The Ice Museum

Home > Contemporary > The Ice Museum > Page 30
The Ice Museum Page 30

by Joanna Kavenna


  It was late in the season for outings but I persuaded a bony-faced man called Anders to take me to the Russian mine at Barentsburg. Anders was wearing bright orange overalls, like a human beacon on the shore. He moaned as he fumbled with the ropes. ‘I don’t understand why anyone wants to go there,’ he said. ‘It’s a bleak place. Miserable.’ Anders’s boat was a stuttering motor-cruiser, which moved slowly along the fjord, cracking the sludge-ice as it went. The ice churned under the boat, and Anders stood on the bridge, saying how beautiful the winters were, when the mist rose from the fjord sides and the moon gleamed across the ice. He was surly and unkempt, his hair coated in grease, his hands covered in dirt.

  ‘There’s never a perfect place, but I prefer this place to anywhere else,’ he said, screwing up his eyes to stare at the mist.

  Barentsburg was round the corner from Longyearbyen, along a coast of green rocks, covered in ice. There was nothing to see at first. The town was engulfed in thick mist; the quayside was covered with rusty iron containers stacked up in piles, and the skeletal shapes of cranes. Russian workers stood in small groups, talking. Anders ran up the steps from the shore, and found a Russian woman called Natasha who said she had a spare half-hour and could show me a few buildings. Anders was off to buy vodka, he said, and he moved quickly away towards the local shop.

  Natasha was neatly dressed in a red jacket, black trousers, small bird-heel shoes, and she seemed to be speaking an official language. Everything she said jarred significantly with the physical evidence around her, but she ignored the discrepancies. She shook my hand; her hand was cold, and she breathed heavily as we walked up the steps to the town. She said: ‘In Soviet times you had to be a member of the Communist Party to come to Barentsburg, but now, it is only necessary to be healthy, to be able to overcome Arctic conditions for two years.’

  We passed the piles of steel containers, and Natasha said they were full of coal; in the winter it was impossible to ship anything because of the ice, and the coal was stored on the shore. During the summer it was taken away. We walked past dilapidated wooden houses, standing by the shore, their windows broken. Natasha gestured towards the shattered windows, and said, ‘We keep these buildings to remind us of how things were,’ and then she said, as if that had not quite explained things, ‘We always mean to repair them each summer, but the summers are so short.’ It seemed unlikely they would ever be repaired.

  ‘You can come here for longer, if you like, and the average stay is eight years,’ Natasha said. ‘There have not been so many changes here since Soviet times, and the conditions are still hazardous. But there are positive benefits, all meals are supplied, and we have a small café for further purchases. But,’ she said, suddenly, ‘you must not look the men in the face, you must not go too close to the people, you must not talk to them.’

  Through the mist, I saw the Russian miners coming and going, sometimes on their own, sometimes in pairs. They walked past, saying nothing. They were the real representatives of the town of Barentsburg, and their faces were blank, impossible to read. There were no women on the street, no children. It was the end of their shift, and they walked into the canteen, a vast black-and-white building by the quayside, with a putrid smell rising from the kitchens. Above the entrance was a poster of a bearded Russian standing in front of an Arctic snowscape and a poem in Russian, written out large, saying:

  SO, WHEREVER YOU NOW TRAVEL

  ON THE THRESHOLD OF ANY SPRING

  YOU WILL THINK OF ARCTIC WAYS

  YOU WILL DREAM SNOWY DREAMS.

  Dream the Arctic dream—even the Russian Arctic Coal Company was saying it to its employees. Natasha thought I shouldn’t go inside the canteen. The men were busy in there, dreaming the Arctic dream, and they couldn’t be disturbed. In the winter, when the sun had failed, the men would emerge from the darkness of the pits into the darkness of the afternoon, with the winds blasting across the frozen expanse of Grønfjorden. The lucky ones had their photos hammered to a board in the centre of the town, photos taken against luminous orange curtains, which stripped the colour from the subjects. Some of the men had put on suits and ties and tried to smile; others squinted miserably at the flash.

