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Day of Cadre Workers /День кадрового работника: Here We Go Again

By October 12, 2010June 1st, 2017Uncategorized

Today is День кадрового работника, or Day of the Cadre Workers, which confused me, somewhat…

Photo Credit: Shutterstock

…since “Cadre Worker” is just Sovietease for “Human Resources,” and as fans of this blog know, we celebrated that on May 24th.   It’s the same holiday, celebrating the same dragon-like crowd who keep your labor book and make you take the leprosy test, only today, October 12th marks the day in 1918 when the Peoples’ Commissars for Justice ratified their “Instructions Concerning the Organization of Soviets of Workers-Peasants Militia,” (a document that has to have been right up there with “Right Ho Jeeves”) and founded the first Soviet-era recruitment for the ministry of the interior.  So, obviously, today is an older (Soviet) version of the newer version of the holiday based on the older (Tsarist) 1835 holiday.  Right?  Don’t you just yearn to meet the lunatic sitting in the windowless room in the Kremlin who is in charge of this stuff?  I do!

I’m going to re-post the Human Resources post from May 24th: It’s very funny first of all, and second, of all, I don’t think the HR crowd really deserve to be indulged to the extent of two posts by me, do you?

Today is Human Resources Day, and quite frankly, that doesn’t have me up at dawn sifting the dry ingredients, or throwing caution to the wind at Liquors 44, saying, “Hang the expense, we’ll have the bottle of $9.99 chardonnay, instead of the usual $6.48 bottle.

HR day is celebrated on May 24th because this day marks the occasion in 1835 when the first Tsarist Imperial decree was published, spelling out the exact rights of both employers and employees.  And we all know how well that worked out. Nevertheless, in 2005, the government decided that the HR types needed their own holiday, and thus was born HR Managers day.

The mistake foreigners make about HR managers when they come to Russia, is that they think these people will perform the same functions and services as they did in the West simply because they have the same title on their business card. Big Mistake. Same job description as good ole’ Joe back in Indiana, only this one’s name is Svetlana Vladimirovna, and she doesn’t seem to want to help organize a new employee get-together, a refresher course on the company’s software, or, indeed, the Christmas party.  What she does want is about 69 pieces of paper and your blood — literally: she will send you out to the other end of Moscow to some clinic that looks like it was last cleaned in during the reign of Leonid Brezhnev, to have an HIV screening, a leprosy test, and a skin scratch for bubonic plague.  Her job is to keep the “trudoviye knishki” or work record books in order, and not to help employees maximize their potential.

You get a lot of this in Russia: words that sound like words we have back at home, but mean something completely different.   Angina, for example, pronounced in Russia “ahn-GEE-nah” is tonsillitis, whereas “angina” in English, pronounced “An-Jaiy-NAH” is a dress rehearsal for a heart attack.  When a hapless uninitiated potential traveler to Russia is told he needs “an invitation” to Russia, this does not mean a stiff cream-colored card with engraved lettering, or, indeed, a badly spelled, but enthusiastic email from 19-year-old Natasha Quelque Chose whom he met on vanillalove.com.  No no, they mean a form you get after an extensive outlay of time and money from some organization like the Permanent Representative of Kalmikhiya to the President of the Russian Federation, which comes, wait for it, by TELEX to a Russian Embassy near you.  Yes…a TELEX.

Letters of invitation, in theory, are handled by the HR Managers, but not always.   They are mainly paper pushers, “nyet” sayers, and in cahoots with major league scary organizations such as the Ministry of Labor and the Tax thugs.

HR Managers do not worry about what Russians call “teembeeelding” which you and I would know as “Team Building,” but when pushed, they can produce the name of some company, which can be brought in “nah out-suuuuursing-guh” or outsourced.  This kind of company is usually run by someone called Sergei, who reeks of cigarettes and will come to make a presentation on the many exciting “timbeeelding” opportunities, which are available through his extensive network.  He will be either related to the HR Director, or on an active referral list.  Either way, money will change hands for the meeting.

I sat in on just such a meeting when I was working at The Bank.  The idea was that the Management Committee should go somewhere and “teembeeld.”  Since the cotton was relatively high back then, there was a tidy to spend on an executive “teembeeld.” I was dozing off as Sergei showed slides of a visit to Formula 1 in Italy, which is not my idea of a dream vacation, and a rock climbing opportunity in Andorra that looked even worse, when up on the screen came a much more pleasing image:  a long scrubbed pine table with bunches of herbs, mixing bowls and happy looking people in aprons chopping and stirring.

