Suite101
Post this Blog to facebook Add this Blog to del.icio.us! Digg this Blog furl this Blog Add this Blog to Reddit Add this Blog to Technorati Add this Blog to Newsvine Add this Blog to Windows Live Add this Blog to Yahoo Add this Blog to StumbleUpon Add this Blog to BlinkLists Add this Blog to Spurl Add this Blog to Google Add this Blog to Ask Add this Blog to Squidoo

Aug 30, 2007

Zaprozhets vs Trabants

A few years ago, I landed at Vladivostok Airport and was met by a charming young Russian guy whose face I can still picture clearly. Perhaps that's because I link it with the terror I felt as he drove me from the airport into the Vladivostok city center.

During our car ride, I remember this man explaining about the Russian cars that were built during the communist era, and proudly boasting that they were far superior to East Germany's Trabants, built "from rubbish", he said. This comment came flooding back to me as I read the latest novel from Marina Lewycka called Two Caravans. One of the characters, a Ukranian man named Vitaly, describes how his father had a sky-blue Zaprozhets 965, one of the first mass-produced "workers' cars" in Ukraine. And he was proud because it had a "real metal body - not fibreboard rubbish like the Trabant". While these old cars are increasingly rare across Eastern Europe, you should definitely try to see one when you travel - it's really amazing that some of them ever functioned.