The Prague Post - An ocean away, Russian-Americans feel backlash from Putin's war

EUR -
AED 4.308835
AFN 74.49196
ALL 95.752485
AMD 433.698247
ANG 2.100015
AOA 1077.060107
ARS 1634.062666
AUD 1.619899
AWG 2.111883
AZN 1.991476
BAM 1.958911
BBD 2.358165
BDT 143.658162
BGN 1.957131
BHD 0.442705
BIF 3484.13359
BMD 1.173268
BND 1.495075
BOB 8.089849
BRL 5.759602
BSD 1.17087
BTN 111.500038
BWP 15.911271
BYN 3.314593
BYR 22996.060933
BZD 2.35476
CAD 1.595434
CDF 2716.116648
CHF 0.915365
CLF 0.026988
CLP 1062.183556
CNY 8.013834
CNH 8.000259
COP 4358.938548
CRC 532.648236
CUC 1.173268
CUP 31.091613
CVE 110.440404
CZK 24.380163
DJF 208.492911
DKK 7.47298
DOP 69.761094
DZD 155.38575
EGP 63.060593
ERN 17.599026
ETB 184.261902
FJD 2.563476
FKP 0.866879
GBP 0.863766
GEL 3.156259
GGP 0.866879
GHS 13.124845
GIP 0.866879
GMD 85.648623
GNF 10275.319526
GTQ 8.935325
GYD 244.949034
HKD 9.19332
HNL 31.122562
HRK 7.53602
HTG 153.233369
HUF 360.376445
IDR 20420.267455
ILS 3.43574
IMP 0.866879
INR 111.62728
IQD 1536.981624
IRR 1544021.234685
ISK 143.209371
JEP 0.866879
JMD 184.242619
JOD 0.831829
JPY 183.53262
KES 151.589327
KGS 102.567717
KHR 4696.459037
KMF 493.360307
KPW 1055.94532
KRW 1706.712534
KWD 0.361378
KYD 0.975658
KZT 544.048709
LAK 25711.054095
LBP 105065.228965
LKR 374.668251
LRD 214.84305
LSL 19.594087
LTL 3.464356
LVL 0.709699
LYD 7.42786
MAD 10.821086
MDL 20.208268
MGA 4880.796414
MKD 61.7262
MMK 2463.519483
MNT 4198.666619
MOP 9.45069
MRU 46.750649
MUR 54.885322
MVR 18.132862
MWK 2030.224454
MXN 20.305407
MYR 4.635602
MZN 74.97463
NAD 19.594087
NGN 1602.415095
NIO 43.070698
NOK 10.817069
NPR 178.399098
NZD 1.973918
OMR 0.451147
PAB 1.17086
PEN 4.104719
PGK 5.091086
PHP 72.05921
PKR 326.276691
PLN 4.243201
PYG 7094.32786
QAR 4.278502
RON 5.235247
RSD 117.384344
RUB 88.582143
RWF 1711.918913
SAR 4.401895
SBD 9.423995
SCR 16.802622
SDG 704.5479
SEK 10.819729
SGD 1.492673
SHP 0.875963
SLE 28.891716
SLL 24602.847529
SOS 669.162781
SRD 43.970569
STD 24284.28737
STN 24.538973
SVC 10.244358
SYP 129.682209
SZL 19.589779
THB 38.039123
TJS 10.94718
TMT 4.112306
TND 3.390157
TOP 2.824949
TRY 53.075266
TTD 7.936673
TWD 36.97966
TZS 3051.592546
UAH 51.453219
UGX 4420.019989
USD 1.173268
UYU 47.135018
UZS 14108.552463
VES 579.000876
VND 30880.424682
VUV 139.061086
WST 3.186516
XAF 657.000465
XAG 0.015467
XAU 0.000252
XCD 3.170816
XCG 2.110069
XDR 0.817098
XOF 656.445742
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.934303
ZAR 19.371072
ZMK 10560.814925
ZMW 22.099287
ZWL 377.791951
  • BCC

    -2.2000

    72.13

    -3.05%

  • CMSC

    0.0099

    22.88

    +0.04%

  • RIO

    1.8700

    100.5

    +1.86%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.29

    +0.17%

  • NGG

    0.1400

    87.64

    +0.16%

  • BCE

    0.1700

    24.1

    +0.71%

  • BTI

    1.0500

    59.4

    +1.77%

  • GSK

    -0.5200

    50.38

    -1.03%

  • AZN

    -2.2200

    181.24

    -1.22%

  • BP

    -0.4400

    46.5

    -0.95%

  • RBGPF

    0.0800

    63.18

    +0.13%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    16.5

    +0.91%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    13.04

    +0.84%

  • VOD

    -0.3100

    15.74

    -1.97%

  • RELX

    -0.2000

    36.16

    -0.55%

An ocean away, Russian-Americans feel backlash from Putin's war
An ocean away, Russian-Americans feel backlash from Putin's war

An ocean away, Russian-Americans feel backlash from Putin's war

In the days after Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine, the Russian School of Mathematics, a network of popular after-school academies across the United States, felt it had no choice but to speak out.

