I’ve only recently realised that many non-Ukrainians mistakenly see Russian-speaking Ukrainians as some sort of marginalised social group which has never learned Ukrainian and, not being able to speak or understand it, is left without access to services provided in Ukrainian.
That’s… really far off from what is actually happening. Like, light years away. In reality, most people in Ukraine are bilingual — some prefer to use Ukrainian in their daily lives, while others tend to speak Russian more often.
I won’t get into the details of why this came to be, but let’s just say it has a lot to do with Ukraine being an ex-colony of the Russian Empire (which tried really, really hard to wipe out our language and culture) and, essentially, an ex-colony of the Soviet Union.
Yes, the Soviet Union was *technically* a Union of many ethnic states, and it officially preached a policy of equality, ethnic and cultural pluralism, and all of that. In reality, being Russian was The Norm. Sure, you could identify as Ukrainian or Georgian… but only if you
wanted to be potentially seen as a) a fumbling source of real-life comic relief, or b) a potential traitor to Communism, a nationalist and a person to be distrusted and destroyed. However, if you identified as Russian, learned the language and tried to get rid of your “funny”
accent, then you’d probably be rewarded by the system. Because while the other ethnicities were “quirky”, “uncivilised” or “dangerously nationalist”, Russians were seen as… well, normal people. The default type of people. The “right” type of people.
School kids in every part of the Soviet Union were taught in Russian, and learning the language was mandatory. Learning the National language of the republic was optional, and many parents chose to have their kids skip those classes. Because Russian was the only language
you really needed to learn in order to survive in the Soviet Union. So yeah, now we have families that spoke Ukrainian up until a few generations ago, but have been conditioned to see themselves as primarily “Russian-speaking”.
Of course, all of the stereotypes about non-Russian languages being “funny” or “only fit for peasants” that circulated in Soviet pop-culture only helped steer people towards learning Russian and forgetting the language of their grandparents.
So what about modern-day Ukraine? Well, a lot of us know and can speak Russian. Some of us see it as our primary language (for some, this has changed after the “big war” began), while others understand it, but don’t feel comfortable using it. Also, pretty much EVERYONE knows
Ukrainian. It’s been the official language since 1991, it’s the language we learn at school, the language of all official documentation, the language we have our university entrance exams in and so on. Of course, for most of us Ukrainian is much more than that —
it’s the language of our grandparents, and the language Russia tried, but couldn’t, destroy. But I feel like I should highlight the fact that we learn it in school/university, because it just kind of shows you that it’s nearly impossible to be a functioning Ukrainian adult
and NOT know Ukrainian. Sure, you might prefer to use Russian in daily life (mostly out of habit of because you might be worried that you sound a little weird when speaking Ukrainian), but unless you’re a ninety-year-old diehard Soviet revanchist who purposely never learned
Ukrainian out of sheer spite, you definitely know Ukrainian. And the Ukrainian-speaking and Russian-speaking people don’t exist in separate communities (which I was shocked to learn is how many non-Ukrainians imagine it to be like). Everyone understands each other, and many
people just switch languages depending on who they’re talking to and what’s the situation. In fact, it’s really common to see families where one parent uses more Russian, and the other prefers to use Ukrainian. I have friends who’ve decided they want to use more Ukrainian
in their daily lives, or friends who are usually Russian-speaking, but switch to Ukrainian when we hang out because they know I feel more comfortable speaking in Ukrainian. All in all, it’s hugely complicated, and I feel like I’ve really skipped over a lot
of the political dynamics at play here, and the historical and social factors that influenced the situation. But if there’s one thing you take away from this rant-y thread, let it be the fact that the Ukrainian policy concerning language definitely isn’t
“creating ghettos filled with poor, oppressed Russian-speaking people who are forced to watch movies in Ukrainian, even though they don’t understand the language”. Our language policy aims to give Ukrainian a fighting chance and create an environment in which
Russian media won’t flood our market and wipe out everything we’ve built this far.
I am beyond happy to see that so many people took the time to read this! And I’m so grateful for the feedback and the questions and kind words! Wish I could respond to everyone, but since I probably won’t be able to, I just want you all to know how inspiring your support is 🇺🇦❤️

