June 05, 2020

Immigrants Protect Restaurant


Immigrants Protect Restaurant
Immigrants from Russia and CIS countries worked together to protect a restaurant from protesters. Image by Babu via Wikimedia Commons

Twelve friends, including immigrants from Russia and CIS countries, banded together this week to help protect their friend’s Russian restaurant from looters. Pushkin Russian Restaurant, located in San Diego, was not vandalized or looted during the protests, thanks to the preventative actions of this group of friends.

The restaurant’s owner, Hayk Gazaryan, who moved to the US in 1998, called on friends to help protect the restaurant once he understood that something might happen. Within a half-hour, twelve people arrived for support. They were all armed, but luckily no firing was necessary. Gazaryan stated, “We’re not beating anyone, we’re not touching anyone, we’re not letting anyone break anything or break into the restaurant.”

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The Little Humpbacked Horse (bilingual)

A beloved Russian classic about a resourceful Russian peasant, Vanya, and his miracle-working horse, who together undergo various trials, exploits and adventures at the whim of a laughable tsar, told in rich, narrative poetry.
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Marooned in Moscow

This gripping autobiography plays out against the backdrop of Russia's bloody Civil War, and was one of the first Western eyewitness accounts of life in post-revolutionary Russia. Marooned in Moscow provides a fascinating account of one woman's entry into war-torn Russia in early 1920, first-person impressions of many in the top Soviet leadership, and accounts of the author's increasingly dangerous work as a journalist and spy, to say nothing of her work on behalf of prisoners, her two arrests, and her eventual ten-month-long imprisonment, including in the infamous Lubyanka prison. It is a veritable encyclopedia of life in Russia in the early 1920s.
The Little Golden Calf

The Little Golden Calf

Our edition of The Little Golden Calf, one of the greatest Russian satires ever, is the first new translation of this classic novel in nearly fifty years. It is also the first unabridged, uncensored English translation ever, and is 100% true to the original 1931 serial publication in the Russian journal 30 Dnei. Anne O. Fisher’s translation is copiously annotated, and includes an introduction by Alexandra Ilf, the daughter of one of the book’s two co-authors.
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A Taste of Chekhov

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Okudzhava Bilingual

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