Natalya Pipa says a lot of schoolchildren stop using the country’s official language during recess
An MP in Ukraine has proposed a new law preventing schoolchildren from speaking to each other in any language but Ukrainian, even outside of the classroom. Natalya Pipa claims that the mandatory use of the official language in class is not sufficient to ensure its dominance.
A large proportion of Ukrainian citizens can speak or understand both Russian and Ukrainian, particularly in the east of the country. However, since the 2014 coup, the new authorities have abolished Russian as an official regional language, and adopted policies aimed at its suppression. According to the government in Kiev, the language constitutes a threat to national unity and security.
Russia has repeatedly denounced these steps as discrimination.
Explaining the need for tougher legislation in a post on Facebook, Pipa cited complaints from parents who are unhappy that their children were being exposed to Russian in schools and kindergartens as most of their peers communicate with each other in that language.
“In 2021, we obliged all schools to provide educational services in the Ukrainian language, but the problem is that, after leaving class, children and teachers switch to Russian,” the lawmaker said. She also cited recent research indicating that only 41% of schoolchildren in the country use solely the official language in informal settings.
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According to Pipa, parents should make a point of only speaking Ukrainian with their children at home.
“We need to get rid of this unwritten rule in the heads of teachers, pupils and parents: ‘The bell rings – and you can [speak] any language,’” the MP stated.
A survey conducted by the State Service for the Quality of Education during the 2023/2024 school year showed that there had been a drop in the use of the Ukrainian language by schoolchildren, parents, and teachers.
Around the same time, Commissioner for the Protection of the State Language Taras Kremin warned that many Ukrainian children did not know their official state language well enough because they were still using Russian in their daily lives.
In 2019, the national parliament passed a law requiring Ukrainian to be used exclusively in nearly all aspects of public life, including education, entertainment, politics, business and the service industry.
Commenting on the legislation at the time, the Russian Foreign Ministry denounced it as a “forced and total” Ukrainization.
This is considered to have been one of the reasons why Russian-speaking residents living in Donetsk and Lugansk, as well as in Crimea, seceded from Ukraine following the 2014 coup.
October 02, 2024 at 04:55PM
RT