Text size:

Calling the war "a source of great, real, and concrete pain for all of us," the school made clear in a statement: "We stand with the Ukrainian people against Putin, his regime, and the Russian military invasion of Ukraine."

It also urged patrons not to conflate the school with the Kremlin's actions.

As Russian bombs level Ukrainian cities, the horror is acute among Russian-Americans, many of whom also have relatives and friends in both Russia and Ukraine.

And as Russian-themed restaurants face vandalism and threats in US cities and Russian musicians are dropped from lineups -- some feel Putin's war has cast a shadow over their entire community and heritage.

Founded in Boston 25 years ago by two Jewish refugees from Belarus and Ukraine who were educated in Saint Petersburg, the math school explained that it was named after the "historic tradition of Russian mathematics."

"Regardless of their country of origin, no one is responsible for this war but Putin and his regime," it wrote.

- 'Bear the shame' -

On the first day of the invasion, Alexander Stessin, a Moscow-born oncologist in New York, woke up to a friend's text message telling him the world would never be the same.

"It was absolute shock, absolute horror, and that feeling hasn't subsided," said Stessin. "For me, it felt like my whole world came crashing down."

Nearly 2.5 million Americans are of Russian ancestry, according to the US census bureau, and the community of Soviet-born immigrants with links to Russian culture, many of them Jewish refugees, is larger still.

Stessin's own family emigrated in 1990 when Stessin was 11, but he maintained deep ties to the country of his birth, publishing award-winning books in Russia.

The 43-year-old is well aware his pain is "nothing compared to what the Ukrainian people have to bear."

But nonetheless, he says, "I think we will all have to bear the shame by virtue of being Russian, we cannot escape it."

- 'Cancel everything Russian' -

In that climate, Eugene Koonin, a distinguished biologist and member of the US Academy of Sciences, felt compelled to initiate an open letter against the invasion.

Signed by several dozen Russian-speaking scientists hailing from the former Soviet Union who work at the National Institutes of Health, a flagship US research agency, it condemned Putin's "aggressive, genocidal, pointless war."

But in an interview with AFP, Koonin also spoke out against international academic journals returning papers submitted by Russian scientists, and collaboration with Russian scholars being halted by governments or university councils.

"Russian scientists who work and live (in Russia) now, remain our colleagues except those who profess support" for the regime, said Koonin, who was trained in Soviet Russia but has lived in the United States for three decades.

"They deserve our compassion and help," he said, warning that "blanket prohibitive action" against Russian academics was "short-sighted and detrimental."

As the war spills deep into the cultural sphere, Stessin likewise warned against the temptation to "cancel everything Russian" -- regardless of any ties to Putin's regime.

While New York's Metropolitan Opera and Carnegie Hall invoked support for Moscow in cutting ties with star soprano Anna Netrebko and conductor Valery Gergiev, orchestras in Cardiff and Zagreb went further by removing Pyotr Tchaikovsky from their programming.

In Stessin's view, that approach is both "easy" and "very damaging."

"Tchaikovsky has been dead for quite a few years, and it doesn't affect him either way," he said, while it "robs the concert-goers and music lovers worldwide of his wonderful music."

Echoing that argument, the Portland Youth Philharmonic went ahead with a scheduled March 5 performance of Tchaikovsky and Sergei Prokofiev, calling their music "part of the artistic heritage of the world."

- 'Frozen in horror' -

But south of Portland in California -- where Silicon Valley has seen a boom of Russian-founded startups -- there is a palpable sense their prospects have dimmed.

"The Russian-speaking tech community has frozen in horror," said Nick Davidov, who moved to the state from Russia in 2015 and now runs an investment fund focused on tech companies together with his wife Marina.

Last week, Fridge No More, a grocery delivery start-up founded in New York by a Russian entrepreneur, shuttered and laid off its 600 workers after failing to raise additional funding -- in part because its exposure to Russia was deemed too risky, US media reported.

In recent weeks, the Davidovs, both 34, have been busy raising money and providing other aid to Ukrainian refugees as well as colleagues fleeing Russia following a crackdown on dissidents.

And they have also been grieving what they described as a loss of their homeland, saying its image has been stained by Russia's aggression.

"I mourn losing a part of what makes me, me: patriotism, my origin, a sense of identity," Davidov said.

J.Simacek--TPP