Russian Language Excluded from Kyiv State Schooling

Authored by kyivpost.com and submitted by Pure_Candidate_3831
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Kyiv City Council has completely excluded the Russian language from being taught as part of the curricula at municipal institutions of preschool and general secondary education.

According to the Kyiv City Council’s press service, Kyiv City Council held a vote on Thursday, Nov. 10, in which 64 local lawmakers of the 120-member council approved the exclusion of Russian language from local schooling.

According to local lawmaker Vadym Vasylchuk, who is also chairman of the Standing Committee on Education and Science, Family, Youth, and Sports, in the current conditions of war with the Russian Federation, it is inappropriate and incorrect to conduct the educational process and study of Russian in preschool and general secondary education institutions that belong to the communal property of the territorial community of Kyiv.

“Russian leaders have stated repeatedly that ‘Russia reaches as far as the Russian language is spread.’ In this regard, the deputy corps of Kyiv City Council has adopted a decision that will enable it to avoid escalation of tension in society and step up protection of the educational space of Kyiv from the hybrid influences of the aggressor state. Language does matter, and in wartime it is a matter of national security,” Vasylchuk said.

He added that the decision provides for carrying out organizational and legal actions to transitional groups and classes from Russian to Ukrainian, the state language.

Kyiv City Council also plans to introduce a moratorium on the public use of Russian-language cultural products in the capital.

At the end of June, Odesa Region and the city of Mykolaiv removed Russian from their school curriculum.

Dazzling-Honey1280 on November 13rd, 2022 at 02:07 UTC »

I understand why, but this is much larger than just language.

Russian is rooted into Ukraine quite a bit, to the point where even families from somewhere like Kyiv speak Russian instead of Ukrainian. There’s also a mix of both languages that developed in more rural areas - Surzhyk; this mix is usually regarded as improper Ukrainian and often looked down upon.

You also need to understand the cultural results of such drastic change. Media content, movies, music, etc will be left out and I imagine it’d be hard for some people to cope with that.

That’s a very big step in Ukraine, and although I hold no opinion on that, I think it’s massive.

Also, make no mistake, I speak Russian and I can get every 5th or so word in the sentence, but I definitely can’t understand Ukrainian

Local_Working2037 on November 12nd, 2022 at 23:58 UTC »

Can’t believe it took this long. That’s how Russia keeps claiming territory by referring to Russian speakers as “Russians”.

Admirable-Thing-7235 on November 12nd, 2022 at 23:44 UTC »

Some of my Ukranian friends have a joke that they actually speak Rusdian better than Ukrainian. Guess that'll be a thing of the past but Russia only has itself to blame