‘They felt no sympathy for me’
Russia has a race problem that is hardly even acknowledged, let alone being remedied

In Russia, there are different words for every kind of non-Russian. Armenians are often referred to as black, even though my skin colour doesn’t differ much from that of the majority of the population. After the other kids were mean to me on my very first day at nursery school, I refused to go back. But when I was old enough to go to school, it wasn’t quite that easy — I couldn’t just not go.
But instead of accepting me and thanking me for pushing for progress, the comments under my interviews and public appearances focused on telling me to go back to wherever I came from. I ignored the insults, thinking it would be best just to rise above it all.
If I had been ethnically Russian, other Russians would have been outraged. They would have been appalled that a migrant had dared pose a threat to a fellow Russian. But they felt no sympathy for me.
While all that was going on, I was stripped of my Russian citizenship. There have been changes in the law and it is now much easier for people who are not ethnically Russian to be stripped of their citizenship and to have their property seized.
Everyone is afraid. Especially minorities, which is why they are silent. I was afraid too. If you’re not part of the Russian ethnic majority, fear is your default state.

Censory overload
As the Kremlin declares war on queer literature, Russians are still finding ways to read and publish transgressive fiction

Thawing out
How TV smash hit Heated Rivalry has not only melted hearts, but cultural stereotypes about Russia as well

The first draft of history
Julia Loktev discusses her critically acclaimed documentary about Russian journalists being branded foreign agents

Russian film Mr Nobody Against Putin nominated for Best Documentary Oscar

Watch your steppe
Five new films worth searching out from Russia’s regions and republics
The price of freedom
Director Alexander Molochnikov talks about Extremist, his short film about former political prisoner Sasha Skochilenko
Stephen King novel It being withdrawn from sale in Russia
The emperor
Mikhail Piotrovsky’s journey as director of the Hermitage has taken him from liberal innovator to pro-war imperialist

St. Petersburg film studio to focus on films about past Russian heroes and war in Ukraine




