aaus-list @ ukrainianstudies.org -- [aaus-list] Russian history teachers' manual explains OrangeRevolution as U.S.-inspired plot


[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date/Main Index][Thread Index]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/19/AR2007071902707.html?hpid=topnews  
 
New Manuals Push A Putin's-Eye View In Russian Schools

By Peter Finn
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, July 20, 2007; A01

MOSCOW -- With two new manuals for high school history and social studies teachers, written in part by Kremlin political consultants, Russian authorities are attempting to imbue classroom debate with a nationalist outlook.

The history guide contains a laudatory review of President Vladimir Putin's years in power. "We see that practically every significant deed is connected with the name and activity of President V.V. Putin," declares its last chapter. The social studies guide is marked by intense hostility to the United States.

(...)

"Sovereign Democracy" is the title of one of the history manual's chapters. The term was coined by Kremlin strategist Vladislav Surkov, who attended the launch of the two books at a teachers' conference in Moscow last month. Supporters of the president use the phrase to describe the centralization of power under Putin as essential to the building of a stable Russian state, free from outside interference.

But critics say the term is a self-serving veil for unchecked executive power, which has led to the disempowerment of parliament, the judiciary and many media voices in Putin's Russia. That viewpoint finds no place in the manuals.

" 'Sovereign democracy' is a political slogan, and it's unethical not to point out that there are other political parties and other points of view that believe it is part of the authorities' myth-making," said Vasily Zharkov, a history lecturer and deputy director of the Institute of Eastern Europe, who attended the teachers' conference.

Other events, such as the so-called Orange Revolution in Ukraine in 2004, in which hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians overturned the official results of a presidential election they believed to be fraudulent, are explained as largely American-inspired plots.

"Tension was built up artificially in Ukraine, and a 'revolution' scenario was readied," the history manual states. Supporters of the pro-Russian candidate, Viktor Yanukovych, "were stripped of their victory," it says.

(...)





[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date/Main Index][Thread Index]

lists@brama.com converted by MHonArc 2.3.3
and maintained by BRAMA, Inc.