“Cooking in Tuscany!” proclaimed Sergei.

“I don’t think so,” said Alexei, the conservative COO, who had dragged me to the meeting.

“Oh, I think that would be GREAT,” I said a little too loudly, and heads turned.

“Cooking is great teembeelding,” I added.

“No..no,” said the CFO, waving his hands in a dismissive fashion.

We didn’t end up going anywhere, but the mirage of the teembeelding at a Cooking School in Tuscany remained with me for months to come.  I fantasized about it during meetings, when they all went on about debt instruments or did that thing where they pretended The Market is a real person with like emotions and feelings: “The Market likes this”, or “the Market isn’t sure about that”…grown men in nice shirts!   I would imagine us all at the cooking school, for once my skill-set the predominant.

“Dmitry,” I would say tersely to the snooty Head of M&A, “I told you to crush that garlic, not chop it…don’t you know the difference?”  Or, I would be incredibly patient showing the Assistant Head of the Trading floor, who I was convinced suffered from Aspergers’ syndrome, how to rip leaves off a basil plant.  I’d make the really bitchy new female IPO specialist beat egg whites into stiff peaks.

By hand.

Happy Human Resources Manager Day to all!

 

15 Comments

  • Chris says:

    ahoy! One hundred posts, one hundred entertaining reads, and a thousand laughs! Can’t even begin to tell you how much I’ve been learning about the Motherland—and about certain peculiarities of my own HRH*
    Will work on the digging and googling.. but your bets may be off with Ariana until the “Sanity Bus” migration is complete 🙂
    (* HRPartner?)

  • Well Done Jennifer! 100 times 100 is a lot of laughs you have given me. Cooking classes in Tuscany sounds like a fantastic Teembuilding -I might have to speak to Annette about that!
    Can’t wait to see you in Moscow!! (soon right???)
    XOXOXO,
    Teyeyeyeyeyrrrllllleee
    LOL!

  • Frances Buttenheim says:

    Great as usual, funny enough to make me laugh out loud. These blogs, combined with a mocha latte have become my favorite, ease-into-the-day strategy. Keep going! Fran

  • Mara says:

    As I told you, I love reading your writing (how knew it?), makes me smile (a laugh to most others) and feel in touch with you. I’ve shared these with my co-worker, the one you met when you had us over to dinner, another Jennifer, who (even though she doesn’t really understand the context) still appreciates the humor and quality of your writing.

  • Dear Chris: Thanks for your very kind note! Tell me more about your HRP??? Very intriguing!

  • Hey There TL! Thanks for your support and inspiration. I can see you at the TEEMBEEEELDING in a heartbeat!

  • Potty Mummy says:

    Congratulations on the 100th post – I hope there was champagne(ski)?

  • Chris says:

    Intriguing enough to be illegal in 31 states. Jumping on the expat bandwagon after completing our graduate work.

  • Mark says:

    You could write about the telephone book, and it’d be funny; you have a knack for making everything funny without really insulting anyone – a gift many diplomats would be glad to share. You’ll always make the best of wherever you are, and when you write about it you make everyone want to visit. I’m a big fan, and while I’ll be sorry to see The Stunt run out its string – some of those holidays must have been a hell of a challenge – I know your writing on a less-imposed schedule about random subjects is just as great. I sure learned a lot from The Stunt, though.
    Love your recipes, too; I’m a recipe junkie. I’ll never live long enough to make half the stuff I’ve collected in recipe form, and I’ve been known to take newspapers out of trash cans to retrieve the recipe section. Rock on, Jennifer!

  • Mark, you are amazing! How did you know that next up is День создания адресно-справочной службы Российского государства! Seriously! I think you’ve just given me my prompt! Thanks, as ever, for your support!

  • Gin…actually 😉 Hope you are keeping well, PM and looking forward to someday meeting in real life!

  • Maritchka! Great to see you here! thanks for the very kind comments! When might we see you over in Russia again????

  • Hey Fran, thanks so much for your note. And I hope you found your personal tribute in Post # 100!

  • Excellent news, Chris. Sounds like we can use you over in Russia!

  • Heidi says:

    Here’s to you – Darlin!
    Fantastic to reach 100 and you do keep us all laughing!!
    Hope all is going well and missing you – when do you return to the Motherland!?

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