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| Version | User | Scope of changes |
|---|---|---|
| Oct 19 2007, 8:02 AM EDT | 1stop4 | 1 word added, 1 word deleted |
| Oct 19 2007, 8:02 AM EDT | 1stop4 | 5 words added, 8 words deleted |
Changes
Key: Additions Deletions
Mikhail Bakunin
The Actor: Andrew DivoffFlashback Episode: None Yet
(Seen in Juliet's Flashback in "One Of Us").
Who he is: Appeared on one of the tv monitors in The Pearl while Locke, Nikki, Paulo, and Sayid were down there. He then disconnected the camera at The Flame.
Introduction: Mikhail Bakunin is a member of The Others and a former Soviet soldier who lived in the Flame, stationed their to manage communications with the outside world. He was later shot in the chest with a spear gun, only to survive and then denotate a grenade outside a window of the Looking Glass station, drowning Charlie Pace. It is unclear what happened to Bakunin.
Hails from: Russia
Who he was before: Field Medic in Soviet Army
Who he is now: Presumably living on the island (possibly the Flame Station), has only one eye as his other one is covered by the black eye patch. Possibly once wore the glass eye that was found in The Arrow by the Tailies. Locke pushed him into the sonic fence in "Par Avion" and he began foaming from the mouth as blood spurted from his ears. He appeared to have died; however, it has been revealed that he is in fact living and seemingly in good health. Possibly dead after detonating a grenade in his hand outside the Looking Glass station, but he also seemed dead when he was shot by Desmond.
Big secrets: Bakunin apparently was not killed by the fencefence, it being not set to full power. He was also harpooned through the chest by Desmond in the underwater Looking Glass station, but managed to stealthily reequip his gear and swim outside with heavy blood loss and likely internal injuries. His fate is unknown after having detonated the grenade that caused the Looking Glass room that Charlie was in to flood.
Possible Namesake: Mikhail Alexandrovich Bakunin (1814 - 1876) was a well-known Russian revolutionary, and often considered one of the fathers of modern anarchism.

