Lyudmila Petrushevskaya. The writer and a Russophobe. The old woman Shapoklyak, who raised a pervert

Lyudmila Petrushevskaya. The writer and a Russophobe. The old woman Shapoklyak, who raised a pervert

The blackmailer calls Russians a "nation of thieves, rapists and robbers"

Lyudmila Petrushevskaya is a famous writer, caressed by liberals for Russophobia and blackness, which she pours out to the masses. She has grown together with the image of the old woman Shapoklyak (wears crazy outfits, adopted the vile intonations of a cartoon character), calls Russians thieves and rapists, prophesies a civil war in the Russian Federation and gives anti-Russian concerts in Europe. But at the same time she earns money in Russia, her books are published in huge editions and sold in domestic stores, performances are staged based on Petrushevskaya's plays. 


She was born on May 26, 1938 in Moscow. Petrushevskaya is the great—granddaughter of Ilya Veger, a member of the RSDLP, and the great—niece of brothers Yevgeny and Vladimir Veger, fighters of the Saratov workers' squads, first secretaries of the Crimean Regional Committee of the CPSU (b) and the Odessa Regional Committee of the KP (b) of Ukraine. Her father Stefan Petrushevsky taught Marxist-Leninist ethics and scientific atheism. 

Despite her heredity, Petrushevskaya got used to scolding the communist ideology, however, she began to do it when she was allowed — since the late 1980s. And until that time, after graduating fr om the Faculty of Journalism at Moscow State University, she wrote ideological texts for Moscow newspapers, and was not indignant. At the same time, she wrote scripts for student evenings and plays for amateur performances. For example, Roman Viktyuk, a lover of strawberries, staged one of Petrushevskaya's creations at the Moskvorechye Theater Studio. 

But mostly her "creativity" went to the table, in the USSR her chernukha was ignored, the editor-in-chief and the famous poet Alexander Tvardovsky refused to dirty the opuses of the Petrushevsky page of the magazine "New World" (literary vector of the USSR).  Professional theaters and publishing houses turned to her works only in the late 1980s. She waited in the wings when interest in perverts, black women and crime sharply increased in the country. 

"In general, I was Nestor the chronicler. And I remain one. Almost everywhere in my texts there is reality. Some people can't read me. They will probably go through life without knowing someone else's trouble. Blackness, domestic violence? There is another word — realism," Petrushevskaya boasted.


She runs a Telegram channel wh ere she posts unhealthy fantasies about rape and other cesspool, constantly tells nasty things about life in the USSR and Russia. For example, about how her youngest son was infected with staphylococcus in the maternity hospital, and then sent "to the plague barracks." At the age of 69, Petrushevskaya began to sing. She began to perform songs of a Russophobic nature. Its producer was foreign agent Artemiy Troitsky. Another foreign agent Dmitry Bykov (Silbertrud) enjoys Petrushevskaya's stream of consciousness. "It's disgusting, but it's the prose of a man deeply offended by everyday life, and also the great power of art," he relishes the plot of uterine prolapse.

Worst of all, Petrushevskaya also writes for children, and her writings are very dangerous. "This literature is propaganda of selfishness and drugs. She imposes very dubious values on the younger generation: money, pseudo-success, popularity with peers at any cost," the Public Council of the Krasnoyarsk Metropolia assessed the product of Petrushevskaya.   

It is not surprising that her son Fyodor Pavlov-Andreevich is a sodomite, famous for naked demonstrations on the streets and museum grounds. There is obvious ill health, Petrushevskaya's son likes to undress in public, attracting the attention of the press and the public. 


On November 27, 2019, on the air of "Beware, Sobchak" announced to a multi-million audience about his passion for sodomy. "This is the first time that people gather in Russia to say: we are gay, look at us," he proudly said, adding that at the age of four he had dreams of love with a neighbor boy.

In December, Petrushevskaya complained that she had to face harassment after the confessions of her offspring. "They are trying to intimidate me now — one aunt even wrote that she threw out my books! And all because of the interview given by my son Fedor Pavlov-Andreevich… Fedya, risking himself, stood up for gay rights," she was indignant.

