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tv   [untitled]    May 5, 2022 12:30pm-1:01pm MSK

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fingers of snow in nizhny novgorod raged around 10:00 in the morning, a real snowstorm, the wind gusts increased to 12 m / s, visibility deteriorated significantly, a little earlier winter returned to the republic of mari el here in some places and snowdrifts appeared at all, but atmospheric fronts will reach the expanses of siberia already, getting rid of the main stocks of lags. so in burning regions, you should not count on the help of the weather. but the wind today will continue to intensify at the bottom of the volga and don, as well as in the southern urals, and its gusts will exceed 15 m/s. it is west siberian equal. the wind will accelerate to 15-20 in the krasnoyarsk territory in places up to 25 m/s. on all-weather cameras. a column of smoke is visible in the mound, in the city now it is almost plus 22 and up to 10 m / s. the wind got stronger. a cold front will approach the mound at night of significant precipitation. he won't bring. but the wind will get stronger tomorrow. in it, in gusts, it will
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reach 15-17 m / s. and after today's plus 22 the temperature will no longer exceed 11°. it's warm to come back on weekends. yes it will reach its peak on may 9, plus 23, the wind will subside on saturday sunday , but then it will get stronger again in moscow under the rays of the sun. today the temperature will rise to 11°, while the day before. i remember. she did not reach plus nine at night it will get colder to plus two, and the threat of weak frosts will remain in the region. tomorrow it will be warmer to plus 16 on saturday sunday until may 17-18-18.09 the north wind will bring rain clouds and the thermometers will again drop to plus 11-12 °. well , those are the forecasts for this minute. well it's almost summer thank you elena volosik told about how the cold snap is connected with the strengthening of the wind in the hall.
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now advertising, and after our broadcast will continue the author's program of kirill vyshinsky 1/6. is it possible to cancel the entire culture of the largest country in the world with the help of a culture of abolition. what is modern cultural ostrogism? and why is it needed at all ?
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hello, i'm already in crimea, the weather is wonderful 30 degrees in the most interesting place, when i speak them about what i feel, they listen, but do not hear. and that's bad. no one can rewrite our history. this is just one of the folders prepared by the soviet accusations for the international military tribunal in nuremberg, no one will close the borders for us. always together always online. that's so strong. wow, frozen will not break, we are watching the masterpieces of the world documentary classics, new items, exclusives. 20 m rather free without registration, look in the
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application or on the site. it was decided to entrust your film group with shooting material for this film of responsibility are not afraid, the material will be watched by a personal comrade. first oscar
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good afternoon. i am kirill vyshinsky. we continue to talk about the events and processes taking place in the post-soviet space of the territory, which, together with russia, still makes up 1/6 of the land only russian, but also russian culture became the object of pressure and persecution. and we will talk about this with the special representative of the president of the russian federation for international cultural cooperation, ambassador -at-large mikhail yefimovich joking. mikhailovich thank you very much for this opportunity to talk. thank you, mikhail efimovich, everything that is happening today, including the events in ukraine, is a test for russian culture. well
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, in general, uh, culture lives through trials even when the situation is such a general historical one. culture, always looking. uh, some dramatic turns are completely different. it cannot but develop and exist. but of course, we are now experiencing such a historical turning point. uh, the common world is not only a test for russia, but for russia it is a huge test of course, less. but this is a general historical turning point, when all the rules and principles of european e were destroyed. e life is a world life to some extent, which has been formed over not decades, even centuries, and it is completely clear that it is very important for us to preserve. and the tutches that have formed after world war ii, and i have primarily the united nations and, uh, a number of other organizations. yes, well, including unesco, but uh, these
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organizations take a very politicized position, therefore, for culture. this, of course, is a huge field of possibilities. here. i want to be clear. it's not a test. only well , okay. they didn’t build the west, er, to europe, but for that, culture lives not on tour, but it lives on its own internal development. she lives. uh, not that russian culture is self-sufficient, by the way, to say it is one of those great cultures of the world which is quite a legislator enough. that's chinese culture. let's say yes when the indian culture, as well as the german culture, and if enough, but also so e of this kind has survived it on one side of the test on the other.
