Aleksandr Kharchikov

Aleksandr Kharchikov (Russian: Александр Харчиков; born December 21, 1949, Kensha) is a Russian folk singer-songwriter noted for his controversial songs of Stalinist, nationalist, anti-Ukrainian and antisemitic nature.[1][2][3] He is considered a hero and an patriot by Nazbol and neo-Stalinist groups in Russia.

Biography

Alexanr Kharchikov was born on December 21, 1949, in the village of Kensha, in Penza Oblast. He attended primary school in Saransk before enlisting in the Navy. During his naval service he participated in 1968 [4] in the Sinai war between Israel and Egypt, on the Egyptian side, and claims to have been wounded. He graduated in 1974 from the Mordovian state University as an electronic engineer. Kharchikov, now a Saint Petersburg resident, is a leader of the March 17 movement proclaiming the "implementation of the March 17, 1991 referendum on future of the USSR" as its goal.[5]

Career

Kharchikov achieved notoriety in the 1990s after his participation in a TV broadcast of the program "600 seconds", after which his cassette tapes and later CDs achieved wide circulation. He has a repertoire of nearly 300 songs, of which those with extreme chauvinist, nationalistic, Stalinist, antisemitic and anti-Ukrainian content became the best known part of his oeuvre, notably the "Aryan march" (aka "White Race" ("Арийский марш" ("Белая раса")), "Epistle to the Khokhly" ("Хохлам"), "Our Stalin - the father, Our Motherland , the mother" ("Нам Сталин - отец, нам Родина - мать!"), "Smite the kikes, smite the dandruffed ones!" ("Бей жидов! Бей пархатых!"), "Kikes rule over Russia" ("Россией правят жиды"), "Heart's Sorrow" ("To kikes") ("На сердце тоска" ("Жидам")), "Kill an American!" ("Убей американца"), "Finish off that Asian!" ("Добей абрека"), "Do you think a Black one would spare you?" ("Думаешь, черный тебя пощадит?").[6] Kharchikov's aficionados, though, regard him as the modern Russia's great Songs of struggle bard. According to V. Vinogradov, he "accumulates in himself the energy of resistance and devotes his whole life to the one superior goal: that of fighting for Russia".[2]

Kharchikov sings in a hoarse voice styled after the Russian bard Vladimir Vysotsky, self-accompanied on guitar, or occasionally a synthetizer. Kharchikov's own songs contain explicit exhortations to violence and are described as defined by "zoological antisemitism".[2] His songs have been used as soundtrack to numerous videos produced by Russian Neonazi groups. Many of these are available on YouTube. Although some see Kharchikov's songs as meeting the prosecutable criteria of Russia's criminal code (such as the articles that cover fomenting interethnic strife), up until January 2010[7][8] he has never been faced with legal action. This has led to widespread suspicions that he has the Russian government's tacit support.

In March 2012 the song by Kharchivov "Жиды хлебушка не сеют" ("Yids don't sow wheat") was declared extremist by a Russian federal court,[9] and Kharchikov's personal web site was shut down by the Russian law enforcement.[10]

Discography

See also

References

  1. http://www.tolerance.ru/review-smi/antisem_proy.html
  2. 1 2 3 http://www.duel.ru/200622/?22_5_1
  3. http://komsomol.narod.ru/anti-tyul/Harchikov2003.htm
  4. http://www.rusinst.ru/articletext.asp?rzd=1&id=6459
  5. «17 марта» movement site
  6. http://ghetto.in.ua/article.php?ID=8&AID=66
  7. Готовьте списки! — Александр Харчиков на LITZONA.NET
  8. Федеральный список экстремистских материалов Министерства юстиции Российской Федерации Archived June 15, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  9. Стихотворение про "приморских партизан" признали экстремистским
  10. — "Аккаунт заблокирован в связи с нарушением условий использования веб-сервиса uCoz"

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.