Dmitry Petrov (anarchist)

Dmitry Dmitrievich Petrov (Дмитрий Дмитриевич Петров; 1989–2023), also known by his nom de guerre Ilya Leshiy (Ілля Лєший) and under other pseudonyms, was a Russian anarchist activist, ethnographer and historian. Following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, he volunteered for the Armed Forces of Ukraine, getting killed in the battle of Bakhmut.

Biography
Dmitry Petrov joined the Russian anarchist movement in 2004, when he was still a teenager. In the 2000s, he was known among Russian anarchists under the pseudonym "Ecologist" for his environmental activism. He was involved in organising protests against the construction of waste incineration plants, the defence of the Bitsevsky Park and the Khimki Forest, etc. In addition to environmental protection activities, he also participated in street fights against Russian neo-Nazis, the activities of the anarchist trade union Interprofessional Union of Workers, social protests (in particular, against the eviction of dormitory residents), independent book publishing and cultural and educational events.

Since 2009, he has been a participant in the guerrilla struggle against the Russian regime, co-founding the Black Blog, whose team participated in and covered radical anarchist actions, such as the arson of construction equipment in places of illegal construction, police cars and stations, military registration and enlistment offices, and United Russia offices. Dmitriy Petrov himself was directly involved in the arson of the State Tax Service and other direct actions.

He took part in the Snow Revolution in Russia (2011–2013), the Revolution of Dignity in Ukraine (2013–2014) and the Slipper Revolution in Belarus (2020). To take part in the Belarusian protests, he illegally crossed the Ukrainian-Belarusian border, as he faced extradition to Russia in Belarus.

In the years after the Euromaidan, he defended his PhD thesis on the "Sacred Geography of the Eastern Districts of the Arkhangelsk Region" and worked as a researcher at the Centre for Civilisational and Regional Studies of the Institute of Africa of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Inspired by David Graeber's article on the social revolution in Rojava, in 2017 he spent six months in Syrian Kurdistan, where he studied the Kurmanji language, local experience of self-organisation and social transformation, and supported the Kurds' fight against the Islamic State. He was engaged in promoting information about Kurdistan and the Middle East in general as part of the research project Hevale: Revolution in Kurdistan, co-authored and co-edited the books Life without a State: The Revolution in Kurdistan and Desert Flowers: 10 Years of the Rojava Revolution, as well as a translator of the study ''Kurdistan. Real Democracy under War and Blockade''. His materials about Kurdistan also appeared in the Ukrainian publications Commons and Political Critique.

During his stay in Kurdistan, he found out that the FSB was interested in him and, against the backdrop of persecution of anarchist and anti-fascist activists by the Putin regime, he decided not to return to Russia and moved to Kyiv in 2018.

After the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, he participated in the creation of an "anti-authoritarian platoon" in the Territorial Defense Forces of the Kyiv region, as well as the Resistance Committee initiative and a number of volunteer solidarity networks. Later, he was transferred to the 95th Air Assault Brigade, within which he fought in the Battle of the Svatove–Kreminna line in autumn and winter. In the spring of 2023, he moved to another unit and was transferred to fight in the Battle of Bakhmut.

He was a co-founder of the Combat Organization of Anarcho-Communists (BOAK). In his farewell letter to the BOAK in case of his death at the front, he wrote that he would remain a member of the organisation after his death.

By religious views, he was a practitioner of the Slavic Native Faith, belonging to the pagan-antifa movement.

He was killed in the battle of Bakhmut along with Irish socialist Finbar Cafferkey and African-American activist Cooper "Harris" Andrews.

Works

 * Thesis


 * Articles


 * Books


 * Lectures


 * Pseudonymous articles