I agree with most of what’s been said here, though I would add that in the three months that I spent in Nizhny Novgorod a few years back, I never experienced any kind of problems due to the fact I was a foreigner. Similarly, the foreigners that I met there, most of them African, told me that they never had problems either. NN is also a big city (3rd or 4th largest in Russia), but the numbers of foreigners there is - relative to Moscow and Peter - really small. Maybe its more of a problem with those places than in the "provinces".

In contrast however, every single one of my foreign friends with dark skin here in Poland, whether African or central Asian, has stories of being harassed or attacked by hooligans. (Granted of course, nothing even remotely as serious as what you hear about from Moscow and St. Petersburg, but it still takes place.) Last summer while in Donetsk I hung out a few times with some students from Nigeria who were doing a full 5-year degree program at the university. They told me that even after spending two years there, not a single one of them had experienced a race related incident. For me, that was a bit shocking - in a good way.
Nashi can be pretty scary…. brain-washed youth. One doesn’t need to be able to speak Russian to understand the imagery on their website (
www.nashi.su) … that’s .su for Soviet Union…
Finally, in that first video edcocks posted they talked about politician Dmitr Rogozin who was deemed too “xenophobic” for the duma and was made to stand down. They must have decided his “talents” could be better used badgering the west; he was made ambassador to NATO earlier this year. The economist reported that NATO gave him some corner office on some bottom-far-away floor away from everybody. Supposedly he hung a poster of Stalin leading a column of Soviet tanks across Europe…