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Into the Cosmos Page 13


  duty, and noble ideals of communism.”17

  The first group of cosmonauts—twenty young fighter pilots—all had

  similar social and professional backgrounds. Born (with few exceptions)

  in 1933 through 1935, they witnessed the horrors of World War II but

  were too young to participate in the war. A few, like Gagarin, lived under

  Nazi occupation. Many, like Gagarin, came from peasant families and

  had modest schooling. Most went to a military aviation school right after

  graduating from high school. By the end of 1959, when they were selected

  into the cosmonaut corps, most of these young men had served in the

  Air Force as fighter pilots for only two to three years and had the rank

  of senior lieutenant. Only two had graduated from Air Force academies;

  just one had training as a test engineer. Most cosmonaut trainees had

  82  Slava Gerovitch

  little flying experience. Gagarin, for example, accrued only 230 hours of

  flight time. Sixteen of twenty were ethnic Russians. After the Ukrainian

  Vladimir Bondarenko died in an accident and the Tatar Mars Rafikov was

  expelled from the corps for misconduct, only two non-Russians remained

  in the group.18 Major General Leonid Goregliad, who participated in the

  cosmonaut selection, remarked that for all cosmonauts, the life story was

  the same.19

  Turning a group of young pilots, inexperienced in public relations,

  into professional spokespersons for Communism required a serious ef-

  fort. As the Cosmonaut No. 2, German Titov, confessed, he was “very

  afraid of journalists. After all, we were trained to fly into space, not to

  speak at various official or improvised press conferences.”20 Lieutenant

  General Nikolai Kamanin, an Air Force official in charge of cosmonaut

  selection and training, carefully scripted cosmonauts’ public appear-

  ances, wrote their speeches, rehearsed them, and corrected their “errors.”

  In particular, Kamanin staged Gagarin’s first public appearance before

  the Soviet leadership at Vnukovo airport and wrote the sixty-six-word-

  long report that Gagarin was to give to Khrushchev. Kamanin and Gaga-

  rin spent thirty minutes rehearsing it. Kamanin posed as Khrushchev,

  as Gagarin was getting his intonation just right. Kamanin was satisfied

  with the training, noting self-contentedly that he had seen an oratory po-

  tential in Gagarin even before the flight.21

  Kamanin used his experience of being a cultural icon of the Stalin

  era as a model for his efforts to shape the cosmonauts’ public persona.22

  Kamanin was a legendary Soviet aviator, a household name in the Soviet

  Union in the 1930s. In 1934 he was among the first recipients of the new-

  ly established title of Hero of the Soviet Union for the daring air rescue

  of the crew of the Cheliuskin exploration ship, crushed by the Arctic ice.23

  Among other famous aviators, Kamanin represented the New Soviet Man

  of the Stalin era.24 A decorated air corps commander during World War

  II, Kamanin served after the war as first deputy to the Air Force chief of

  staff and air army commander. In 1960 he was appointed deputy head of

  Air Force combat training for space. Kamanin oversaw the Cosmonaut

  Training Center and represented the Air Force in all negotiations over

  crew selection and responsibilities in flight. An unabashed Stalinist, he

  ruled the cosmonaut corps with an iron fist, demanding strict discipline

  and implicit obedience and severely punishing any transgressors, up to

  The Human inside a Propaganda Machine  83

  expulsion from the corps. The cosmonauts, whose chances for future

  flights depended heavily on Kamanin’s favor, were terrified of him.25

  Kamanin’s goals did not always perfectly align with the objectives of

  Khrushchev’s propaganda apparatus. Outraged by Khrushchev’s attacks

  on Stalin and by the vociferous campaigns glorifying Khrushchev’s per-

  sonal accomplishments, Kamanin had little sympathy for official political

  rhetoric. He knew how to pay lip service to the party line but was adamant

  in pursuing his own priority—boosting government support for human

  spaceflight. Rather than following orders from above, Kamanin often put

  forward new propaganda initiatives. When his military superiors vetoed

  his proposal to declare April 12 (Gagarin’s flight anniversary) an official

  Cosmonautics Day, he petitioned the Party Central Committee over their

  heads. Kamanin arranged for Titov to sign the petition, thus adding the

  cosmonaut’s political weight to the proposal, which was accepted.26 While

  the Soviet leadership exploited space spectaculars for their political ends,

  Kamanin and other leaders of the space program skillfully manipulated

  the symbolic capital at their disposal to elicit much-needed support for

  the space program from party bosses.

