Berliner Boersenzeitung - Ukraine's star author Kurkov says his native Russian should be curbed

EUR -
AED 4.268901
AFN 82.53969
ALL 98.318932
AMD 448.249748
ANG 2.080279
AOA 1065.931638
ARS 1373.384221
AUD 1.78543
AWG 2.095248
AZN 1.970124
BAM 1.959132
BBD 2.34556
BDT 142.071664
BGN 1.956944
BHD 0.438397
BIF 3459.81909
BMD 1.162412
BND 1.488076
BOB 8.044823
BRL 6.384899
BSD 1.161711
BTN 99.90695
BWP 15.478595
BYN 3.801781
BYR 22783.280354
BZD 2.33346
CAD 1.592267
CDF 3344.260128
CHF 0.935004
CLF 0.02856
CLP 1095.945096
CNY 8.34554
CNH 8.332096
COP 4748.64008
CRC 588.017923
CUC 1.162412
CUP 30.803925
CVE 110.45288
CZK 24.778007
DJF 206.869894
DKK 7.460002
DOP 68.746346
DZD 150.956419
EGP 58.180361
ERN 17.436184
ETB 159.698229
FJD 2.612812
FKP 0.861751
GBP 0.853268
GEL 3.161921
GGP 0.861751
GHS 12.023659
GIP 0.861751
GMD 83.11376
GNF 10062.115656
GTQ 8.933195
GYD 243.042825
HKD 9.124884
HNL 30.343353
HRK 7.536728
HTG 152.468036
HUF 401.228092
IDR 18943.018961
ILS 3.950295
IMP 0.861751
INR 99.907703
IQD 1521.775448
IRR 48966.6169
ISK 141.791166
JEP 0.861751
JMD 185.755971
JOD 0.824143
JPY 168.165737
KES 150.187415
KGS 101.439885
KHR 4656.961553
KMF 496.928359
KPW 1046.160766
KRW 1578.079076
KWD 0.355292
KYD 0.968055
KZT 602.062236
LAK 25061.599974
LBP 104092.552378
LKR 349.019687
LRD 232.334195
LSL 20.59363
LTL 3.432301
LVL 0.703131
LYD 6.293706
MAD 10.573668
MDL 19.817881
MGA 5164.985589
MKD 61.732147
MMK 2440.453513
MNT 4164.176516
MOP 9.393141
MRU 45.896069
MUR 52.750144
MVR 17.906967
MWK 2014.404484
MXN 22.084679
MYR 4.933261
MZN 74.348179
NAD 20.593452
NGN 1800.251013
NIO 42.752538
NOK 11.750465
NPR 159.850719
NZD 1.928111
OMR 0.446932
PAB 1.161721
PEN 4.172097
PGK 4.788227
PHP 66.051777
PKR 331.018157
PLN 4.252743
PYG 9273.73473
QAR 4.235104
RON 5.048341
RSD 117.197835
RUB 91.104848
RWF 1677.467803
SAR 4.360516
SBD 9.695016
SCR 16.414963
SDG 698.026292
SEK 11.065839
SGD 1.486615
SHP 0.913474
SLE 26.096307
SLL 24375.208207
SOS 663.949369
SRD 44.520914
STD 24059.586942
SVC 10.164289
SYP 15113.603228
SZL 20.576798
THB 37.968451
TJS 11.448517
TMT 4.068443
TND 3.424525
TOP 2.722482
TRY 46.026178
TTD 7.894667
TWD 34.241529
TZS 3106.54811
UAH 48.502102
UGX 4180.236447
USD 1.162412
UYU 47.120151
UZS 14417.524205
VES 120.433838
VND 30420.328921
VUV 139.655759
WST 3.089585
XAF 657.080346
XAG 0.032705
XAU 0.000352
XCD 3.141478
XDR 0.817578
XOF 657.083177
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.058824
ZAR 20.638047
ZMK 10463.078521
ZMW 27.194726
ZWL 374.296274
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Ukraine's star author Kurkov says his native Russian should be curbed
Ukraine's star author Kurkov says his native Russian should be curbed

Ukraine's star author Kurkov says his native Russian should be curbed

Ukraine's bestselling Russian-speaking author Andrey Kurkov says it is "immoral" to defend the Russian language in the ex-Soviet republic during soaring tensions with Moscow.