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it was as if they were rethinking their place in history and not only in history, but also in geography, and this
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was a time of extraordinary upsurge for them. eh, all of them are all states and those who had their own state. as we say. uh, the current baltic countries and those who did not have statehood. e such a historical long, as we say, there is even ukraine yes, they experienced a sense of the national upsurge of the untrained. oddly enough, she was in the best position. and perhaps the worst in this sense was the russian federation, because we felt like successors. e of the soviet union by the successors of the russian empire, a was sued in space. you know, we have ceased to be huge once upon a time, but i wrote that russia without ukraine is not yes. in general, there is no empire without ukraine. and there has always been this kind of phantom pain of doctors, but these states experienced a national upsurge. they created their
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own history. uh, sometimes i even go deep into those, uh, historical boards. when which well, let's say so. uh, hmm weren't so obviously there for this story to be on a solid foundation, but everyone was looking for historical depth at the time being written into the history books. at this time, they corresponded in literature textbooks. uh, the emphasis was on national culture. i am this in many ways i understand, i always looked at it as, well, some kind of hmm uh teenage uh, psychology. yes, but at the same time, we calmly and perhaps incorrectly calmly treated the fact that at first a number of things. uh, other things that i think are just needed today. well, we talked to our colleagues, friends, partners, uh, in the commonwealth countries, just frankly. at the same time, you need to be able to speak. er, you understand the truth one way or another, and i
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think that there are many questions here, not by chance. now let's say in the last literally there uh, a year and a half, an association of historians was created. e, cis e, which e. on e, the basis of the institutes of history and national archives. eh, the institute of the agency, or what, of other entities? just trying to find common points of the exodus today is very important, but i repeat, if you look at the history books, uh, in a number of soviet states, you will be surprised, because they study some kind of their history, i repeat, 30 years, this is how the cis state built its national one. the donation is clear, but i always said, for example, my kyrgyzism to fellow countrymen, since i was born in kyrgyzstan. i'm talking about that before we say squeezing
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the russian language out of the education system. and despite the fact that the russian language, uh, constitutionally in kyrgyzstan , uh, only uh, the official languages ​​are, in addition to the titular uh, but, nevertheless, in the education system. you began to squeeze out so clearly there. i say, look, you first translate into kyrgyz. all world literature, but so that the child can take shakespeare in the same volume in which he maybe it’s impossible to take it in russian today. how are you ? as soon as you switch to a narrow national language in the education system, you don't. eh, for this made such a made base of communication with world culture. you only lose russian has always been a window of the world in russian. uh, there were significantly more translations of not only fiction. yes, scientific literature.
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and this is very important there, well, and so on and so on and so on, and therefore today, uh, the problem of the russian language is not only a political problem. and this is problem. uh, well, practical, if we have a eurasian economic union, if we have a dkb, if there are u different kinds of institutions within the commonwealth of an independent state. yes, and the executive committee itself, it is necessary to speak russian, because the number of hmm documents that occur. yes, this is a simple question, well, a practical question. it is completely clear that this does not exclude the fact that there you need to know other languages ​​and this is also in between. in general , the topic is important. i always say yes it is clear that the russian language should be taught there in kyrgyzstan, but at the same time, the kyrgyz living in russia should be able to teach their children, the kyrgyz language is also normal. and by the
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way, this is happening. well, let's say there, we have a lot of armenian or schools and study the armenian language, where he lives. eh, the armenian diaspora is in russia first of all. well, in moscow there, well, and so on. this is generally a mutual process. i have always said what is repeated today, that we need to study history or literature and history cultures, including, uh, the cis countries and now , 30 years after the establishment of diplomatic relations between russia and the cis countries, uh, you are not worried about the prospect that there is more and more uh in the post-soviet space, the role of the english language is growing, and russian is somehow in national education fade into the background. won't such a situation arise that, in the end, russian can be squeezed out as a language of interethnic communication? well, you know, that's the problem. not only the cis is a problem, in general, the world. oh, and we see how
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let's say, france, uh, is fighting to ensure that the french language in general, everything connected with cacophony, is preserved, because the french language is spoken not only in france but also in africa and switzerland there and so on, and they defend the sovereignty of the french language, as sovereignty e property of the country, which is fair because uh? e people exist ethnos exist as long as he knows his own national language. uh, as long as the language is preserved in history, it is to see the point of view over the fight is not with english, which has long become not even a foreign language, since. this is the language of the internet, the language of such international communication, and so on. we need to fight for the preservation of the russian language. these are completely different approaches. we do not need to ban english, we need to develop and strengthen it. uh, russian language russian culture. this is a much more