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More from @rynkrynk

May 29
*sighs in Ukrainian* Okay, let’s talk about this a little. Sadly, people with reprehensible views can be found pretty much in every army in the world. Russia, for example, has people like the Wagner group (named after You-know-who’s favourite composer), which has
close ties to Putin himself, has been known to kill the Kremlin’s opponents, has already committed war crimes in Ukraine and, according to quite credible reports, has been tasked with assassinating Ukraine’s openly and proudly Jewish president.
Are there people with far-right views in the Ukrainian army? Probably. (If you’re itching to yell “probably? But Azov’s definitely nazi!” at this point, please hold your horses. Yes, Azov had members of the far-right among its founders back in 2014,
Read 8 tweets
May 29
Good question. Well, the truth is that while is pretty much impossible to live in Ukraine and not know Ukrainian nowadays, the situation was quite different mere decades ago. Even ten years ago it was much harder to find translations of
popular foreign books in Ukrainian than it was to buy them in Russian. And so most people bought books in Russian (imported from Russia, mostly), and our publishing houses didn’t really stand a chance against their Moscow-based rivals. Russian producers had a lot more
money to spend on promotion, so pop songs in Russian were hugely popular, while music in Ukrainian was harder to come by unless you actually started looking for it on purpose. Our magazine stalls were filled with Russian newspapers and magazines (which usually had at least a tiny
Read 9 tweets
May 27
Боже. Так, не можна натягувати американські проблеми зі зброєю на Україну — в них унікально йобнуте законодавство, і в нас наряд хтось буде продавати автомати в АТБ. Ні, вільний обіг зброї не вирішить проблеми зґвалтувань чи пограбувань — є статистика, яка це демонструє.
Так, я розумію, чому хочеться мати право легально мати зброю (особливо якщо ви живете у приватному будинку десь за містом, наприклад!). Ні, проблема масових убивств в американських школах, магазинах та інших місцях виникла не через булінг та жорстокі відеоігри.
Ні, заборона на зброю це не те саме що «заборонити ножі» — є, наприклад, статистика яка демонструє, що з більш вільним обігом зброї зростає кількість самогубств. Так, нелегальний обіг зброї — проблема, яку якось треба вирішувати.
Read 4 tweets
May 27
Every time I see westerners calmly discuss ways to get Ukrainian grain out of our blocked ports without “angering Putin” (what does that even mean by now, anyway?) or “provoking Russia somehow” — that is, without actually saving Ukrainian lives — I feel a shiver down my spine.
Compassionate non-Ukrainians may find these discussions insensitive, tasteless or offensive, but every single Ukrainian sees them as a chilling threat to let the darkest pages of our history books repeat themselves.
Back in 1932-‘33 the world took our grain and sat back as millions of Ukrainians were murdered. Yes, it was Stalin and his henchmen that carried out the artificial famine known as Holodomor, but the entire world ate grain stolen from Ukrainian farmers while they starved to death.
Read 7 tweets
May 26
Pity we rarely talk about culinary appropriation when it comes to the food Russian restaurants all over the world present as their own, authentic Russian cuisine. Because if you glance through the menu of ANY given Russian restaurant in the Europe or the US, I guarantee 1/?
you’ll find dozens and dozens of dishes shamelessly appropriated from the cultures and ethnicities Russia colonised and oppressed throughout its long and bloody history: dishes from the Caucasus (which many Russians still openly declare “wild and uncivilised”), along with 2/?
Ukrainian staples such as borsch and salo. The complicated history and discussions around who borsch belongs to probably warrant their own thread (or, better yet, actual well-designed studies, meaningful articles and a lot of research), but the poet Mayakovsky, for example, 3/?
Read 12 tweets

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