"We don't take unfamiliar things, however we are reclaiming our own," the verses run. "We know, we recall that, we remember, and we will protect our country from Alaska to the Kremlin." 사설토토
"I tracked down the verses by some coincidence," said the mother of one understudy, who posted the tune on the web. "My child expressed nothing about it. Truth be told, with the exception of Moscow and Kaliningrad, he'd struggle with naming any urban communities in Russia… . The kids have been learning the tune for seven days. I think they will sing it as a component of the Victory Day festivities [on May 9]."
A few examiners have said Russian President Vladimir Putin is attempting to accomplish an "announceable achievement" in Ukraine for the country's conventional Victory Day march on May 9.
Understudies in schools all through the city have been squeezed into the venture of composing letters to Russian troopers in Ukraine.
"What would it be advisable for me to compose? 'I'm truly happy that you headed out to kill individuals'?" one 10th grader told RFE/RL. "I asked what others were composing. They composed what they needed to compose with the goal that the instructor wouldn't shout at them. They just discovered a few comparable texts on the Internet and replicated them… . One young lady just looked into equivalent words for 'brave' and utilized them all."
I support the 'extraordinary activity.' I support my country. Be that as it may, I won't give these tasks to my understudies. I could do without deception, and that is actually the thing this is."
One instructor who works in the Kaliningrad district city of Baltiisk and who asked not to be distinguished said that she wouldn't request that her understudies take an interest in the undertaking.
"I support the 'unique activity,'" she said, involving the Kremlin's code word for the intrusion of Ukraine. "I support my country. Yet, I won't give these tasks to my understudies. I could do without pietism, and that is by and large the thing this is. I don't think youngsters are equipped for passing judgment on appropriately about such muddled matters. Not all grown-ups are either, truth be told."
Aleksandr Solomko's 6-year-old child goes to a school in St. Petersburg. Last week, Solomko said, the kid got back home in tears and inquired as to whether Solomko and his significant other, who are both in the tactical stores, may be called up to battle in Ukraine.
"The following day, we went to the school and I saw that every one of the entryways and windows were covered with promulgation pictures with the letter Z and different enthusiastic mottos," Solomko said. "Be that as it may, the guardians are quiet, as though nothing is going on."
"We chose to converse with the school chief, who ended up being a seriously ordinary individual," he added. "She said she, at the end of the day, doesn't actually uphold giving misleading publicity to youngsters. We had an ordinary discussion without outrage… . She vowed to dispose of all the publicity in a couple of days… . At the point when we returned two days after the fact, it was completely gone."