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Vladimir Ilich Lenin, the founder and first leader of the Soviet Union,
lives on in the hearts and minds of the Russian people, but also in one
little-known geoglyph in the country’s Siberia region – pine tree forest
that spells “Lenin” in Cyrillic letters.
Russian photographer Slava Stepanov was planning a business trip to the
city of Omsk, when he remembered a fascinating Google Earth satellite
image captured in that region a few years earlier. Taking a day off from
work, Stepanov decided to drive to the town of Tyukalinsk and look for a
very common-looking grove on the outskirts of the settlement. Planted in
straight rows, typical for man-made forests, the pine grove only
revealed its secret when Stepanov released his drone to get a view from
high above.
Stretching for 300 meters from one side to the other, with letters
reaching 8.2-meters-high was the name “Lenin” spelled in Cyrillic
characters. Although the exact origin of this mythical Soviet geoglyph
is unknown, Stepanov says that it was most likely the result of a
communist anniversary celebration from the 1970’s.
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“In the U.S.S.R., people were very focused on anniversaries, especially
the birthday of Lenin and the anniversary of the 1917 October
Revolution,” Stepanov told Radio Free Europe. “Every factory, every
enterprise, or even whole villages tried to somehow congratulate higher,
stronger, more powerfully; to be more interesting and more noticeable
than the rest. Among other things, there was an idea that communism
would be eternal.”
While the ‘Lenin’-shaped forest won’t last an eternity, at the time it
was planted, that’s likely what the forest was designed to symbolize.
Interestingly, the Lenin forest is one of dozens of mythical Soviet-era
geoglyphs scattered all over the Russian Federation.
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Such unique landmarks are not unique to the former Soviet Union. Last
year, we wrote about Jimmie Luecke, a Texas farmer who signed his name
using trees as letters in the late 1990’s.
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