John G. Rodden writes on the website American Purpose about the educational struggle between Ukrainians and Russiand. Ukrainians want their children to learn the Ukrainian language and literature. Wherever Russia has captured tos, cities, or villages, it switches the curriculum to Russian language and literature. Rodden is a scholar who has written several books about George Orwell.
The 2022–23 school year in war-torn Ukraine began this fall under conditions that Americans—and even Europeans old enough to remember World War II—can barely fathom. Three-quarters of the schools have been unable to open at all because they lack bomb shelters, air raid sirens nearby, or underground classrooms and lavatories. Russian bombing campaigns can last for several hours; all classes are therefore held remotely, insofar as children have access to computers and Wi-Fi.
Understandably, the attention of the world, including that of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his advisors in Kyiv, is focused on battlefield advances and reversals. And yet a parallel war is under way, one that has received only spotty attention in the English-language media, though the German and French presses have covered it more extensively. It is a culture war, a Slavic “Battle of the Books” that goes far beyond the imaginary world in Jonathan Swift’s 1704 book. In Swift’s Battle of the Books, he imagined an epic battle in a library—a so-called “quarrel between the Ancients and the Moderns”—where books come alive, with authors both classical (e.g., Homer, Pindar, Plato, Aristotle, Vergil) and contemporary (e.g., Bacon, Hobbes, Descartes, Dryden, Aphra Benn) duking it out.
The twenty-first century Eurasian counterpart is no mere entry in a game of literary fisticuffs conducted with courtly fellow men of letters. It is a deadly serious affair that Ukrainian officials regard as a retaliatory counteroffensive. For the Ukrainians this isn’t just a Battle of Books–this is a deep, visceral, and emotional reaction to their country being eviscerated and destroyed by Russian forces.
In their view, they have been forced into it by the ruthless “reeducation” policy that Russia has undertaken in occupied Ukraine. The Slavic Battle of the Books is about which authors Ukrainians will read and study. It is a war to “win the minds of men,” as the old Stalinist slogan phrased it. Wherever it leads, it has already validated one venerable contention about which both the Ancients and the Moderns were in full agreement: Ideas have consequences.
The rest of the article is behind a paywall.

With RasPutin the Terrible’s regime, Russia is the land of skrytnost, the opposite of glasnost.
Just speaking/writing publicly against the Ukraine war in Russia may result in a 15-year prison sentence.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2022/07/08/ukraine-russia-gives-first-prison-sentence-anti-war-remarks/10013552002/
Simply, the English translation of skrytnost is stealthiness.
Another translation I found said skrytnost means “the land of deceit”.
“As far as Human Rights go, there are myriad examples of the continued presence, not oiglasnost (openness), but of skrytnost (closing or conceal ing).”
https://www.jstor.org/action/doBasicSearch?Query=Skrytnost
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I like the way Ukrainian Leaders dealt with Muslims centuries ago too. Something about those Ukrainian Leaders. Not for the faint of heart or easily offended, but this one’s worth watching even then:
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I love Olivia Colman, she’s a great actor and plays the character of DS Ellie Miller on the Broadchurch series.
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Olivia Coleman also played Queen Elizabeth on part of “The Crown.” Far better than the actress who took her place.
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I love her from her early career in Peep Show, an incredibly irreverent British Comedy and the sketch show by the same people, Mitchell & Webb like this parody of game shows:
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By the way, Magpie Murders on PBS was really great and well-done!
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Republicans want American children to learn the Slobic language and
culture of Donald Trump.
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Eg, “Grab em by the pu**y”
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..and lock em up!””
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The anti-CRT crowd must be trying to ban any mention in schools of their dirty, old ex, the Ex President.
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Yuuuuge-oslobic.
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Ha ha ha.
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I was actually trying to think of a way of using “yuuge”, and actually had something that was nowhere near as good as yours, I was spelling it yuuge, without the y
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uuge
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