  ‘These are our best employees of recent days,’ Natasha said, though the photos looked as though they had been hanging there for decades. ‘We have visitors who ask if the people who come here have done anything wrong, but of course they haven’t.’

  Once Natasha had summoned the spectre of Siberia, the tone was irreparably altered. The high-rise brick and tile, the decaying wood, the memorials paying homage to the dead—the victims of mining disasters, of plane crashes, of a dust explosion in 1997—created a strange atmosphere in Barentsburg. There was a Denisovich air to the miners slouching slowly from the pithead to the bar. If they were the lucky ones, they knew their country was in trouble. If this Arctic desert was a privileged life, they were men without illusions that things might improve.

  Brooding over it all, there was a bust of Lenin, with a sign behind his head saying ARCTIC COAL. He was the most northerly Lenin in the world, said Natasha, laughing him off. But he made the place look trapped in the Communist past, trapped in Communist colours, Communist functionalism, fading away in the far north. In this land trapped in the past, Lenin was still presiding. One devastated brick façade had its date etched above the door, 1977, the year time stopped in the settlement, stranding the workers in a continual 1970s of dull orange and fading yellow. There were great holes in the roofs; the walls were streaked with dirt. It was impossible to disguise the fact that the town was poor. Most of it was made up of crumbling brick buildings, standing on shattered paving slabs.

  We walked from Lenin along the main street, past the sign for the hotel, and the peeling paint of the post office. There was an old wooden church, compact and elegant against the sprawling block buildings. We stopped briefly in a yellow-tiled bar, studiously decorated with Arctic art, faded pastels of Barentsburg under ice, everything for sale. There was a small museum, with a collection of minerals, a reconstructed coal mine, and a gallery full of paintings of miners.

  As Natasha said goodbye I tried to ask her why she had come to Barentsburg, what she did during the days, whether her husband was a miner. But she smiled and avoided every question. She told me she loved it there, but she looked tired and cold. It was impossible to tell. The Russians never came to Longyearbyen, Anders said, sotto voce, as we prepared to leave the Russian mine. Anders had become loquacious in my absence; perhaps it was the trip he had made to Barentsburg’s bar. He lit a cigar, puffing the smoke into the mist. He said that Barentsburg was a closed place. Through the mist we watched the workers stacking the steel containers, dragging boxes around on the quayside.

  ‘The Russians won’t be honest about Barentsburg,’ said Anders, in a cloud of smoke. ‘You can’t talk to the people much; they don’t want to say anything. It was worse before, but it’s still bad. They earn much less than the Russian officials say they do. That’s just one of the reasons why they tell you not to talk to the workers. The other reason is that they are all alcoholics.’

  There was a last sound of the crash of steel along the quayside, and then we passed the receding shapes of the containers, blurred by the mist.

  ‘The hotel is full of rats,’ Anders said, as we left, ‘and the workers drink. The workers cannot leave Barentsburg, once they arrive; there is no transport available. If they leave before their contracts end,’ Anders said, ‘they lose all their money.’

  The boat slid back along the coast, and the moon rose. The air was cold and the mist swirled around. The governor left the Russians to their frozen rocks, and hoped one day the coal would fail. Meanwhile he let the Norwegian Coal Company blast away, because Svalbard coal was the cleanest in the world, they claimed. The governor let the coal go; the companies exported their fossil fuels. Then the governor sponsored a scientific research base at Ny-Ålesund, to research the effects of fossil fuels on the Arctic. It was a paradox, a t
idy story. It had a beginning—the Coal Companies—a middle—the Scientists—and an end—the Coming Earth, the future. Despite the blasting of the mines, the melting of the ice was a nightmare Svalbard was trying not to fall asleep into. The governor thought the mining could continue, so long as he sponsored the scientists in the north.

