We promise to keep your information safe and will never post or share anything on your Facebook page. Russian Friendship. View Singles Now. The previous years of life were engaged in education and self-improvement. I am interested in Asian culture, but genetically open to the whole world. I'm ready to think with you both about the political system and the winners of the Oscar since its foundation. Tatiana Standard Member. Petersburg, Russia. I'm spanish and english teacher struggling to get a pen pal or even more if you're lucky enough.

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After recovering from the realisation that this was real, and not a joke, I found out that the group was founded by Ilya Prusikin. Unless you share this article to all your friends, one of these guys will appear at the end of your bed, at 4AM this evening. I Skyped Ilya and Olympia to find out more about them. It involved a lot of broken English and deadpan voices.
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Two members of the Russian feminist punk band Pussy Riot have reportedly been detained by police after a protest outside a Siberian prison colony. Maria Alyokhina and Olga Borisova had staged a protest in Yakutsk, Siberia, where a Ukrainian filmmaker is currently imprisoned. A few hours later, Borisova also posted on her social media channels that the pair had been released. Protest: Alyokhina and Borisova are seen holding flares and a 'Free Sentsov' banner on the bridge nearby outside the prison colony in Yakutsk, Russia. Borisova, in a video from a police car posted on Twitter, added: 'We're going to the police station
There aren't many revolutions that have been started by wearing colourful dresses and playing loud music, but Pussy Riot are not most revolutionaries. For a start, they're women. Or devushki, as the Russians call them — "girls". And for seconds, they're not hardened activists or Machiavellian politicos; they're just a bunch of highly-educated, articulate young women who possess perhaps the greatest political weapon of all: the uncorrupted idealism of youth. Three weeks ago, I met three unimprisoned members of the group on the eve of the trial opening. While they talked interestingly about all sorts of things — the church, the state, feminism, art — what struck me above and beyond anything else was simply how funny they were, how charming, how — I can't think of any other way of saying this — how nice they were. It's a terrible word, "nice", particularly when used about women, and most especially when used about women with strong, committed ideals on a mission to provoke political change, but it's also a self-evident and inescapable fact about them. The three I met — Squirrel, Sparrow and Balaclava — were lovely, sweet-natured, bright young things who just didn't see why they shouldn't have a voice. Or say what they thought.