Text size:

Kurkov's often absurdist works -- tinged with humour about the misplaced oddities of life -- have been translated into more than 30 languages and become international hits.

He is most famous for the early post-Soviet "Death and the Penguin" novel about a despondent obituary writer.

But he is also a popular political commentator who has strong views on a Ukrainian language law that Russian President Vladimir Putin is using in his attempts to cast Kyiv's pro-Western leaders as persecutors of ethnic Russians.

"In the context of our current relations with Russia, it is immoral to talk about the privileged place of the Russian language," Kurkov told AFP in Russian.

The 60-year-old native of Russia's Leningrad region outside Saint Petersburg speaks Ukrainian without an accent and has written some of his film scripts and children's books in Ukrainian.

But he views Russian as his native language and uses it for most of his works.

"I write in Russia, I speak on TV in Russian or Ukrainian. It does not create problems," he said.

"At the moment, the firm language policy is justified."

- 'Balance' -

The new language law requires Russian-language publications to be accompanied by Ukrainian versions of equal size and circulation as of last month.

Newsstands must also offer at least half their content in Ukrainian.

Human Rights Watch believes the law raises "concerns".

"The Ukrainian government has every right to promote its state language and strengthen its national identity," the New York-based rights group said.

"But it should ensure a balance in its language policy, to avoid discrimination against linguistic minorities."

Kurkov views the law as a natural progression of Ukraine's society. He also has no qualms about Russian no longer being taught in schools.

"The next generation of Ukrainians will be bilingual, but will not be able to write in Russian," he predicts.

The Soviet Union tried to build a socialist society out of 15 multi-ethnic republics that were all forced to learn Russian in schools.

"The process of Ukraine's Russification lasted for 70 years," Kurkov says. "We are witnessing the return of Ukrainian to its territories, a process that can take between 50 and 100 years."

- Collective vs individual -

Kurkov is now working on the third part of a historical detective novel about life in Kyiv in 1919.

Ukraine gained fleeting independence that year before being swallowed up by the Bolshevik Revolution.

He views the current threat of an invasion by more than 100,000 Russian troops who have surrounded Ukraine from nearly every side as one of the hard realities of life that will not permanently alter his country's course.

"There might be a war, but not a total loss of independence," he said.

Kurkov thinks Ukraine and Russia are so fundamentally different they cannot coexist.

"Russians like tsars and the one-party system, like in Soviet times or with (Putin's ruling) United Russia party now," he said.

"In Ukraine, we have 400 registered political parties. Every Ukranian wants to found his own political party because he does not agree with others."

Russians subscribe to the "collective mentality," he said. "Ukrainians are individuals."

- 'Accustomed to war' -

Kurkov's most recent translated work -- called "Grey Bees" in English -- follows the path of a beekeeper through the simmering conflict that has claimed more than 14,000 lives across swaths of Ukraine's Russian-backed separatist east.

Ukrainians have been living with this war since a 2014 pro-EU revolution toppled a government backed by Moscow that was ranked as one of the 30 most corrupt in the world.

Kurkov believes the years of tumult have steeled Ukrainians' resolve.

"There is neither psychosis nor panic. Everyone just gets on with their lives," he said.

"The real shock was in March 2014, when everyone in Ukraine watched a session of the Russian parliament overwhelmingly vote in favour of allowing the Russian army to wage war on foreign territories," he said.

The vote gave Putin the political cover needed to back the insurgency in eastern Ukraine.

"Today, people are accustomed to the fact that there is a war," he said.

(P.Werner--BBZ)