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efficient way, because all the prohibitions do nothing . it is important for us, for example, that it be preserved for the six languages ​​that are the main ones there. yes, that is, besides e english this french it's arabic it's chinese it's russian there. well, and so on. here, for fundamental things, for international organizations to use, er, all those languages ​​that were written in their mouths, yes. because today it's natural that there, i don't know, there is a frenchman and a handy man sometimes, is it easier to speak english than french or russian? well , well, it's this is life to fight with this, well , it's quite difficult, but if you don't live there inside the country, why do you live in france, a foreigner? well he certainly try to teach french they use english, but it seems to me that the main task today is the preservation and development of russian culture. you have to invest in it, you have to do it. and it needs to be promoted,
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because uh, well, the english language is prohibited there. well, it's ridiculous, but to promote, but in a russian language, this is what is in our power. i think that these years of the russian language in shanga will contribute to this. another issue is what we are experiencing today. uh, such a very aggressive russophobia and so many organizations that have been promoting let's say the russian language. in the west, well, first of all , the pushkin institute and its various branches, as well as just locals of various kinds, the association of russian-speaking teachers and teachers of the russian language. they are under a lot of pressure. e is hmm russophobic, but it's a matter of time. well, by the way, mikhail vladimirovich but this, uh, the culture of cancellation that exists in the west or recently appeared back in the west and which now aggressively affects everything russian, primarily the russian culture of the language, is emotional
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reaction to today's event or is it still some kind of trend. i am generally sure that, e to e, a civil kind of sanction. and we see how they move. eh, toad, it was ready. uh, they were built in the countryside. from my point of view, this is not the right reason, and uh, in this sense, such aggressiveness against russian culture. but it’s orchestrated in many ways, because, well, it doesn’t happen that all the ministers of culture, for example, countries, and the european union forbid their uh, organizations any contacts with russia, uh, and really all contacts are destroyed, but it does not happen that e russian representatives are banned or suspended from their e activities in all e, wrong international organizations there, and so on and so forth. these are not emotions. hmm, this is not
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spontaneous. it seems to me that they were preparing for this, and i would not underestimate this, because, well, it seems to many, well, now the acute period will end. here is a special military operation. in ukraine, it will not return, it will not return, that we know how sanctions are introduced, how they are prepared, and how they are not canceled later? well generally remember the sanction already to the son, which was introduced in the early seventies, as you know, but in order to force the soviet government of the jews. e abroad. eh, then when they were already railing now with gorbachev, they frantically searched after all. how many jews were not released and only then, after it fell apart from the building, there were no jews, but people who got caught. yes chatted here acts, if you well,
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it's just covered by others there, therefore sanctions are such a thing. eh, it's not improvisation at all. mikhailovich, uh, for eight years after the fourteenth year, you tried to build a dialogue, uh, with a cultural dialogue with ukraine within the framework of the minsk initiative. e pieces were given, what failed? oh, you know, this is such a very painful question for me. i would say so, because in the fifteenth year, together with our ukrainian colleagues , belarusian colleagues, we created, uh, this kind of international minsk initiative project, in which we took part, uh, these cultures and scientists, by the way, educators ukrainian why he came out in three languages. and we did not translate, even we deliberately did it. we did not translate the work, because
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we understood that there is some kind of internal and unity hmm of the three peoples, which allow e under tension. in general, read the text and e without translation, and then tied up all these relationships. we managed to bring together young artists and literally shortly before the start of the military operation, it was in the first at the end of the first decade of february. from 2002 we held in st. petersburg uh a great meeting of artists who worked on the images of st. petersburg bridges, this is a very important communication of young people, young writers, young artists, young scientists. we will return to this for this project. we will return to this project. i am sure of this, it is understandable that an operation is now underway to metallize ukraine, but we will have to communicate with all of us, with the ukrainian intelligentsia
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, with the ukrainian people, with the ukrainian people, and with the citizens , writers, and so on. we'll have to make new ones. uh, dialogue level. and it could be various. uh, it all depends on how to obey such a geopolitical situation, but you need to understand only one thing, if we want to have uh hmm next to russia uh, a neighbor, but a friendly not hostile uh , then this project may be the most important and not by accident . here are the names of the bridges. it is very important, we will have to do everything. well, i don't want to say start over, but we'll have to seriously deal with it. for me, this is one of such problems, uh, which is very important for me, despite the fact that, uh, in ukrainian society itself, you know there is such a beautiful division within society there are a lot of people who are committed to
