Putin Slams ‘War on the Russian Language’: 4 Takeaways From Speech

President Vladimir Putin convened a meeting of Russia’s language council Tuesday, where he warned that there is a war against the Russian language, recommended replacing Wikipedia and called for the introduction of uniform language norms. 

Chaired by presidential adviser Vladimir Tolstoy, the 48-member council is charged with developing state policy on protecting and promoting the Russian language abroad.

Here are four takeaways from the session.

On single language norms for government, news media and schools:

“I ask you to start working on a single corpus of dictionaries, reference books, and grammar books containing the norms of the modern literary language when it is used as the state language of Russia.” 

“They should become mandatory for use by all state agencies, including government bodies, the executive, judicial, and legislative bodies, schools, and mass media.”

On replacing Wikipedia:

“It’s better to replace it with the Great Russian Encyclopedia in electronic form […] That information will at least be reliable, presented in good modern form.”

On Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees for future teachers:

“What does that give? Does a Bachelor’s [holder] only teach lower grades while a Master’s [holder] is entitled to teach 10th and 11th grades? Is it some sort of crude scheme or is there meaning in this?”

On the ‘war’ on the Russian language:

“We’re facing — and I’d like to emphasize this — artificial, crude and at times absolutely unceremonious attempts to squeeze out the Russian language to the global periphery.”

“It’s not only entrenched Russophobes, all sorts of fringe groups and aggressive nationalists who are declaring war on the Russian language […] Unfortunately, it’s becoming quite an official state policy in some countries.”

(c) The Moscow Times

5 comments

  1. “We’re facing — and I’d like to emphasize this — artificial, crude and at times absolutely unceremonious attempts to squeeze out the Russian language to the global periphery.”

    The Russian language is a minority language, impossible to compare it to Spanish or English that are true international languages.

    • I say the same to Alina, you’re talking a minority language. Now she’s taking courses to learn Swedish, another language I don’t understand 😂

        • The dialect in Skåne is very similar to Danish, hard to understand 😉
          Most Swedes don’t understand Norwegian, most Norwegians understand Swedish very well.

          • Written swedish is easier for me than spoken, since many products in the supermarkets are from Sweden and often movies only have swedish subtitles available. I think danish and norwegian are more fluent when spoken, while swedish is a bit harsh. 😇

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