Skip to main content

Homeland for a Champion - Maria Filatova. Beth Squires translates

Maria Filatova, 1976 and 1980 Olympic Champion.  The pictures are separated by 38 years, but the person is the same ...


HOMELAND FOR A CHAMPION
MARIA FILATOVA FIGHTS FOR RUSSIAN CITIZENSHIP
(By Indira Kodzasova. Argumenty i fakty, No. 39, Sept. 24, 2014. Translated by Beth Squires.)

After a quest that lasted decades, two-time Olympic gymnastics champion Maria Filatova has received the right to enter Russia. “Argumenty i fakty” deserves some of the credit for this.

Just so you will understand about whom we are talking, Maria Yevgenyevna not only has medals of the purest tint from the 1976 and 1980 Olympics, she is a two-time world champion, two-time World Cup holder, European champion, USSR champion and more. All her medals weigh more than 40 kilograms! This remarkable person has been living in the US for many years and fighting to obtain Russian citizenship! (See AiF No. 3 for the year 2013.)
* * *
FYI: AiF asked Putin to grant citizenship to gymnast Filatova.
* * *
Homeward!
When we were writing the article, we were certain that progress would quickly be made on the case: who, if not a great athlete, should be given back the citizenship that had been absurdly lost during the collapse of the USSR? But the situation turned out to be so complicated that even the involvement of State Duma Deputy and celebrated athlete Alexander Karelin and the assistance of Kemerovo Province Governor Aman Tuleyev could not guarantee that Filatova’s citizenship would be restored. High-ranking officials invariably said that no basis had been found “for granting this individual Russian citizenship for special services to the Russian Federation”!

Little Masha began doing sports at age 5 in Leninsk-Kuznetsky, Kemerovo Province, and that was also where she went to school and college. She invariably returned there after great victories. But she moved to Minsk in 1982, and when she retired from competition, she got a job in the circus in Moscow. That is where she met her husband Alexander Kourbatov. They had a daughter in 1987. Things were so difficult financially during that time that the champion even sold switches of green birch twigs for use in bathhouses! So when she was offered a job training the national team of Northern Ireland, she first went there and then to the US. If only she had known for how long… “We wanted to go back, but each time it was harder and harder to get out! So I went to the US with a Soviet passport. The last time I was in Moscow was 1995. In the years since then, my mother, brothers and coaches died. I wasn’t even at their gravesites,” Maria Yevgenyevna told AiF through her tears.

In the US, in the city of Rochester, New York, the champion opened a gymnastics school and began haunting the thresholds of the Belarussian and Russian embassies. Nowhere was anyone able to tell her what use she was to them: the USSR no longer exists, so she with her red passport was no one. “Do you know what they spent last year doing? Confirming that I don’t have citizenship! I finally have a document stating that I don’t have any documents!” Even across the ocean, the champion’s sarcasm was audible. “As soon as I received the information that I had no citizenship, I learned that the US gives such people a special ‘travel document.’ I got one and took it to the Russian Embassy,” Filatova continued. That triggered another round of phone calls, requests and letters. Including from AiF. “I know that a letter from AiF editor in chief Nikolai Zyatkov was delivered to the Kremlin and played a role. Please convey to him my enormous gratitude! I finally received a Russian visa.”

Next week the illustrious champion will go to Moscow for the first time in many years. Then she will fly to Leninsk-Kuznetsky. “I still don’t believe it, even though the tickets have been bought and the documents collected.” Maria Filatova will spend more than a month in Russia. Children at the Leninsk-Kuznetsky sports school, whose director Aleksandr Tsimerman has been supporting and helping the champion for many years, are awaiting the champion’s clinics. But she herself is fretting: “Do you think I’ll be able to obtain a Russian passport in a month’s time?”

AiF will follow Maria Filatova’s case until she receives a Russian passport.


With many thanks to Beth Squires.  This translation was published simultaneously on the Gymnastics - A Golden Era page on Facebook.

Comments

  1. I hope she gets it. That's sad, especially for what she has accomplished. Yet I read of people getting Russian citizenship so easily without much merit. She should have been given her passport one a long time ago.

    Good luck to her

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Aliya Mustafina - I competed as best I could

Picture credit RGF Aliya speaks in Sports Express http://news.sport-express.ru/2014-05-18/699607 I am very pleased with my performance today, I don't know what the judges didn't like about my bars, but I didn't ask them ... I did my routine fairly well without serious error. On beam I didn't have the start value but I received the highest execution score.  We will try to fix that before the World Championships. Considering the problems I had with my ankle, I think I performed to the optimum at the moment.  I did everything I could. I'm not  the least bit sorry that I performed here -  Very glad that I could help the team. I think my presence made things easier for the girls.   It is very difficult to compete at such serious senior competitions for the first time.  Of course they were very worried.   But I'm sure that with time they will learn to cope easily with their nerves (smiles). 

Remembering last summer - Nelli Kim, her judges and Viktoria Komova

In view of Nelli Kim's recent interview , Lupita and I thought it timely to revisit the performance of some of the WTC President's judges over past competitions ... this article from 27th August 2012 is reposted here, as a reminder. You will find a link to the FIG's newly published book of results at the Olympic Games here .  This year, they have broken down the judge's execution scores so you can see exactly how each judge evaluated the gymnasts' performances.  It makes for interesting reading - if only I had more time to analyse each judge's marking.  A skim reading already highlights multiple inconsistencies in individual judges' marks and makes you wonder why they bother with the jury at all. I have taken the time to look at the reference judges' scores for the top four in the women's all around.  The FIG explains here what their role is, and how they are selected.  I even used my calculator, which is a risky thing in my hands.  M...

Does Komova need gymnastics?

Komova - a prodigious talent for performance I have been pondering the nature of gymnastics talent recently, while viewing some videos of 1992 competitions on YouTube - you can find links to them if you like, by visiting RRG's Facebook page. What was it that made the Soviets so outstanding?  In the videos, you will see three champions, side by side, each competing close to perfect routines almost every time they hit the podium.  No sprung floor, no vaulting table, a Code that (1) required compulsory as well as optional routines to be prepared, (2) encouraged innovation in single moves of extreme difficulty, (3) required balanced performances of artistic as well as technical merit, and (4) recognised and rewarded virtuosity.   The three champions I am speaking of each satisfied the Code in different ways: Boguinskaia had unique and incredible grace and amplitude; Lyssenko expressed emotional intensity through an amazing combination of power, difficulty and artistry; Gutsu ...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more