  Space propaganda thus had a dual face. It conveyed political and

  ideological messages to the masses and at the same time boosted the

  legitimacy of spaceflight as an indispensable component of Communism

  construction. The new party program proclaimed that “the first trium-

  phal orbitings of the globe, accomplished by Soviet citizens . . . have be-

  come symbols of the creative energy of ascendant communism.”27 This

  not only adorned the image of Communism with space symbolism, but

  also asserted the highest ideological value of space exploration and thus

  ensured sustained government support for human spaceflight. The can-

  onization of April 12 as Cosmonautics Day effectively mobilized various

  government agencies in the service of space propaganda. Party directives

  instructed that lectures about Soviet space achievements be given at fac-

  tories, collective farms, and military units; the radio and television broad-

  cast numerous meetings and concerts on space themes; news agencies

  distribute reports and visual materials; political and literary magazines

  publish special issues; movie studios create films about cosmonauts; and

  sculptors erect monuments to Soviet space triumphs.28

  Kamanin carefully controlled access to cosmonauts and their public

  image. He signed off on publications about cosmonauts, managed their

  84  Slava Gerovitch

  schedules, and gave permissions for interviews.29 He even critiqued the

  work of the sculptor Grigorii Postnikov, who created cosmonauts’ busts

  for public display. Kamanin approved Postnikov’s portrayal of the cosmo-

  nauts Gagarin, Andrian Nikolaev, Pavel Popovich, and Valentina Teresh-

  kova but found fault with the depictions of Titov and Valerii Bykovskii.30

  Soviet media gradually shaped a canon of visual representation of

  cosmonauts. Illustrated magazines, such as Ogonek, featured the same

  types of photographs for every new cosmonaut hero: the hero looking

  at his or her photograph on the first page of Pravda; the hero speaking on the phone to the Soviet leadership, informing them of the successful flight and thanking them for party’s loving care; a ritual welcome at

  the airport; the hero in childhood; the hero in training, preparing for

  the flight; the hero among the friends, fishing or playing chess; the hero

  among the family, embracing children. By showing th
e cosmonauts in

  everyday situations, the photographs emphasized that heroic deeds were

  accomplished by ordinary Soviet people. The cosmonauts were not super-

  men; they symbolized the progress of all Soviet people toward the “new

  Soviet man,” the dedicated builder of Communism.31

  As living symbols, the cosmonauts had to comply with their pre-

  scribed image around the clock. A formal set of rules regulated cosmo-

  nauts’ daily life. Cosmonauts had to inform their superiors about their

  whereabouts every time they left the Cosmonaut Training Center.32 They

  had to refrain from alcohol and go to bed at 11 p.m., even if they were on

  vacation.33 The authorities often forbade cosmonauts to go on private trips

  (for example, to a friend’s wedding).34 They also tried to dictate whether

  cosmonauts could take their children with them on vacation.35 Cosmo-

  nauts’ appearance also became the subject of strict regulation. The ques-

  tion whether Tereshkova, the first woman in space, would be dressed in

  uniform or in civilian clothes on her official photo was discussed by the

  Party Central Committee. It was decided that the official Soviet news re-

  port should not mention her military rank, and Tereshkova had to change

  in a hurry.36 On another occasion, when Titov appeared unshaven during

  an interview, Kamanin suggested that the interview be cut from a docu-

  mentary about the Voskhod mission.37

  Kamanin took upon himself not only the formal supervision of the

  cosmonauts’ selection and training, but also their moral upbringing. He

  did not spare any effort to make the flown cosmonauts conform to their

  The Human inside a Propaganda Machine  85

  public image as exemplary Soviet citizens, scolding them for marital

  troubles and withholding their promotion in rank for drunken-driving

  incidents. Kamanin treated the cosmonaut trainees even harsher, expel-

  ling several of them from the corps for drinking and insubordination.

  Rules for cosmonauts’ behavior during their trips abroad were much

  stricter than inside the country, because any incident would be immedi-

  ately publicized and it would be more difficult to do damage control. On

  all foreign trips the cosmonauts were accompanied by KGB minders.38

  Although KGB personnel were routinely attached to Soviet delegations

  going abroad, in this case their functions were broader. They not only

  watched the behavior of the cosmonauts; they were also on the lookout

  to prevent any “ideological provocations,” such as an attempt to photo-

  graph a cosmonaut with a bottle of Coca-Cola in the background.39 Once

  Tereshkova’s minder had left her to the care of a Soviet ambassador’s wife

  for a few hours, and Kamanin was outraged; apparently the KGB watch

  was to be maintained around the clock.40

  For every trip the Party Central Committee issued specific behav-

  ior guidelines and talking points for the cosmonauts. Kamanin himself

  drafted those guidelines and, after they were approved by the party au-

  thorities, was obligated to enforce his own instructions.41 For example,

  when the cosmonauts Pavel Beliaev and Aleksei Leonov were sent to an

  International Astronautics Congress, Kamanin told them to act toward

  American astronauts “in a friendly manner, but without praise” and to

  keep their relationships with the German-American rocket designer

  Wernher von Braun “polite but strictly official.”42 Kamanin eliminated

  shopping from cosmonauts’ trip schedules, on the ground that this would

  “belittle” them.43 When foreign media reported that Gagarin had received

  a sports car as a gift from the French, the party secretary for ideology,

  Mikhail Suslov, became concerned and advised cosmonauts to be “care-

  ful” about accepting gifts out of capitalists’ hands.44

  Kamanin skillfully crafted cosmonauts’ speeches abroad, trying to

  reconcile contradictory expectations. While Soviet officials insisted on

  political propaganda, the locals wanted to see a cosmonaut and not an

  overt political agitator. Kamanin privately remarked, for example, that in

  his speeches in India, Gagarin “delved into politics more than he should”

  and put too much stress on Communist ideology. This probably alienated

  some local politicians, who began limiting Gagarin’s public appearances.

