New approach to history of Belarus in Russian textbooks

We saw many "interesting" things there / @rubanau_collage

We saw many "interesting" things there / @rubanau_collage / @rubanau_collage

Belarus and Russia may soon have joint history textbooks for schools and universities. It's still unclear what will be in them, although one can already make assumptions. Euroradio has looked through Russian history textbooks and found many interpretations of events in Belarusian history.

For some reason, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth are mentioned in the "History of Russia" section, but not in world history. What else is published under the editorship of former Russian Minister of Culture Vladimir Medinsky?
 

GDL and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

For example, the 6th grade textbook calls the lands and population of the modern territory of Belarus "West Russian". The textbook claims that "chronicles in the GDL were written in Russian". 

Русь, везде Русь! Как историю Беларуси подают в российских учебниках
Extract from the Russian history textbook

In fact, the chronicles of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were written not in Russian, but in Old Belarusian.

The Belarusian cities that were part of the GDL are also called "West Russian" in Russian textbooks. 

Русь, везде Русь! Как историю Беларуси подают в российских учебниках
An excerpt about Navahrudak

One of the paragraphs tells about the "competition" between Moscow and the GDL for the collection of the so-called "Russian" lands. The term "Lithuanian-Russian state" was often used.

The reigns of Hedymin, Keistut and Vitaut were briefly described. The latter, by the way, is called "Yahaila's vassal". The fact that in the XIV century the GDL was the largest state in Europe, occupying the territory from the Baltic to the Black Sea, was not mentioned.

In the victory at the Battle of Grunwald, where the combined forces of the GDL and Poland defeated the Teutonic Order, Russian historians attribute the decisive importance only to the Smolensk, Polatsk and Bryansk infantry.

Русь, везде Русь! Как историю Беларуси подают в российских учебниках
Excerpt on the "unification of the Russian lands"
Русь, везде Русь! Как историю Беларуси подают в российских учебниках
An excerpt about the "Battle of Orsha"

In fact, the Moscow army had a significant numerical advantage over Ostrozhsky's army, but this did not prevent the GDL hetman from achieving a brilliant victory.

Another strange statement: according to Russian historians, the people living in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth on the territory of modern Belarus were called "Russian".

Русь, везде Русь! Как историю Беларуси подают в российских учебниках
Russian historians call the Orthodox population of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth "Russian people".

And the last king of the state - Stanislaw August Poniatowski - was called "a protégé of Catherine II".

Русь, везде Русь! Как историю Беларуси подают в российских учебниках
About Stanislaw Poniatowski

The authors called the partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth an "erasure from the map of Europe". Once again, the tendentious narrative about the "unification of the East Slavic peoples who once inhabited Rus" is repeated.

Русь, везде Русь! Как историю Беларуси подают в российских учебниках
About the division of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

Modern times

The period of the collapse of the USSR is described in Russian textbooks in an extremely negative way. The authors call this process a violation of the USSR constitution, and Western countries are accused of "direct interference in the internal affairs of the state". 

Русь, везде Русь! Как историю Беларуси подают в российских учебниках
On the creation of the CIS
Русь, везде Русь! Как историю Беларуси подают в российских учебниках
An excerpt with propaganda stories

"A uniform interpretation of Belarusian national heroes and events"

Experts of @iSANS_Belarus point out that at the moment it's absolutely unclear how the conceived idea will be realized, but it's clear that textbooks will be brought to a single semantic content.

"Everything points to the fact that the textbooks will have a single interpretation of Belarusian national heroes and events. Moreover, it will be exactly the interpretation of the Kremlin's positions regarding Kalinouski, Kastsiushka, the GDL/RP and many others.Part of the Belarusian national figures will definitely be written down as Poles, and the other part - as Russians".

Besides, there is no doubt that these textbooks will also clearly trace the narrative that Belarusians and Russians are "brothers with a common history and common spiritual values".  

 

"Not a recent thesis"

A Belarusian historian, on condition of anonymity, told Euroradio that the common leitmotif of the cited quotes from Russian history textbooks is that Russia, since the 13th century, has consistently returned/united (around Moscow) the Russian lands inhabited by a predominantly Slavic, Orthodox population.

This is by no means a recent thesis: similar narratives are characteristic of Soviet textbooks, where, for example, only the Smolensk forces played a decisive role in the Battle of Grunwald. 

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