Transparent Language, Inc.
Transparent Language Russian Pages - Russian Language, Alphabet, Grammar, Pronunciation, & Russian Software
About Transparent Language, Inc. Russian Language Learning Products from Transparent Language Russian Language Overview Conversational Russian Survival Phrases Russian Language Proficiency Tests Interesting Articles in Russian Play Russian Games FLearn Russian with a free software download Visit Transparent Language at transparent.com
 


Russian Articles
 

 
Dear Language Enthusiast,

Greetings from Transparent Language!   As we approach the year 2000 many questions arise around the issues of Y2K, as well as cultural and religious responses to the new millennium. Here at Transparent Language, Inc. we thought this would be a good opportunity for you to look at a contemporary topic and how is managing it. Included below are some interesting facts and trends relating to the Y2K issues in Russia.

You will also find tips for using RussianNow! appended to this newsletter.

Sincerely,
Transparent Language
www.transparent.com









In English:
 
One of the interesting social developments we can observe in Russia at the turn of the millennium is the increasing popularity of non-traditional religions and their penetration into everyday life. For instance, the Los Angeles-based Church of Scientology is particularly involved in Moscow's education and social welfare systems. The electronic news magazine MoJo Wire has found out that the church of Scientology paid for a new reading room to be built at the Moscow State University, named after Scientology's founder L. Ron Hubbard, is providing financial aid and curriculum planning to the city's kindergartens, and is active in the city's drug rehabilitation center, Narconon. Alexander Asmolov, Moscow's deputy minister of education, explained that after decades of Soviet rule, the Russians are "willing to support any group that offers a way out of our spiritual crisis."

One such group is the notorious "Aum Shinrikio" cult, which was responsible for releasing poisonous Sarin gas in the Tokyo subway system several years ago. This cult, which honors Shiva, the Hindu god of destruction and regeneration, claimed to have 10,000 followers in Japan and even more--20,000--in Russia.

Spiritual confusion among the population may be understandable when one considers that even some of the mainstream churches of Russia and the former CIS are receiving unfavorable press coverage recently due to accusations of their past involvement with the Soviet secret police, or because of their blatantly anti-Semitic pronouncements. For example, the electronic news magazine "Russia Today" reported that the Russian Orthodox Patriarch, Alexi II, has been described in a recent news story in Estonian media as almost certainly having been a key agent of the KGB for nearly 40 years. "Russia Today" reported that files from the Estonian KGB suggest that he owed his promotions within the Church to KGB patronage in his role as "Agent Weasel". The same site, reporting on events in Belarus, quoted the Minsk Jewish community activist Dr. Yakov Basin as saying that the Belarussian Orthodox Church continually propagates anti-Semitic myths in its publications. A recent issue of Tsar Koinae Slova (Word of the Church), for example, advised readers to "be aware of cruel cults, where human sacrifices are being practiced," and then identified Hasidic Jews as members of such a cult. Despite the protests of the Jewish community in Minsk and throughout Belarus, the Church continues to publish titles like "Murdered by Hebrews," stated Dr. Basin.

Turning to the computer-related issues facing Russia at the turn of the millennium, we find that, although officially Russia and its neighboring CIS states have calmly reassured its citizens and the world that the computer failures associated with the Y2K problem will not have a major impact on the nation, not everyone agrees. The Reuters Information agency reports that, in a disturbing newsbrief, Serhiy Parashin, head of Ukraine's Energy and Information research, is warning that computers hit by the millennium bug might paralyze Ukraine's five nuclear power plants next year. Parashin is the former director of the troubled Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Some analysts predict that the country's entire electricity supply could collapse if three or more of Ukraine's five nuclear stations stopped. It is believed that Ukraine operates more than 20,000 computerized information systems, and most of them have not been adapted to beat the Y2K bug.

In Russia, the State Telecommunications Committee, which is supposed to coordinate efforts to check computers in state bodies to prevent failure when the century ends, has stated that the '2000 problem' cannot be resolved entirely in the remaining time, and that it would take 50 years to resolve all of the problems associated with Y2K. The American Chamber of Commerce responded with its assessment that failure to address computer-related Y2K issues will have a disastrous impact on Russia's economy. Not only the economy, but also international security may be compromised if Russia fails to prepare for Y2K. U. S. Defense Secretary William Cohen proposed that America and Russia share early warning information in order to prevent nuclear weapons being set off accidentally. Russian Nuclear Power Ministry spokesman Vladislav Petrov, however, did not seem concerned, when he recently stated that his ministry was content to adopt a "let's wait and see" attitude. "We don't have any problems yet. We'll deal with the problem in the year 2000," he said.

Interestingly, as experts analyze the Y2K computer problem in greater detail, it turns out that dates other than January 1st, 2000 may become global problems. For example, two months after the turn of the millennium, programs could malfunction because they cannot figure out if 2000 is a leap year. Every four years, an extra day is added to February to make up for the slight difference between the 365.24 days of the solar year and the usual 365 days of the Gregorian calendar. If a year is evenly divisible by four, it is a leap year. The extra day brings the two time systems nearly in line with each other, but not quite. To account for the remaining difference, a lesser-known second rule requires the calendar to skip a leap year every 100 years. By convention, those non-leap years occur at the turn of centuries, such as 1700, 1800 and 1900. Many programmers were aware of the second rule and wrote their programs to accommodate it. But, unfortunately, there is a third rule to accommodate the slight distinction between the solar year and Gregorian calendar: every four hundred years, a non-leap year becomes a leap year. So, 2000 is a leap year. And, according to experts, it's going to be a problem for those who haven't set their calendars accordingly.
Tips for RussianNow!
The following are some hints to help maximize your use of Russian Now!

Don't miss the Grammar information in the Grammar Window in the lower right-hand corner of the screen! This window tells you the part of speech of the selected word in the Title, along with other information.

LanguageNow! also includes a special Grammar Basics file to help you focus on grammar. To open it, choose 'Reference / Grammar Basics' to see the first page of Grammar Basics, or select a word in the Title, click the 'Word Tools' button, and select a grammar topic which applies to that word to go directly to the appropriate topic.
 

  Russian Articles

 

   Foreign Language Learning Links:

   In addition to learning Russian, you can further your foreign language education by visiting the sites below for language learning resources, language reference material, educational language software, cultural information, and more.

    Learn ArabicLearn Chinese Learn Dutch Learn FrenchLearn German
    Learn Hebrew Learn Irish Learn Italian Learn Japanese Learn Latin
   Learn Polish Learn Portuguese Learn Russian Learn Spanish Learn Swedish
 

Transparent Language also offers information on more than 100 other languages.

 
    Transparent Store || Technical Support || www.Transparent.com || Privacy Policy || Contact Information || Site Map

If you have comments about this Russian language learning site, Russian software, or ways to learn Russian, please contact us.
©2003 Transparent Language, Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.learn-Russian-language-software.com