Friday, August 21, 2015

The Banya


“What pictures flash in your mind when you hear something about the public baths? Probable like most people, not very nice, do not have nothing to do with cleanliness, hygiene and enjoyable pastime. But it’s all superstition, friends. Currently, public baths, for example, up to 20 people, for the comfort of not much different from private ones… We are waiting for you to look in the Russian bath!”
-From www.banya-lefortovo.ru (translated by Google)

When my roommate John Mark and I began preparing to travel to Russia, we knew a visit to a banya would be in order. In our research we had read accounts of the renowned Hermitage Museum and the Mariinsky Ballet, but it seemed to us that nothing would display this country’s soul better than a steamy room full of naked old guys beating themselves with birch branches.

For the uninitiated reader, a banya is similar to a sauna, differing only in its steam, which is wet rather than dry. For centuries, Russians have visited banyas to wash, recover from illness, and enjoy community. As one Moscow banya claims: “In the life of a Russian man, the tradition of the washing bath holds a special place… banyas in Moscow bring the magical health benefits.”

Choosing the right banya was no easy matter. Like most tourists, John Mark and I were eager to escape other tourists. With this in mind, we bypassed any banya website written in English. Instead, we found websites made for Russians, and we relied on Google for a translation. Which is always a good idea.

The first website we found offered various banya experiences, including but not limited to the following:

-Russian bath on the 1st person: 600 rubles, at one o’clock
-Starorussky massage – a broom in the steam room – 1 person (brooms not included): 1000  rubles
-Hovering in the steam room of honey – 1 person (honey is not included): 650 rubles

The banya also offered a service called “massage and the guy.” Massage and the guy was available for “honey massage the belly,” “lymphatic drainage massage,” and “massage cervical zony,” none of which sounded remotely appealing (or possible, considering my lack of a cervical zony). And although hovering in the steam room of honey piqued my interest—I’m only human—I worried this one was for pros only.

So we kept looking. After scrolling through pages of banya websites, we found Coachman’s Banya and decided it was the one. According to their website, “the walls of [their] baths remember Lenin, Dostoevsky, and Mussorgsky.” This would seem to go against our aim to avoid tourist traps, but the entry price of 150 Rubles ($2.17 USD) gave us hope that this banya was a local joint.

Owing either to a busy schedule or to sub-conscious trepidation, we waited to visit Coachman’s until our last day in Russia. Inside the poorly-marked building, a woman on the first floor sent us up three flights of stairs to the men’s banya. Walking through the door, we expected to find a lobby where we could pay. Instead, we’d entered directly into a dank locker room filled with wrinkled men in various stages of nudity. Inside a booth at one end of the room sat a dour man who would take our money.

When we travel, John Mark and I try to keep a low profile. We talk in low tones and try not to act blatantly American. I walked to the booth and blew my cover right away.

“One—um—one banya, please.”

I gave my rubles to the man, and he returned a few coins change. John Mark offered his credit card, but the man wouldn’t allow it. John Mark left to find an ATM, and I motioned to the man that I would return in a few minutes, but the man wanted me to take my money back first, an awkward process involving my counting back to him the change he had given earlier. John Mark and I descended the three flights of stairs, found an ATM several blocks away, and returned fifteen minutes later. So much for a low profile.

We found a locker for our clothes and walked into an adjoining room to shower. The room was lousy with naked men. I’d visited the Hermitage museum the day before, where I’d beheld the beauty of the human form in myriad paintings and statues. I’d seen men so elegant they resembled women, women so resplendent they looked like angels. Collarbones burst forth into marble wings.

The banya welcomed me back to Earth. No painting had depicted such lumps and sags; no marble bellies had grown so large as to fold into themselves. These men resembled nothing so much as spuds, which, if forgotten in a cool, dark place, might soon sprout roots. Looking at them and trying not to look at them, I thought, this is what I will look like in thirty years.

Not that my body is anything sculpture-worthy. After comparing myself to human perfection in gilded halls, there was a part of me that felt relieved to be back among my fellow unshapely men.

I showered and walked to a heavy wooden door in the back. This was it. I opened the door to an explosion of steam and walked in. My lungs seized and my eyes stung, and I stumbled toward a place to sit in the darkness. Several men shouted crossly at me, and I realized I had left the door open. I trotted to the door and closed it, trying not to laugh hysterically—my reflex response to awkwardness.

I sat. The room resounded with the sound of men beating themselves. I had read about the use of the venik, a bundle of birch branches soaked in water and used to beat oneself. Ostensibly, the practice draws blood to the surface of the skin and opens the pores. Somehow I had not imagined the beating to be so loud, so heartily administered, or to release such a pleasant aroma. The men employed the venik with gusto, boisterously whacking their arms, their chests, their thighs. I could feel the spray of their branches on my skin. They grunted and breathed; they loosed throaty yelps. It was hard to imagine women doing the same, only one floor above.

For me, there was something inherently masculine in the Russian banya. How many Russian men I had passed on the street, looking formidable and impassive. Here I saw these same men with guards dropped. Whatever burdens they carried through life, whatever bulwarks they raised to steel themselves, were here abandoned. Here they were only men. I wondered if they knew I was American.

John Mark sat beside me, and we sat and sweated in silence. Somehow, after anticipating the banya for several months, we had at the last moment forgotten to buy our venik. In the shower room, I’d noted rows of benches with buckets holding birch clusters. I considered taking one at random, but feared being confronted by a burly, nude man deprived of his birch. (Come back, birches!)

A man behind us lay down full length across a bench and enjoyed the beating of two friends on his back, buttocks, and legs. He seemed to enjoy it. As one banya’s website describes so poetically, “And what an unforgettable feeling of lightness and purity will give you an effective use of a broom experienced master!”

I wondered what a banya would look like in America, but I couldn’t imagine it. There is something too self-conscious in the American man, too well-groomed. Glancing discreetly at the other men in the room, at their slack, contented faces, I felt our key difference: None of them were thinking.

The heat rose. Or maybe it simply maintained its sweltering pitch. My body temperature climbed until sweat pattered on the floorboards between my feet. I couldn’t help thinking of an oven, and of poultry that I’d made edible in heat not much more than this. I finally fled the room and found the cold water tank in the shower room. I am squeamish about cold water, and also about tanks where hundreds of sweaty men have bathed, but none of that mattered as I climbed the ladder and dropped into cool, refreshing water. My muscles chilled. My whole body relaxed.

I was ready for another round.

At the door to the banya I found a trashcan of discarded birch clusters and stared into it enviously. Was I desperate enough to use another man’s venik? I grabbed the one on top and examined it, reevaluating my hygienic spectrum. These branches certainly weren’t “Used—like new.” The leaves were withered and still damp; worse, I had witnessed the most recent departure and could give their former owner a face—along with a belly and jocular buttocks.


I didn’t care. I hurried into the banya, climbed a platform where the heat was greatest, and commenced the beating. The leaves stung, and their bite only grew as the air baked them. My skin burned. I lowered my head and breathed deeply, letting my thoughts slow to a halt. John Mark came in from a dip in the tank, and he leaned forward so I could hit his back with the branches. I leaned forward while he returned the favor. All around, men were enjoying the “magical health benefits” of the sauna, and I too could feel the magic. Bowed and naked, sitting blankly in the primal heat, I felt like a man.