No Dostoevsky or Bulgakov: School curricula cleared of "Russian aggression"
All Russian and Belarusian authors of both Soviet and pre-Soviet periods will be removed from Ukrainian school textbooks. This is stated in the decision of the Working Group on updating the content of curricula of foreign literature at the Ministry of Education of Ukraine.
- The entire section "Bylinas" (Epic Ballades) will be removed from the school curriculum, and instead of "Ilya Muromets and “Solovei the Whistler-Robber" the curriculum will include "King Lear" and ballads about Robin Hood.
- Krylov's Fables will be replaced by La Fontaine's Fables.
- The works by Pushkin, Lermontov, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Turgenev and Nekrasov have been ruled out as glorifying Russian aggression and are difficult to understand, so they will be partly replaced by Austen, Hugo and Bronte novels.
- Stories by Bunin, Chekhov and Korolenko, poetry by Tyutchev, Fet, Blok, Akhmatova, Esenin, Mayakovsky and Pasternak, fantasy novels by Belyaev (Amphibian Man) and Grin (Scarlet Sails) are excluded.
- The plays “The Government Inspector”, “The Nose” and “The Overcoat” by Gogol will be removed from the programme. Instead of reading 'Dead Souls', children will be offered the Canadian author's 'Anne of the Green Roofs'.
- Bulgakov's “The Master and Margarita” will be replaced by Camus' “The Plague”.
- War prose – "The Living and the Dead" by Simonov, "The Alpine Ballad" by Bykov, "Babi Yar" by Kuznetsov, "The Dawns Here Are Quiet" by Vasilyev – will be excluded under the pretext of programme unloading and Russian aggression. The same applies to war poetry.
The Working Group explained its decision by the "psychological and physical trauma of Ukrainian children as a result of hostilities" and "lack of a receptive context under martial law to study the works by Russian and Belarusian writers". Other reasons include "the importance of developing cultural ties between Ukraine and civilised countries" and "the need to strengthen the spiritual power of the Ukrainian nation through the achievements of classical and modern literature. The decision was passed unanimously.
Natalia Pipa, MP of the "Holos" party, one of the authors of the draft law №7213 on the ban of the UOC, participates in the activities of the Working Group.
The decision of the Working Group was supported by First Deputy Minister of Education and Science Andrey Vitrenko.
Read also
In Ukraine, Trump’s 'spiritual advisor' reassured of religious freedom
Pastor Mark Burns stated that Ukraine, despite the war, is a "beacon of religious freedom."
Lavra brethren congratulate Metropolitan Pavel on 31 years as abbot
The monks of the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra have expressed hope that they will soon be able to pray again with their abbot.
Amsterdam: Intrusion into Lavra Caves – a return to Soviet-era persecution
International lawyer Robert Amsterdam has condemned the actions of Ukraine’s Ministry of Culture regarding the inspection of holy relics in the Caves of the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra, calling it a violation of religious freedom.
Over 20 EU states condemn Hungary for ban on LGBT propaganda among children
“This restricts the right to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression,” diplomats state in a joint declaration.
His Beatitude officiates consecration of Bishop of Rakhiv
At the Church of St. Agapitus in the Lavra, the Primate of the UOC ordained a vicar for the Khust Eparchy.
Met Victor: It is painful to see Lavra's relics turned into test subjects
According to the bishop, there is particular concern over how members of the scientific commission will handle the holy relics.