  Flying from the mining town of Longyearbyen to Ny-Ålesund was a trip from cause to effect. As the mist breathed across the mountains the light aircraft shuddered along the runway, and rose suddenly into the air. The passengers sat among the crates of scientific equipment, with “fragile” scrawled across the boxes. The plane moved above the azure depths of Isfjorden, towards the mountains of Oscar II Land. Beneath lay vast glaciers, spilling ice into the fjord. They were named Nansenbreen, Sveabreen, Borebreen on the map; from the sky they were another crazy vista of ice and rock, the distinctions between places impossible to discern. Ny-Ålesund stood on Kongsfjorden, where icebergs drifted from a pale blue glacier.

  Ny-Ålesund was little more than a few yellow, red and beige painted wooden houses, in a loose circle around a central mess building, with a broken train track at the edge, rusting into the tundra. There were no hospitals, no schools, just the wooden huts, made for scientists. There was a hotel for visitors, which was where I was taken, deposited by a friendly scientist and told to unpack and find my warmest clothes. There seemed to be no one else there. The corridors were silent; the living room was polished and empty. Paintings of ice-mountains hung on the walls. There was a notice saying: ‘Attention! Please take the polar bear threat seriously!’

  The fjord was pale blue; the glacier fell in frozen cascades towards the edge of the water; the mountains rose above, a mist curling around their peaks, too light to obscure the contours of the rocks.

  The scientists all ate in the mess room, talking about the melting of the ice, tucking into Scandinavian buffets. They were a sombre collection, sitting in their cramped huts making diagrams about the coming earth. The melting of the ice, they said, was a possible result of global warming. There had already been thinner ice cover in the Arctic Ocean during the summer in recent years. It might be related to global warming; it might be a trick of nature. If the ice began to melt more intensely there would be lots more water around, and what this would do was uncertain, they said.

  Sometimes the scientists sat in the sea between Svalbard and Greenland, watching the changing of the ice. Or they sat in their small huts on Ny-Ålesund, writing papers proposing that climate change might be causing a retreat of glaciers in the Arctic region. Some of them said the global sea level was increasing, an effect of the melting of the ice. The scientists stayed cautious, even as they quoted their statistics. They were reluctant prophets, talking only of ‘climate change scenarios,’ things that might happen. Knowing that in the past definitive theories had been proved to be ephemeral, the scientists scattered their reports with qualifications, insisting that everything was merely hypothesis. Everything was laced with uncertainty, though most of the scenarios seemed to be varieties of disaster. They wouldn’t tell the international corporations what to do; they wouldn’t tell the governor to kick the coal bosses off his idyll. They monitored and assessed.

  Running around the base was an Englishman called Jeremy, constantly cheerful, greeting everyone he met with great warmth and enthusiasm. The winds were always biting, but he still stopped on the paths, shaking hands. His hair was always perfectly parted, even in driving gales, and he always wore a fleece jacket in blue, brown windproof trousers, a striped shirt like a city banker, and large boots, which he stamped on the ground as he said, ‘Well, lovely, really lovely to see you, must be off’—this to a scientist he had seen ten times already that day, and would see another ten before the day’s end, there being only one path in the settlement, only one dining room, and hardly any scientists.

  I shook hands with Jeremy, and I learned that he ran a scientific station, one of the huts glazed with ice, lashed by the winds. Weaned on stories of Scott and Shackleton, Jeremy had decided from an early age that he wanted to work in Antarctica. He realized, he said, that he had to get a skill which would be useful on expeditions, so he trained to be a carpenter. After a few years, he became an administrator in British Antarctica, overseeing scientific research bases in the south. Then, he said, he was offered the chance to come to Svalbard. ‘I thought, I’ve never seen the remote north,’ he said. ‘So I thought, why not! Beautiful place, really extraordinary to work here. And gosh it’s cold today’—as the wind slammed us both against the wall of a hut—‘let’s go inside, my gosh, let’s go inside.’

  I respected his striped shirt; I respected his ungloved hands. His constant affability was an achievement in this place, which was nothing more than a dozen huts by an almost frozen fjord, the icebergs drifting slowly through the sludge, the deep blue glacier rumbling in the distance.

