• Initially this is absolutely true! Under Lenin particularly this was very much promoted “indiginenisation” iirc it’s best translated as in English. But particularly under Khrushchev and later Breznhnev this very much changed, focusing on the single Soviet identity.

    They didn’t really prosecute these minorities mind, just very much promoted the Soviet culture and Russian language in a large variety of ways.

    • Grapho@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      Not two comments ago you were saying the soviets accelerated the Tsarist policies of forced russification. Either you know fuck all about Tsarist Russia and it’s pogroms (and thus you’re doing genocide apologia) or you don’t know shit about the Soviet Union. Either way you should stop commenting on it and replying like you’re aware of everything and that’s just the thing you meant.

      Unless, of course, disinfo is the point.

      • Tsarist Russia started with the russification process. The Soviets initially under Lenin reversed course, but this later changed under Stalin, Khrushchev and Brezhnev. They accelerated the process. None of this is contradictory to what I’ve said.

        The pogroms in tsarist Russia are horrible acts of genocide, but they were fairly simply anti-Jewish in nature. They were not a part of the russification process and should be considered separate. Hence when I compare the russification between tsarist Russia and the Soviet Union, I’m obviously not taking any pogroms into consideration. It’s horrible, but unrelated to the subject at hand.