are all in... in schools taught, from moldovan to finnish in all languages everything is silent, churek saklya, everything is yours, i remember it from childhood, and this, i would say, could create an anti-imperial narrative, and also pavlo grabovskyi, and also ivan franko, and even lesya ukrainka, all these poets were anti-imperial while their russian contemporaries, one might say, the best of their russian contemporaries, glorified the empire. and this is already, you know, a pitfall for centuries of misunderstanding, well , you mentioned shevchenko's words about from a moldovan to a finn, the finns are also mentioned in alexander pushkin's testament, and fine print, stepey kolmyk should have considered him his national poet, and his national poet, yes, yes, yes, that is, this, this, this is very, this, this, these are very different narratives. and they seemed to be present, in particular in ukraine, and one in the lessons of russian literature, the other in the lessons of ukrainian literature, but the question is also that the children who, who studied it, mean, well, there are cre