This article appeared in the October 12, 2022 edition of the Monitor Daily.

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A chipped bowl, Russian parents, and a Monitor moment

Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP/File
Schoolchildren walk in snow-covered Red Square with the Spasskaya Tower in the background in Moscow, Feb. 24, 2021.
Trudy Palmer
Cover Story Editor

I had a classic Monitor moment last night. Fred Weir’s story about parents and teachers in Russia pushing back against the government’s required patriotism lessons reminded me that you can’t judge citizens by their leader.

Schoolchildren were already top of mind for me because of a chipped, cracked serving bowl I reluctantly threw out over the weekend.

For well over a year, every time I used it, I wondered if that would be the moment the crack would worsen and the bowl would split. Finally, I decided to replace it.

Why was it so difficult to let it go? Because two little labels with my last name and an old phone number were still stuck to the bottom after countless washings. Seeing them always brought back memories of my daughter’s school days when I’d use the bowl to take a salad of some sort to a school potluck celebrating something or other. It didn’t really matter what.

The love in the classroom or playground or wherever we gathered was palpable. We loved our kids and were doing the best we could for them. 

So are those Russian parents Fred wrote about, I realized. In trickier educational settings than I have ever faced, they are doing their best to pass along family values – instead of what many call propaganda – to their kids. 

If they have school potlucks in Russia, I’m pretty sure I know what they feel like. 


This article appeared in the October 12, 2022 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 10/12 edition
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