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Thread: Russian in Everyday Life, Russian as a world Language and Keeping your skills up..

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  1. #1
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    Quote Originally Posted by Marcus View Post
    Such things exist everywhere. Then this practice has taken place recently. That can't be the cause.
    Why it can't be the cause?
    Don't forget the origin of the problem. That person wasn't afraid of border officers but of political situation, so if border officers wouldn't let her out where she would go for help? And who would help her. Answer this yourself

  2. #2
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    Don't forget the origin of the problem. That person wasn't afraid of border officers but of political situation, so if border officers wouldn't let her out where she would go for help? And who would help her. Answer this yourself
    I have gone abroad for several times and have never had this problem. Do you know many situations like that? Is it common? And what is scaring in Russian political situation?

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by Marcus View Post
    I have gone abroad for several times and have never had this problem. Do you know many situations like that? Is it common? And what is scaring in Russian political situation?
    I guess you should ask that person. Can't go inside somebody's head

  4. #4
    Hanna
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    Quote Originally Posted by Marcus View Post
    I have gone abroad for several times and have never had this problem. Do you know many situations like that? Is it common? And what is scaring in Russian political situation?
    When I fly out of Sweden the border police always ask where I am going after they checked the passport.
    I always respond honestly but it irritates me that they ask - it's my personal business. I have never been asked anywhere else.

  5. #5
    Hanna
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    Yes.. with border police it seems to be REALLY important not to say anything that could annoy them!

    I personally know two different (British) people who got refused entry to the US because they complained and were a bit rude about the (totally absurd) entry requirements there (finger printing people and generally treating tourists and business travellers like criminals). One of them I am not surprised, but the other one is a very normal person, not prone to rudeness at all and a frequent business traveller.

    My dad joked with border police in West Germany during the cold war and they actually refused him entry from East Germany to West Berlin. I am not sure what he said exactly, but knowing him it was probably a very bad joke in rather bad German. He had to to interrupt a business trip and go back to Sweden and change his passport.

    I heard of one person (relative of a friend) who was entering the UK from South Africa and was asked if she had any contagious diseases. She said "Just cholera and typhus", or something like that, as a joke.. The border guards refused to accept that she was joking (a boring day at work, maybe?) and she was refused entry and sent back to ZA. She had planned to visit relatives in the UK. Lesson, never ever joke with border guards anywhere!

    On the Lonely Planet forum there are lots of stories about English speaking people who get singled out and terrorized by border police in the CIS countries (not Russia in particular). The theory is that the guards overhear conversations in English and decide to try for a bribe, or that they simply don't like the English speaking countries and take that out on the tourists.

    On my trip through Eastern Europe, I had no trouble worth mentioning. In fact, I have personally never had any border trouble that comes to mind right now. I think border trouble can be avoided by avoiding jokes and being very passive and do exactly what they say even if it seems stupid and irritating.

  6. #6
    Hanna
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    Today I discovered that the person I sit next to at work, who is a software architecht, is a bona fide Russian language geek, like me!

    He too had taken it up as " a hobby" and got drawn in, lol!!! There is something very addictive about Russian language and culture, and he had the same view as me, of Russia as a fascinating country, and Russian as a cool and useful language. He had visited St Petersburg and Moscow on holiday and said that he wanted to visit cities in Siberia, but unfortunately his wife was not interested in travelling there, so it had not yet happened. I suggested that he bring his wife to the Black Sea instead, for a Russian speaking holiday in the sun! He was impressed that I had travelled through the Russian speaking countries alone, and laughed at my visa fiasco (I did not get a visa for Russia and had to change my plans en-route)

    He is actually studying Russian language at university at half speed - both economic (since it's free) and motvational since it finishes with an exam. I had planned to take a course at an evening school in spring, but he was suggesting the university as a more sensible option.
    Lampada likes this.

  7. #7
    Hanna
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    I used my Russian skills in real life today, in a really unexpected situation!

    Despite being sick I dragged myself over to church to attend the evening midsummer service, as I had not been in church for ages. Midsummer is a big deal in Sweden since it doesn't get dark at night for about a month.

    Well, the church I went to was the Laestadian church in Stockholm, which is a kind of old fashioned Scandinavian Luthern church. It's from Northern Sweden originally, and it's quite common in Finland and Norway too.

    But today, a group of Russians from Northern Russia was in church, having arrived for some kind of Christian revival meeting later in June, in a different city.

    It turned out that they had been practicing Laestadian Christianity in Russia ever since the 19th century --
    miraculously their faith had survived 75 years of being completely cut off from the main part of this movement. Everyone in the Scandinavian church had forgotten about them, and vice versa.

    But then, some people in Finland had discovered by complete chance that these Russians were still practicing Laestadian Christianity. They decided to invite them to come to Finland and participate ub the bigger group's meetings along with everyone else.

    It was really touching to hear how the Russian believers had stuck to their faith and kept it secret during most of the Soviet times -- A bit like the early Christians in Rome. Not sure what would have happened if they had been open about it.

    More recently however, the challenge had been that the children were too materialistic and not interested in religion - leaving the area for St Petersburg or Moscow and dropping the faith too.

    Only one person in their group could speak English to a useful level, so I ended up speaking Russian with several of them. I was really impressed that they went to so much trouble and expense to come to Sweden - they were not well off and had some serious communication problems.

    Others in the church were impressed by my Russian skills, but I had to admit that I was just about able to communicate and was literally spitting out grammatical mistakes in every sentence, as I am out of practice. But I was able to translated some nice well wishing phrases, ask about families and things like that

    Well, happy Midsummer everybody - this is the shortest night of the year!
    Lampada likes this.

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