In Moscow, capitalism now in full fashion
Moscow, now the most expensive city in the world, has shed its Soviet gray for flashy billboards and foreign cars.
Melanie Stetson Freeman - staff
Moscow
The heavy, block buildings of Russia's capital are no longer covered in banners of Lenin, Marx, and Engels. Instead, enormous billboards advertise watches, cars, clothing – items unimaginable in Soviet times. Capitalism has taken hold with a vengeance.
How far they've come from the days when people you met on the street used to look at your feet to find out if you were Russian or not. If you had nice shoes, you were a foreigner.
It's hard to communicate how colorless and shockingly gray it was behind the Iron Curtain. Honestly, the only color was the red of Communist banners. Stores had nothing to sell. There wasn't enough food. People carried shopping bags just in case. Lines formed whenever something, anything, was for sale. The fatigue of daily life was all over their faces.
Now, stylish Russians wear the latest fashions. Fur-clad women confidently stride across the winter ice in stiletto heels. Stores have sales, which means that for the first time, they have too much inventory. Moscow's wide avenues are filled with expensive foreign cars – their proud owners constantly apologizing about how dirty the vehicles are from winter muck.
Plenty of upscale cafes cater to cosmopolitan clients. Bookstores and magazine stands, once so strictly controlled, rival those in the West.
The middle and upper classes are growing: Fitness centers with swimming pools attract clients with time to work out and money to spare. People actually have disposable income. They can travel abroad – a luxury previously impossible for the "masses."
Life before was so drab. Now the city seems loaded with possibilities. Muscovites often still wear stern expressions that say, "We can endure anything." But now, maybe, it's more about the long gray winters than anything else.