Systematic Indoctrination in Occupied Regions
Russian authorities are escalating their campaign of cultural assimilation in occupied Ukrainian territories, with children becoming the primary targets of systematic indoctrination. According to human rights organizations, the russification efforts have reached alarming levels, particularly in educational institutions where Ukrainian language and culture are being systematically eradicated.
Patriotic Education from Kindergarten
This school year marks a significant escalation with the introduction of Russian patriotic lessons for kindergarten children. "That is new this school year," explains Mariia Soelialina from the Ukrainian human rights organization Almenda, who was named Human Rights Defender of the Year 2024 by Sweden's Civil Rights Defenders.
The program extends to older children in partially occupied Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, while Donetsk and Luhansk have endured similar practices since 2014. Approximately 1.6 million children live under occupation, with 600,000 of school age facing this systematic re-education.
Military Training and Historical Revisionism
The curriculum now includes mandatory military training where children learn weapon handling and conduct exercises with military personnel. "They are being prepared to become soldiers," Soelialina states via video connection from Kyiv. The historical education presents a distorted worldview where "the Russian Federation influences the world while Europe plays no role."
Linguistic Erasure and Parental Coercion
Ukrainian language instruction faces de facto prohibition despite recent backtracking on formal legislation. Russian authorities had proposed complete banning of Ukrainian language lessons in July, claiming lack of demand, but withdrew the measure likely due to international pressure concerns.
Coercive Tactics and Security Service Involvement
Parents requesting Ukrainian language instruction face intimidation from security services and parent councils. "They suggest using extracurricular hours for additional Russian lessons instead," explains Soelialina. Those refusing risk job loss or criminal charges for offenses like "insulting the Russian army."
Ukrainian textbooks have been designated extremist literature, making possession a criminal offense. Only 47,000 children receive online Ukrainian education secretly, operating outside school hours at significant personal risk.
Long-term Implications and International Response
Experts describe Russia's actions as "linguicide" - the deliberate destruction of a language and culture. Taras Kremin, former Ukrainian government commissioner for language protection, emphasizes the systematic nature of this cultural eradication.
The international community continues to monitor these developments, with human rights organizations documenting violations and providing covert educational support. However, the scale of russification presents profound challenges for future reintegration and cultural preservation in liberated territories.