Pussy Riot answers questions on activism at Sziget festival

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Budapest, August 14 (MTI) – Two members of Moscow-based punk-activist protest group Pussy Riot took questions from the audience during a session held at Budapest’s Sziget Festival on Friday.
“You go mad if you constantly live in fear,” members Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Maria Alyokhina, known for their campaign against Russian President Vladimir Putin, said at the event. They said they fought with art as well as organising civil action against Putin’s regime.
“Besides Russia it is only in Hungary that I met people who still thought we had danced naked in a church. This is not so; even our heads were masked,” Tolokonnikova said, adding that one did not need to be naked to carry out radical political action.
Tolokonnikova said she had set out on a journalist career when she was a student, but because of heavy censorship in the media she chose art instead.
Pyotr Verzilov, a Russian-Canadian artist and activist who is married to Tolokonnikova, said the group decided to take the path of political activism as there is no independent media in Russia and the opposition is not well organised.
“In western Europe this is difficult to grasp, but perhaps Hungarians understand better, because the government of Viktor Orban much resembles Putin’s Russia,” he said.





