Education

Finns lose interest in studying Russian language

Finland's relations with its giant neighbor have soured since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.

Pupils attend a lesson in Russian at the Itä-Suomen school in Lappeenranta, Finland, on April 17. [Alessandro Rampazzo/AFP]
Pupils attend a lesson in Russian at the Itä-Suomen school in Lappeenranta, Finland, on April 17. [Alessandro Rampazzo/AFP]

By AFP |

LAPPEENRANTA, Finland -- Two Finnish towns near the Russian border plan to close schools offering Russian language and culture classes.

Finland's relations with its powerful eastern neighbor have soured since Russia's 2022 invasion.

The war prompted Helsinki to reverse its decades-long policy of military non-alignment and join NATO in April 2023, a decision that angered Moscow.

When the towns of Lappeenranta and Joensuu announced this year they would close their two schools focusing on Russian language and culture for lack of resources, school representatives saw it as fallout from the rise of anti-Russian sentiment in Finland since the war in Ukraine.

The headmaster of the School of Eastern Finland, Katri Anttila, said town officials were no longer keen to maintain Russian language studies after the invasion.

"This is part of the same trend, which is very sad. I am happy we have parents and students who do not link the Russian language to Russian President (Vladimir) Putin and the Russian government, because language should never be linked to politics or a certain country," Anttila said.

The School of Eastern Finland has three branches in the towns of Lappeenranta, Imatra and Joensuu, the only schools outside the capital Helsinki that offer Russian culture and language studies in addition to the Finnish curriculum.

The state-funded schools founded in 1997 have 700 students aged six to 18.

Declining interest

During a recent visit to the Lappeenranta school, classrooms were bustling with students chatting in Finnish and Russian, colorful posters hanging on the walls with writing in the two languages.

Some 30km from Finland's 1,340km-long border with Russia, the first spring flowers were beginning to bloom in the schoolyard under a gloomy April sky.

A city official in charge of Lappeenranta educational services, Juhani Junnilainen, told AFP the closure was due to a school network reform.

"We do not have enough resources to maintain all the schools we have," he said.

In addition, "interest for the Russian language has decreased for more than a decade" while "Spanish has become more and more popular" in Lappeenranta schools.

The city of Turku also decided this year it would end a Finnish-Russian language programme offered at one public school, citing declining student enrolment.

A separate school in Helsinki offering classes in Russian told AFP it had no plans to close.

Before the COVID pandemic and Russia's war in Ukraine, almost two million Russian tourists crossed Finland's border to visit the Lappeenranta region annually, bringing in more than €300 million ($322 million).

Now, Russian license plates are a rare sight on the streets of Lappeenranta.

In late 2022, Finland imposed entry restrictions on Russian tourists, allowing only essential travel.

"Before the ongoing situation in Ukraine, you heard Russian everywhere," said Eetu Varis, an 18-year-old at the upper secondary school.

Finland closed its entire eastern border with Russia in December, five months after Moscow began pushing undocumented migrants over the border in what Finnish officials labelled a "hybrid attack." Russia has denied the charge.

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