Paul Goble
Staunton, Feb. 11 – For decades, Russians expressed confidence that their country would never suffer the kind of school violence that Americans have and even adopted the toponym “Columbine,” the site of a 1999 school shooting in the US, that Russians felt was typical of that country but would never happen in their own.
But a spate of school violence, including more than a half dozen cases in the last month alone, and its increasing lethality as students use not just knives but guns, is forcing Russians to recognize that they now have a problem similar to that in the US and to discuss how they can best respond.
Perhaps not surprisingly, Russians are alarmed and are casting about for explanations as why this has happened and what is to be done. Natalya Savitskaya, an observer for Moscow’s Nezavisimaya Gazeta, provides a useful survey of these reactions and these proposals (ng.ru/kartblansh/2026-02-11/3_9435_kb.html).
She says that Russians from the highest to the lowest levels are worried and fear that they are at the start of a trend that may be even worse than the one that has scarred the life of Americans. In 2025, there were 25 armed attacks on schools; this year, if the current trend continues at the same rate, there could be a hundred or more in 2026.
Aleksandr Bortnikov, the director of the FSB, says that clearly “prophylactic work with young people is insufficiently effective” and calls for efforts to improve things to prevent more violence. Other Russians are simply frightened and say they fear that their country’s schools are suffering “a mental epidemic” and blame teachers, pupils, and the country’s broader problems.
Duma Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin asked the readers of his telegram channel whether they support his plan “to defend citizens from the destructive content” on video games, something that he says is particularly affecting young people. Seventy percent of his readers, he says, support such a move.
The Duma is currently considering proposals to deal with the problem of bullying in the schools, something that many observers believe is behind the current uptick in violence. But other Russians place the blame on rising tensions in society as a whole, teachers blame parents, and parents blame teachers for what is happening.
Russian educational experts want more psychologists in the schools. There is currently only one psychologist for every 300 pupils, a number that everyone concedes is too few but that cannot be improved upon because Moscow is spending what money it has on Putin’s war in Ukraine and doesn’t have the funds to address the problems in the schools.
But even if Moscow did more to address this problem, Russian experts say, it might not prevent more outbursts of increasingly lethal violence because the teenage years are among the most difficult of life’s stages when young people are driven by hormones to set themselves apart from their parents, feel isolated and often try things that they wouldn’t later.