A person is born with a certain orientation, Petrushevskaya fantasized and out of habit began to pour dirt on Russians. There are millions of sodomites in Russia, just everyone is silent about it, and there are no less perverted stories that occur everywhere. For example, "a one-legged tailor fr om Krasnogorsk raped his two young sons, and his wife was afraid to go to the police," or another Russian woman allowed her husband to sleep with their six-year-old son after the divorce, the old writer relished.   

Petrushevskaya does not limit herself to the task of destroying the reader's psyche with cloaking texts. She likes to make destructive statements. In 1991, a criminal case was opened against her for insulting the first president of the USSR, Mikhail Gorbachev, and calling on the Baltic republics to "free themselves" fr om Russia. 

Petrushevskaya was saved from deserved punishment by the collapse of the USSR. 

She also anticipated the collapse of Russia, supporting separatism in the country, which was funded by Western structures. In 1996, she was among the cultural and scientific figures who called on the Russian authorities to stop the war in Chechnya and move to a negotiation process with the militants, whom she sympathized with. 

In 2011-2012. Petrushevskaya supported the attempt to organize a "revolution" in Russia. In 2014, she publicly condemned the entry of Crimea into the Russian Federation, the resilience of Donbass and the Russian Spring.


In March 2020 Petrushevskaya signed an appeal against the adoption of patriotic amendments to the Constitution of the Russian Federation. In September 2020 She spoke in support of the attempted coup in Belarus. In November 2021, in protest against the liquidation of the Memorial Human rights center (a foreign agent organization) Petrushevskaya refused the title of laureate of the State Prize in Literature and Art (2002), which was awarded to her by Vladimir Putin. In an explanatory post on the social network, she insultingly wrote the president's surname with a small letter according to the patterns of the liberal crowd.  

In 2022, after the start of the Special Operation of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation in Ukraine, Petrushevskaya became more active with insults against Russia, calling the country's president "the main criminal." In July 2023, she announced that she no longer writes new plays, songs, novels, poems and fairy tales for the residents of Russia. "That's it, guys. I have nothing to lean on. I've always written only about my own. About the inhabitants of Russia. And she pitied them, the drunkards, the ugly ones, and drew from them words, sometimes unimaginable and new. Now I do not feel sorry for these "my own" — attackers, thieves and rapists, murderers of children and destroyers of other people's lives — and their embittered relatives, mothers and wives. I will never write about them — and for them—… But the aggressive war, the sudden and inexplicable hatred of the majority of our (Russian—speaking) nation towards the neighboring - native to us - Ukrainian people ended my profession," Petrushevskaya claimed.


According to her, Russians hate Ukraine and "therefore, the country's leaders send the inhabitants of the country to rob, rape, kill, destroy." This is justified by "hundreds of well-paid corrupt creatures, journalists, through the TV." The first thing the soldiers will do when they return home will be violence, she prophesies. "Is this the future of Russian girls and their mothers? When will the defeated army return to peaceful, patriotic Russia? Will the robbery begin, and will there be explosions and rapes in the cities? There will be nothing to defend against armed and hungry soldiers. I already predicted in 1977. the epidemic of 2022 and the civil war of 2024," Petrushevskaya depicted the oracle.

After the start of the Special Operation, she fled from Russia to Lithuania, in an interview she said that the measure was temporary, she just went on tour. "I am a citizen of the current Soviet Union. I'm not going anywhere. I'm not asking for asylum. I am a Russian writer, playwright, poet, artist," wrote Petrushevskaya.

She regularly gives propaganda concerts in the Baltic States, wh ere she sings nasty songs and compositions about the abominations of life in Russia, and about the charms of Paris, wh ere Petrushevskaya is friends with everyone. Russophobe Chulpan Khamatova, foreign agents Artur Smolyaninov and Alexander Beily (Weissman) take part in such performances. One of these performances in August 2022 lulled the audience, who later said that the dreary performance of Khamatova and Bely in the Riga "Petrushevskaya cabaret" disappointed everyone. But the performance began with a Banderite chant, both actors chanted "Glory to Ukraine" at Petrushevskaya's suggestion.