  86  Slava Gerovitch

  Kamanin then advised Gagarin to stick to the basic message of world

  peace and cooperation in space.45 Kamanin also pointed out to the cos-

  monaut Popovich that some statements he had made on Cuba were indis-

  crete. Popovich had said, “We will help Cuba not only here on Earth, but

  from outer space as well,” which had sounded like a veiled military threat.

  Popovich had also hinted that the Soviet Union was about to launch a

  woman cosmonaut, which was still a state secret.46 On another occasion

  Kamanin admonished the cosmonaut Leonov for saying that “people

  in Greece welcomed us even warmer than in socialist countries.”47 The

  warmth of reception was seen as a political indicator, and it had to cor-

  respond to the degree of the country’s closeness to the Soviet Union. Cos-

  monauts clearly had to learn the ropes of public political speech. Kama-

  nin insisted that they had to visit two to three socialist countries before

  they could be trusted to go on a more challenging mission to the Third

  World, not to mention the capitalist inferno.48

  Kamanin made a determined effort to turn former fighter pilots into

  public figures, skilled at oratory and adept at political language. Politi-

  cal education was made part of the formal curriculum. The first group

  of six candidate cosmonauts, including Gagarin, received forty-six hours

  of instruction in Marxism-Leninism, which amounted to 8 percent of

  their total training time.49 Under Kamanin’s supervision the Cosmonaut

  Training Center introduced a program of enculturation to broaden the

  fighter pilots’ intellectual horizons. The cosmonauts went on group trips

  to museums, art galleries, and historical sights, visited the Bolshoi and

  other theaters, and attended concerts by performers from Czechoslova-

  kia, Cuba, and the United States. They listened to lectures about ancient

  Greece and Rome, the Renaissance men, Peter the Great, and famous

  Russian painters and opera singers.50 The chief of the Air Force, Marshal

  Konstantin Vershinin, who often felt embarrassed at meetings with for-

  eign dignitaries because of the lack of knowledge of foreign languages,

  instructed Kamanin to make sure that all cosmonauts become fluent in

  English.51

  Cosmonauts’ “private” lives were by no means private. Kamanin in-

  sisted that Gagarin and Titov treat their wives with greater respect. In a

  domestic dispute between Popovich and his wife, Marina, Kamanin took

  the side of the cosmonaut and suggested that Marina, an ace pilot, should

  quit flying and devote more time to her husband and daughter—a pro-

  posal that made Popovich quite uncomfortable.52 Kamanin took a special

  The Human inside a Propaganda Machine  87

  interest in the marital plans of Nikolaev, the only bachelor among the

&
nbsp; first cosmonauts, and even introduced him to the daughter of the Soviet

  minister of defense, hinting that a marriage to her might prove “useful

  for cosmonautics.”53 When Nikolaev’s affections turned to Tereshkova,

  however, Kamanin quickly realized that their marriage would also be

  “useful for politics and for science,” even though he had strong doubts

  about their match.54 In October 1963 he urged Nikolaev to hurry up with

  a proposal, since both Nikolaev and Tereshkova were already invited to

  visit Hungary together in December, on the assumption that they would

  have got married by then.55 Kamanin even suggested setting the wedding

  day in late October or early November to avoid conflict with their foreign

  trip schedule. Finally the date of November 3 was set by a formal decision

  of the party leadership. Kamanin suggested that “the wedding cannot be

  just a family affair, for the entire world is interested.”56 Two hundred peo-

  ple were invited to a government-sponsored banquet; Kamanin handled

  the invitations. The newlyweds spent their honeymoon on a propaganda

  trip to India.57

  Cosmonauts could not speak publicly in their own words: Kamanin

  wrote their speeches, and journalists drafted their articles and memoirs.

  Cosmonauts spoke other people’s thoughts and copied other people’s

  texts in their own hand before submitting them for publication to pre-

  serve the appearance of authorship.58 Tereshkova pointed out to Kamanin

  that her ghost-written memoir tells a story of her long-held dreams of

  space, while in fact the idea of becoming a cosmonaut had never crossed

  her mind before she was invited to take part in candidate selection tests.

  Kamanin acknowledged that a journalistic account followed stereotypes

  and had many discrepancies, but it was too late to make any corrections if

  the book was to be released by the third anniversary of Gagarin’s flight.59

  Early cosmonaut biographies were all written on the same template,

  likely borrowed from Kamanin’s own 1935 autobiography, written when

  he was twenty-six or twenty-seven, about the same age as the cosmonauts.

  The biographies featured an obligatory set of points of passage: humble

  beginnings, childhood burdened by wartime hardship, encouragement

  by the family and teachers, good education paid for by the Soviet state, a