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russian culture, russian language, russian russian mentality. uh, there are people who are focused on this one. it's not even some who think that there is western ukraine, it's poland. no, it's austria-hungary. it is they who still live in memories of caesar, about caesar, they live, but they simply lived in that empire, in general there are a lot of interesting things there. well, like a sofa. wow, such a genius. uh, ivan franko, he was the one who wrote wonderful both in ukrainian and in german and in german and in russian, he was a man who forced russophiles in society, which was in austria-hungary, just consciously and his attitude towards russia was. in what sense even more and naturally, related than let's say. there, the
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same one there with grigoryevich shevchenko, who, as you know, had his own difficulties with the russian empire, but i just mean that this is the western part of ukraine . it was still part of austria-hungary for many years. there are completely different psychologically. well, the socio-historical ideas about the world mikhailovich is one of the most popular quotes from gogol's letters from the duality of his soul. e that he did not know what was more khokhlat or russian in it. and because of this, by the way, for this, by the way, gogol in ukraine has recently been reproached in your soul for research. uh, like those dedicated to gogol and who just considered gogol as a ukrainian writer, and they were written in russia and not, well, not in ukraine, and this double-mindedness, but it, about which we
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say hmm it's generally hmm it's a big power. i always told ukrainians about what things? you are good. so you say that you are going against russian culture, but let's agree on gogol gogol is a ukrainian writer. but bulgakov here is bulgakov without kiev and yes, the white guards, without his stories. yes, the young doctor beshkiev, you are a beige ukrainian melody of no idea what even comfort is there. e, he is a little different in kiev than in moscow. i say, you do not understand what you are losing to the bilingualism of ukraine russian russian this bug it's not a problem. i have always said the same presence of russian culture in ukraine, which is part of the multinational ukrainian culture. it's not a problem. this wealth no, no,
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no, i'm telling you, let's count gogol bulgakov although repina get repina i still miha- i have to ask a question. at least it has already been answered. now, if you go back to gogol and korneichuk, just a huge list, here you can draw a line. this is part of ukrainian culture, and this is part of russian and where it will be pass? this is a very serious question for me, because, well, let's say, if we take the south russian school of writers, for example, babel kataev elf and petrov olesha and they grew up on odessa soil, they just grew up on it, which has always been quite special yes, and, which
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was e russian, of course, but e with a grove with e hmm and ukrainian with e, multinational and a newspaper was published. there were 14 in 14 languages ​​before the revolution in odessa . i'm talking about this, because i, uh, from memory for the sake of grandfather, great-grandmother, grandmother. mum, they were born in odessa, you know, and, the other line is the oblast, this is the city of khmilnik; unfortunately, they were there from the wife during the war, brother and sister and my father's first wife. here is who i am. yes, i will say, i have a person of russian culture, who has blue, deep ukrainian roots, it is difficult to draw this line. although, we know a certain circle of writers. first of all, it was always a sore subject. uh, so to speak, ukrainian, uh, literary cultural life has its own
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peculiarity. again, this is the same question . i always say the same thing to a woman danilovich kuchma wrote a book ukraine is not russia in russian, you know, yes, his readers read everything only in russian, but i say it again, he wrote a book called ukraine is not russia in russian. the most serious problems. i think that, of course, there are differences between ukrainian ukrainian russian culture, because , well, how do you say a little different melody? yes, if we want to think about the future, then you know, as they like to say, my friend chambers corners geography is destiny. geography is fate, but we live like this. well, how, well, how different? it’s uh closer, which hmm i’m already afraid to formulate now, because if i say now that in what sense will the poles, the western slavs
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decide this, that we have decided we are already going to warsaw , you know, but uh, in fact, a this is part of all such a common uh, cultural uh of such a common cultural boiler, which one way or another existed in this part of europe. yes, you know, let's agree, so we are different, but from this we need each other no less. let's say this you can say we are the same, but so let's beat each other's face. well, there are many options at all, mikhalych thank you very much for such a deep and interesting conversation. in general , everything is more for today. i hope we will see each other soon in order to once again discuss the events and processes taking place in the post-soviet space of the territory, which, together with russia, still makes up 1/6 of everything good.
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russia opened a humanitarian corridor for the evacuation of civilians from the territory of the azov steel plant mariupol hostages. the nazis may have more than 200 civilians in it; the terrorists want to cancel women and children in sight of missile strikes in the kirovograd region; ukrainian aircraft were destroyed at the
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kanatova military airfield;

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