  Everything in the scientific research station was orderly—huts, equipment, the small quayside with the motorboats lined in rows. The mess was open for breakfast, lunch and dinner, and the scientists ate together. One day Jeremy said: ‘You should of course meet Alice.’

  Alice knew all about the coming earth, he said, though like all the others she was reluctant to commit herself. But she could spin a riddle or two, offer up an augury, as long as no one asked her to stamp it as definite. ‘Alice is a very remarkable person,’ said Jeremy.

  Suddenly there was a murmur of voices. A scientist had fallen into the ice fjord. He was Olav, he had been out looking at the bird cliffs, making notes about the end of the season. He had hit a patch of ice in the fjord, and his boat had buckled like a crashed car and thrown him in. Murmurs of concern broke out among the scientists, and the mess immediately emptied. Jeremy said ‘I’m awfully sorry, I must go and see if there’s anything I can do. I’ll tell Alice about you—’ and he ran out.

  The settlement was in a state of shock from the near loss of a scientist to the elements. No one talked much, and Jeremy was nowhere to be found. I sat in the hotel, leafing through information packs and rule-books, and then I walked along frosted train tracks towards the edge of the fjord.

  Later I went out on the fjord with Alice. I was slightly nervous because of what had happened to Olav, but Alice put me in a luminous survival suit and told me to blow a whistle if anything happened. Alice was small and compact, wearing jeans and a large sweater, with grey-blonde hair and an expression of rapturous calm. She didn’t want to be adamant, she said, but some things looked very worrying indeed, and it was hard to know what to say. She had not found so many signs of good news, she said, vaguely, deliberately vaguely. But things might change, she added, lending me a hand as I climbed into the small boat.

  The boat was a nautical midget under the towering bergs. The sludge-ice massed around the hull; the pancake-ice scratched at the paintwork. Under a twilight sky Alice steered the boat into the icy centre of Kongsfjorden, past the icebergs drifting from the glacier, swaying on the waves. A bearded seal yawned on its iceberg and flopped into the water. From a distance, the glacier looked serene, edging towards the fjord, a gentle slope of clear white and blue ice, the mist romantically encircling its base, softening its fall towards the water, and the icebergs looked pure white and blue. Out in the middle of the fjord, the boat hit the waves and lurched sideways as Alice swerved to avoid an iceberg.

  Alice steered the small boat through the massing chunks of ice to the bottom of the glacier, stopping at a stretch of ice-littered sea twenty metres away. The glacier chilled the air around it, adding further depths of coldness to the evening. It was a squat glacier, dribbling ice into the fjord. The ice in the bergs was muddy, greased with dirt. For a few minutes, we sat in the boat and listened to the roar of the glacier, the groaning of the ice. As we listened, a loud boom came from the glacier and a great chunk of ice dropped into the sea before us, shaking the boat. Then everything was calm again, except for the lapping of the waves, causing the bergs to sway and rock in the water.

&n
bsp; Sitting in the boat, staring at the glacier, Alice explained to me that it was sometimes difficult to be happy, knowing what she did about the ice-plains and their coming doom. She was not a mystic, or a novelist, she wanted to emphasise, but she thought some things were so worrying and probable that it was worth talking about them. In recent years, there had been bad tidings from the archipelago, from the scientific researchers on Svalbard. Chemicals from Russia, from North America, from Europe had circled in the air and water and moved towards Svalbard. The ice might melt, at some stage, and no one was predicting a sudden improvement in conditions.

  ‘Let us just say,’ Alice said, dropping the tiller and sitting upright in her survival suit, ‘that there are man-made chemical compounds found in high concentrations on Svalbard, and they seem to cause damage to those animals in which they accumulate. They come by air, they come by water, and they are changing the wildlife on Svalbard. The Arctic wilderness,’ Alice continued, after a long pause, ‘might be under threat from the chemicals of more southerly civilizations, chemicals carried by air from Europe and North America, or by water across the oceans—from Siberia to Spitsbergen.’

 

‹ Prev