While Ukraine is taking a principle stand towards its history and calling Holodomor (famine of
the 1930s) genocide of the nation, undertaken by the communist regime, Kazakhstani authorities
are very quiet on the comparable disaster of the Stalin era, when more than 30 percent of the
Kazakhs died. Schriftsteller says [ru]:
Famine in Kazakhstan was not simply genocide, but also ethnocide, because it left significant
changes in the Kazakh culture: the type of economy, settling , habitation and clothing changed
dramatically. The previous complex of Kazakh nomadic culture, which was present in 1920s was
eliminated during the years of famine.
Alim-atenbek looks at the
development of Kazakhstani cinematography. One of the recent Kazakh film, “The Gift to
Stalin” opened the South Korean film festival, while another movie, “The
Tulip”, has taken the CNN APSA Viewers Choice Award [ru]:
3 movies that I saw recently in the cinema were Kazakh ones... Next year, KazakhFilm studio plans
to make 15 movies, and if half of them would be of comparable quality, it would be possible to
speak about resurrection of the domestic cinematograph.
While Russian blogosphere discusses theft of money at creation of secondary schools’
websites, Megakhuimyak suggests taking a glance at how state funds
are spent in the sphere of e-government [ru]:
51 billion tenge, which makes up 425 million dollars were spent for this e-government portal
(http://www.e.gov.kz/wps/portal)
Cheerful-husky continues
the Internet-related debate and finds out that most of the Kazakhstn-related Google ads lead to
the religious websites [ru]:
Link “I hate my life” always grabs your attention. Apparently, it brings you to some
Studentstan website, which appears to be a Christian organization. Love.kz has nothing to do with
dating – it’s also a mission and love they speak about is the
God’s one.
Also posted on neweurasia