From the love letter, like the twentieth century, to the post on Instagram, which is decidedly more contemporary, the choice is almost obligatory.
But the 'juice' remains.
"Yulia, you saved me, and let them put it in neuroscience textbooks," Navalny wrote, thanking his wife for assisting him in the darkest stage of the coma.
The post is accompanied by a photo of the couple at the Charité hospital in Berlin.
But if on the one hand there is love, on the other there is the political struggle.
Navalny has in fact asked the Russian police to return the clothes seized in Omsk, given that they are "evidence".
During the day there was also space for a mess.
That is the news, released by some Russian media, that the Supreme Court had definitively closed the race of the Navalny party, Future Russia, which had been denied registration by the Ministry of Justice because there was already another political body with that name .
Well, the Court liquidated the 'homonymous' party to that of Navalny, at the request of the ministry itself.
This was made clear by Navalny's spokeswoman, Kira Yarmush, emphasizing that this was not a party but "a group of thieves who simply stole our name".
Navalny's staff let it be known that it will not resubmit the request to the Russian authorities but will wait for the ruling of the European Court of Human Rights, which had been appealed.