volley of meal-names at me, and before I have time to catch my breath, he concludes that salad with crab sticks is the most edible one. OK - anything, as long as the crabs don’t stare up at me with reproachful eyes.

Short walk to the trolleybus stop. Well, all-vehicles stop to be exact. I’m promptly assured that all the small privately-looking vans are normal part of the public transportation system. Variety is the spice of life. Variety and relaxed attitude. Timetables? Don’t make me laugh. I don’t even inquire about them as I remember the reply to a timetable-related remark I once dropped in all innocence: "Kidding? There is no schedule for city transport here. No schedule!! You have to go to the stop and wait patiently until it arrives, in a minute or in half an hour..." So let’s wait. For a minute or for a light year. Fortunately, the light year lasts only couple minutes. We find free seats inside our trolleybus, and immediately a heavy-set middle-aged woman heads towards us. The conductor selling tickets. My comment that it’s a bit uneconomical to place a conductor into every bus (shameful waste of human power), meets with a confident reply: "Good way to keep the unemployment rate low." In any case, it provides a very effective exercise – combination of demanding physical activity (pushing through crowds of hostile passengers in the rush hour) and extraordinary memory training (how is she able to remember who paid for the ticket and who didn’t in the constant hustle and bustle?). Perfect training camp for secret agents.

Getting of the vehicle at a busy stop teeming with life. Time to start exploring the city. As we proceed to walk along a tree-lined street, a huge blue billboard hits my eyes: "The country lacks Nobel Prize winners! Love one another!" I blink, only to spot a yellow one: "The country lacks astronauts! Love one another!" Great! In this place they seem to know easy solutions for all pressing troubles of nowadays world. From unemployment to a low birth-rate...

The country lacks footballers! Love one another!
Our first sightseeing stop – St. Vladimir’s Cathedral. Cherishing the majestic charm of the place, getting carried away in time and space. The first powerful dose of sheer beauty for that day – and not the last one.

After emerging back to the city reality, it’s straight to more places of interest. After a short stop for refreshments at a bistro (adorned with such pearls of wisdom as "Don’t leave for tomorrow what you can drink today" or "Smoking domestic cigs you die as a patriot, smoking American ones you die as an investor"), it’s time for the main sight of the day, the breath-taking St. Sophia’s Cathedral. I usually enthuse over any fragment of a 12th century fresco. Here they have such a vast expanse of perfect frescoes and mosaics from even older times that it almost seems a careless profligacy. Unmitigated  pleasure, and as if it wasn’t enough, the exploration of the nearby St. Michael’s Cathedral gives a delightful coup de grace.
St. Sophia's Cathedral
St. Sophia's Cathedral
The sun inclines westward, we sit at a table in front of a pub and sip our juices (concentrated juice in my case, vodka-diluted in MacRua’s). Next step of our programme – music gig. We stand up and my host confidently heads towards... well, towards something that may have been a stairway a long, long time ago. The merciless teeth of time have left gaping holes between the planks and bent the concrete pillars to weird angles, producing a charming result. Stairway to heaven? To a much better place, I’m told. To hemp valley.

Alas, times they are a-changing. In this case, it was the merciless teeth of city developers what marked the place – causing an unpardonable damage. Where once greenery grew freely, abominable posh houses grow like mushrooms after rain. As we stumble through the construction site, MacRua conjures up images of former wilderness and connoiseur paradise. Noticing my not-yet-so-convinced expression, he claims: "They used to grow everywhere here. I can sense them from the look of the place." He stops, looking around. Then without a trace of hesitation, he makes couple steps away from the path and triumphantly points at a plant. There can be no mistake. With an environment like this, they should charge an extra payment for luxury to the future valley inhabitants.
We leave the valley (spotting a few more plants on the way) and dive into an underground bar. Short conversation between my guide and the bored hostess and in the next minute we are up in the fresh air again. What’s the problem? Change of programme, another band is playing, "some shitty rock, they don’t even know their name". Never mind, who needs their "entertainment". My host leads the way up a narrow path, up a dim forested slope. We emerge above the hemp valley, on a welcoming grassy hill overlooking not only the unrepairable damage below, but also the wide spread of the city to the other side, topped by another magnificent church. Sitting in the grass, pondering ladybirds and June bugs. Precarious walk down another bumpy winding path and another steep stairway (no gaping holes this time – or maybe the darkness mercilessly covers them). Weaving through streets until we find ourselves at a square. It’s long past 10 p.m., but the place is as crowded as if it was the height of afternoon. At the curb, two guys have set chairs and microphones, they hit guitar and bass strings and sing their hearts out. Bingo – so there will be a gig for us this evening after all. Majority of people hold bottles of various contents in their hands. So why not join them. MacRua goes for gin and tonic, I – having demanded some local stuff, not the terribly globalized coca-cola – proudly sip apple lemonade with a merry pic of an apple with huge Mickey-Mouse-like eyes on the label. Guys do their best, current pop hits are occasionally peppered with Ukrainian folk songs. MacRua receives special attention from the money-collecting girl, I get a dance offer from a suspiciously grinning guy. [MacRua: She assured me that she would be back as she had a strong intention to talk with me, thinking for some reason it would be pleasant. But she never got back. And neither did that guy, thanks God, he fucked off after I explained to him twice that you had no wish to dance and no chance to say so.] Dogs happily squirm their way through the bunches of onlookers, hunched figures sneak to pick up discarded glass bottles. Jolly.

As the hand of the clock rushes towards midnight, we board a minibus and head back home. After saying our farewells, I ride up to my eleventh floor, to enjoy the hospitality of the bathroom and bed. End of day one – or the beginning of day two as it’s already past midnight when I switch the light off.
    Days 0 & 1
    Days 2 & 3
    Days 4 & 5
    Days 6 & 7
© Zuzana, 2005

Photos shamelessly lifted from the Internet – I offer an unconditional apology to all whose copyrights I’ve trampled.
Special thanks to MacRua for the invaluable source material, comments, complaints, criticisms and, first and foremost, for helping me to make the journey happen.