2024-10-03 18:17:41
I can’t believe that Ukrainians are killing their own people, says the 25-year-old Russian influencer Maryana Naumov convincingly in an interview with The Washington Post. He has his own show on Russian state television, in which he helps push the Kremlin’s war machine. They teach young people their age how to hate Ukrainians.
Naumová regularly speaks at youth forums, universities and on talk shows across the country. He is among thousands of young Russians who have embraced Kremlin propaganda as their own.
On her platforms, where she has over 80,000 followers, for example, she reported in the past about the Russian siege of Mariupol, during which she claimed without evidence that Ukrainian forces attacked civilians. “It was incomprehensible to me,” The Washington Post reports her saying.
Roughly seven out of ten Russians aged 18 to 24 support the war in Ukraine, according to an August poll by Russia’s independent Levada agency. Approximately the same number of young people state that they do not follow the events in the attacked country and do not have an opinion on them. However, the Kremlin is trying to change that.
Just as the Russian State Duma has recently focused on women and their role in society, it has also focused much more attention on the youth.
“The Kremlin has introduced militaristic programs in schools and unleashed a wave of ‘hyper’ patriotic propaganda. Thousands of young people have left Russia, but those who remain are part of a new generation that is redefining what it means to be Russian and will shape the nation’s direction for decades. ” David M. Herszenhorn, an American journalist from The Washington Post, explains to Aktuálně.cz, who has been investigating the rapidly advancing changes in Russian society since the beginning of the war.
Teaching with Putin
Young Russians are taught in schools that the defense of their homeland and self-sacrifice are essential. The year before last September, schools were obliged to introduce a lesson called Conversations about important things, which was prepared by the Ministry of Education. On them, teachers cover a variety of topics from the Kremlin’s perspective, from national identity to world events.
Russian President Vladimir Putin himself personally led an introductory lesson with selected students in Kaliningrad. During it, he repeated false claims that Russia’s goal in Ukraine is to “end the war” and “protect the people” in eastern Ukraine’s Donbass. At the same time, in February of last year, Moscow unleashed the conflict in Ukraine for no reason.
The head of the Kremlin has also made it known several times in recent months that “the continuity of Russia’s development is for young people to consider traditional Russian values as their own”. The Kremlin even pays young people to share war propaganda on their networks. As Herszenhorn says, however, many of them don’t even know they are lies.
This is how influencer Naumov makes money from the safety of her native Moscow. However, Putin’s so-called “Z-bloggers” often work directly with the Russian army and publish footage from the front, where they call on young Russians to join the army. Among the most famous ones is Semjon Pegov, performing under the nickname WarGonzo. He has over 1.3 million followers on his Telegram channel. Also known is Alexander Kots, an experienced journalist from a pro-government newspaper who became a war influencer.
Kots told the British public broadcaster BBC last year that he is aware that Russia relies on his work to some extent. “My work is with information. The Ministry of Defense often listens to us. We have a direct channel for private communications. Everything happens behind the scenes and I am part of it,” he admitted.
“We are raising a new generation of Russians to believe that the West hates us,” a former high-ranking Kremlin official who still works in government circles told The Washington Post on condition of anonymity. “Now everyone, including young people, must be for war, for traditional values and religion. Our children simply must be patriotic, otherwise they have no future,” he adds.
It was as if he was speaking from the heart of 21-year-old Mikhail Dkhnyak, whose biggest dream is to become the next Russian foreign minister. “The most important thing for me is that everything is in order in my country. I want people to live in peace, walk around the cities with a smile on their face and be happy. It will be up to me and my classmates what role our country will have in the world, ” he describes.
Dkhnyakov also made it known that, according to him, there are no political prisoners in Russia. Nor do they believe reports of a sharp increase in political persecution of young Russians. “You can write anything on the Internet,” the young man notes, adding that he is convinced that the West is only lying about Russia.
Moving away from free Russia
Joshua Tucker, professor of political science and director of the Center for the Advanced Study of Russia at New York University, warns Aktuálně.cz that if Moscow educates an entire generation at Putin’s request, the country does not have a bright future.
“What Navalny dreamed of (Putin’s most prominent critic, who died in prison in Siberia in February – editor’s note)that free Russia, will only move away for generations to come, while the Kremlin tightens the screws. I believe that is Putin’s goal. I don’t think they focus on women and children for no reason. He wants to build a superpower that will stick around after he dies, like a true dictator,” says Tucker.
British historian Ian Garner, who wrote a book about “Russian fascist youth” called Generation Z, agrees with this. it’s a little different, you have to give birth to children and wait at home for your husbands when they return from the war. A career is out of the question,” he explains to The Washington Post.
Video: The West is totally losing the information war, we must “deputize” the Russians, says Vlach (September 26, 2024)
Spotlight moment: The West is totally losing the information war, we must “deputize” the Russians, says journalist Tomáš Vlach | Video: Team Spotlight