From the BBC:
“Ukraine war: History is
rewritten for children in occupied areas”
(Russia's textbook calls the
annexation of Crimea a "reunification with Russia" and says Ukraine
is run by "radical nationalists")
When Ukrainian children in occupied areas return to school on 1 September, history lessons will be taught very differently. The BBC has discovered that Ukrainian teachers are being pressured to use the Russian curriculum, which means studying the world according to the Kremlin. Most names in this report have been changed. In the occupied areas of Ukraine's south, administrative and educational buildings - including schools - have been dressed with Russian flags. In Russian-controlled Melitopol, Iryna's 13-year-old child is getting ready to begin the 8th grade. Iryna is worried. "What really bothers me [about the Russian curriculum] is what they'll be taught in history. It will be taught from the 'other side'," she says. She's also angered by lessons being held in Russian rather than Ukrainian: "It's the imposition of their traditions and culture - I do not want the children to be hostages to the situation," she said. Users of pro-Russian social media channels have boasted publicly about the attempted erasure of Ukrainian history in occupied areas. There are regular images of Russian forces removing Ukrainian history books from libraries, while Russia's so-called Ministry of Enlightenment has started to provide several occupied areas of Ukraine with Russian textbooks.
The BBC has analysed the content
of the main school textbooks approved for use by the Ministry of Enlightenment
and the differences with their pre-war 2016 and 2022 editions. Most references
to Ukraine and Kyiv were removed. Even "Kyivan Rus" - the name of a
medieval Eastern European state with its capital in Kyiv - was replaced with
the name "Rus" or just "Old Rus". The books include false
statements that during the Russian annexing of Crimea in 2014, people came out
to "protect their rights" after "radical nationalists… came to
power [in Kyiv] with the support of the West". Meanwhile, in the current
version of the textbooks, the number of references to Putin and his
achievements has grown. The BBC contacted Russia's Ministry of Enlightenment
but did not receive a response.
Iryna has considered leaving for
Ukraine-controlled areas but doesn't want to abandon her home. She's adamant
that she doesn't want her child to learn under the Russian curriculum, but is
concerned about keeping her child at home. In principle, children can learn the
Ukrainian curriculum online, but parents are concerned about repercussions. "What
if someone informs on us to the new [Russian-installed] authorities or if they
start persecuting me and my child for not receiving a Russian education?"
she says. On 19 August, a post on the social media platform Telegram from a
local pro-Ukrainian outlet quoted a message allegedly sent to parents from a
pro-Russian teacher at a school just outside Melitopol. It said that there will
be "no remote learning on our liberated territory," which is how the
Kremlin describes occupied areas. Parents who refuse to send their children for
in-person teaching would be "stripped of parental rights" if they
violated the rule multiple times. Meanwhile, parents who agree to send their
children to schools in occupied regions of Ukraine will be rewarded. On 24
August, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the one-off payment of
10,000 rubles (£140) to parents, as long as their kids attend a school by 15
September.
Teachers tracked and deported
(Parents are concerned about
losing parental rights if their children learn the Ukrainian curriculum)
Pro-Ukrainian teachers have also
been hit hard by the war, with some forced to go into hiding, sent for
're-training' and threatened with deportation. Dmytro, a headteacher in
Melitopol, had a bustling school of more than 500 pupils before the invasion.
Now he's in hiding after being sought out by Russian officials for trying to
organise for students to learn the Ukrainian curriculum online. He says he
knows teachers who were either forced or decided to cooperate with Russian
officials and were sent to Crimea or Russia to be re-trained in a way that's
palatable to the Kremlin ideology. "They were told, 'we're Russia, we're
one people. We should be united,' and that these narratives should be passed to
children," he says. While Dmytro has chosen to stay in Russian-controlled
areas, many teachers and parents have decided to leave.
Marina, a teacher from Nova
Kakhovka in the Kherson region fled at the end of July. Her decision came weeks
after armed Russian soldiers and a Russian-installed head of education
announced that they were shutting her school because the headteacher would not
cooperate with them. She says she has heard of staff shortages in Nova
Kakhovka, with some teachers having to teach multiple unrelated subjects. She's
worried that the Russian-installed education system will be detrimental to
children's sense of identity. "Their main task is to brainwash and to put
their own narratives into a child's mind. They want our children to forget what
country they've been living in, to forget who they are."
Historical revisionism
(Pro-Russian Telegram channel
claims 66,000 Russian textbooks have been delivered to occupied Melitopol)
Leonid Katsva is a Russian author
who has taught history to school pupils in Moscow for 42 years. He has seen how
history has been misrepresented in Russian textbooks. In the case of the 2014
annexation of Crimea, he says there are "no mentions of activities of any
Russian forces in the peninsula." In the next school year, Mr Katsva
believes books will likely feature a tough assessment of the West's activities.
"Textbooks that are being rigidly moderated now will fully follow the line
of Channel One (Russian state TV)," he says. "This is a clear
evidence that the Kremlin uses school education as a propaganda tool",
says Dmytro from Melitopol. However, he hopes that even with a limited access
to an online version of the Ukrainian curriculum, children from his region will
still be able to learn the true course of events and have a clearer understanding
of Ukraine's recent history. "Our kids keep asking why their schools have
been dressed with a flag of another state. What can I say... Even six-year-old
children understand this is not normal."
^ I hope the Ukrainian Parents
can continue to teach their Children, at home and in secret, about what life was
like in a Free Ukraine so they won’t only know Russian Occupation. ^
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