Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 27 – Russian teachers, on the basis of a textbook for fourth graders, have
been asking their 10-year-old charges as a homework assignment to write an
imaginary “letter to your father at the front.”
Many children have reacted with incomprehension and tears; many parents
have reacted with fury and calls for a boycott of what they consider a horrible
idea.
Govorit Moskva reported that many
parents have simply refused to have their children compose such letters while
some have written the letters themselves so the children won’t get a bad grade
but won’t be exposed to the trauma of imagining that they might lose their fathers
to war (govoritmoskva.ru/news/181154/).
In a
commentary carried by Ekho Moskvy, Olga Fedorchenko, the mother of one of the children
given this assignment expresses the reaction of many when she writes: “What
kind of idiot in power would dream up such subjects for homework?! Is it that
we are preparing for war?! And we are making drafts for relatives?!” (echo.msk.ru/blog/echomsk/2322534-echo/).
“This is a new
low, although I understand that it is far from the last … Here is the letter of
my devastated daughter. She couldn’t accept the imaginary circumstances:
“Hello,
dear Papa! Your daughter Sasha is writing. Not long ago you were at home. I remember
how you and I played and walked together. And now you are at the front. We are very
worried about you. Most of all I wantt that you return whole and unharmed.
Mother and I pray to God that you will return.
“Papa, why are you in this war?
“Return to us! Everything with us is
fine! Why do you need this? We have food and everything is good, Nikita and I
go to school. Mama goes to work and raises us. I hate those people who began
the war. I want that everyone will always live in peace and be next to one another
and that there won’t be a war.
“With love, your daughter Sasha,
Mama and my older brother Nikita!”
There are many reasons to be
outraged by Vladimir Putin and his system on a daily basis, but perhaps not one
is more compelling that frightening children with this kind of war hysteria. As
Fedorchenko observes, when one hears about such things, the kind of language no
one should utter is the first that comes to mind.
This is monstrous, and those behind
it are monsters.
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