How about what some ordinary Russians and others who lived in Communist countries at the time have to say about Reagan...
Immigrants from former Soviet Union mourn Reagan
GILLIAN FLACCUS
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES - Rabbi Velvel Tsikman remembers a time when the only link he had to his Jewish heritage was a line in his Soviet passport that read: "Nationality: Jewish."
Now, Tsikman - who in the former Soviet Union was forbidden to wear a yarmulke - watches over a vibrant Russian Jewish community in West Hollywood from his office at the Chabad Russian Jewish Community Center.
Tsikman says he credits his spiritual freedom to the late Ronald Reagan, whose anti-missile program drew the Soviets into a costly arms race, helping lead to the collapse of what Reagan called the "evil empire." His 1987 demand to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev at the Berlin Wall - "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall" - was the ultimate challenge of the Cold War.
Tsikman recalled with emotion the first time a Jewish synagogue opened in the Ukraine after years of religious oppression. He began to wear a yarmulke openly and grow his beard; he soon veered from a career in computers to the spiritual life of a rabbi.
"It was like going from the basement to the street and seeing the light," Tsikman said. "(Reagan's) doctrine, what he did, was very helpful to destroy the monster that was there in Europe."
Those sentiments were echoed across Southern California, home to large Russian and Eastern European immigrant communities. They were also reflected in poignant signs and flags placed outside the Santa Monica mortuary where Reagan's body was taken after his death Saturday at age 93.
Lithuanian and Polish flags sprouted from the grass. Posters paying homage to Reagan - some decorated with pieces of the Berlin Wall - sat propped against a fountain alongside flowers and balloons.
"Sir - You told Gorbachev to 'Take down this wall.' We helped. Thanks for your courage and leadership," read one sign that was affixed with two quarter-sized bits of the Berlin Wall.
[/b]Another sign, accompanied by a Lithuanian flag, read: "President Reagan, Thank you for Lithuanian freedom." Still another said: "Solidarnosc! With love from Poland," a reference to Reagan's efforts to promote the Solidarity labor movement in Poland in the 1980s.[/b]
Pope John Paul II sent a message Tuesday to Nancy Reagan, expressing "deep gratitude" for her late husband's commitment to the cause of freedom in the world and his work to help end the Soviet grip on eastern Europe.
In West Hollywood, Tsikman has for 12 years watched over the Russian Jewish community center, an anchor for up to 50,000 Soviet bloc immigrants in greater Los Angeles. The neighborhood is dotted with Russian, Ukranian and Armenian groceries, pharmacies and video stores, and people speak more Russian than English.
Dozens of seniors chatted Tuesday about the impact Reagan had on their lives.
"This is a guy who changed the world. It wasn't only his speeches - it was his actions," said Aleksandr Shakhnovich, 57, a former shipbuilder for the Soviet navy.
"He cut down the economy of the USSR and it was one of the main reasons the country just shut down. He did something that not only changed my life, but changed the lives of everyone in the former Soviet Union."
Down the street, Armenian grocer Paul Khostikyan paused from unloading fresh fruit to remember the man he called "the best president in U.S. history."
Khostikyan, 54, who immigrated in 1990, said he remembered Reagan's famous speech at the Berlin Wall - and recalled being moved by his bold words.
"I liked how he talked about freedom," said Khostikyan, now a U.S. citizen. "He really meant it, not like other presidents. He will be in history much more than Clinton or Bush."
At the community center, Tsikman brushed his finger against his yarmulke and watched contentedly as dozens of elderly people ate at long tables, laughing and chatting in Russian.
"They are living in a paradise here. It's like God is paying them for a terrible life in Russia," Tsikman said. "These people were sitting home waiting to die. When they came here, they came alive again."