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Fans racing to learn Russian

Updated: 2018-03-17 13:32
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Tamara Yevtushenko, coordinator of the Russian language learning program of the Russia House in Buenos Aires, talks to students before class on March 6. [Photo/Agencies]

BUENOS AIRES-Walter Morales has tickets for him and his girlfriend to follow Argentina in the World Cup, but the thrill of watching Lionel Messi lead the charge has come with a growing concern: Russian.

"I've asked everyone who has been to Russia the same question: 'Do they speak English or another language?'" said the 35-year-old lawyer. "But the answer is always the same. No, nothing. Zilch. Zip. It's a bit scary."

The remedy, Morales added, was to enroll in Russian language classes at the Cultural Center of the Russian Embassy in Buenos Aires.

Morales and his partner Marisol are part of a growing number of Latin Americans who are trying to learn the language of Leo Tolstoy and Lev Yashin in time for this year's tournament, which kicks off in Moscow on June 14 and runs for a month in 12 cities across Russia.

Eight of the 32 teams in the tournament are from Latin America, ranging from the five-time winner Brazil, to debutant Panama.

Of the 10 nationalities that purchased the most tickets so far, five of them are from South America, FIFA said.

Language teachers up and down the continent have been working overtime to teach fans Russian, even if it is only the basics like "zdrastvuite" (hello) and "spasibo" (thank you).

"We normally begin a new class each month, but in February we had to open two and now (in March) we had to start an additional class," said Carolina Gaspar, director of the House of Russian Culture, a language center in Puebla, Mexico, where 150 Mexicans are studying Russian.

It's a similar story in Colombia, where the foreign language department at the National University was forced to reopen its shuttered Russian language program to cope with the demand.

"The same happened with Brazil (in 2014)," said Ligia Cortes Cardenas, the department's coordinator of extension courses. "There was a big rise in interest in Portuguese during the World Cup there."

The head of the language center at the University of Buenos Aires said over 100 people daily were asking about lessons, and the number of people signing up for Russian this semester is expected to grow by 30 percent to 300 students.

Galina Rumiantseva, curator of Russian language at the school where Morales is studying, said she will open more spaces for her courses but warned: "Russian is a very difficult language."

Peruvian student Jose Rodriguez Ramos agreed, pointing out the treacherous confusion between new letters and old sounds.

"It's difficult to learn the Cyrillic alphabet," said Ramos, a 28-year-old who was not even born the last time Peru qualified for the World Cup, in 1982.

"First because it is a different alphabet, but also because it's a little similar. You see a P but it's an R and pronounced like an R."

The difficulties are daunting but there are good reasons Morales and his fellow fans are insisting-and they don't all have to do with self-improvement.

"The letters are really weird," he said. "It's not easy. About the only thing I can focus on right now is Messi scoring goals."

Reuters 

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