MacLean's Michael Petrou writes about a new documetary about the plight of non-heterosexual children and teenagers in Russia. Children 404, named after and coordinated with the Russian GLBT teenage outreach group of the same name, is the product of a successful IndieGogo fundraising campaign. The story's unsuprising: claims to want to save children lead directly to hurting them.
“Imagine a child—I am speaking of myself now—a teenager at the age of 14, 15, who always comes to school late because he is bullied there, and before entering recites ‘Our Lord in heaven . . . ’ It’s true. This is not a joke. And it’s not funny.” The boy speaking is Pasha, a gay Russian teenager and one of the protagonists in Children 404, a new documentary about LGBT kids in Russia that is showing at this year’s Hot Docs film festival in Toronto. The film takes its name from an online mutual support group for gay Russian youth, which in turn is a play on the common Internet error message that appears on screen when a page cannot be found. It’s meant to suggest that in today’s Russia—especially since last year’s law banning “propaganda” supporting “non-traditional sexual relationships” among minors—gay youth are similarly banished. “The law states that it protects minor children under the age of 18, but of course no one has asked those under 18 for their opinion,” says Elena Klimova, the group’s founder.
The film is a fragmented but powerful collection of stories about discrimination, ostracism and inner pain. As part of its production, 45 teenagers agreed to be interviewed and to film their daily lives. Most did so anonymously. “The idea was to give these children a voice, because nobody believed that they exist,” Askold Kurov, one of the filmmakers, tells Maclean’s. “We wanted to feel their world, and to see what they see themselves.”
The results are startlingly intimate and at times heart-wrenching. “It was impossible for me to walk down the halls. They spit on me, humiliated me and called me names,” one teen says. “My parents asked about the scratches and bruises. I said that I fell down,” another confesses. As for Pasha, we don’t need to imagine his life in a provincial Russian high school, one he left at the age of 16 to move to Moscow. He returns to the school in the film. The principal greets him warmly. Some students do not. They shout insults at him in the cafeteria, undeterred by the camera filming them.
Part of Vladimir Putin’s efforts to build an inward-looking and nationalistic country involves conflating homosexuality with Western culture in general. It’s striking to see that its effects have reached even young boys. Among the abuses thrown at Pasha in the school is this: “Get the f–k out of here and go to your f–king Holland!” Pasha appears stoic and bemused by this. “Happily enough, they still remember me,” he says. A little later, a school staff member confronts him in the hall and demands that someone call the police.