We might not see millions in the streets, but the resistance is there. While the civil servants paint over hundreds of new anti-war graffiti, people in Russia are protesting and making their voices heard on social media despite risking their freedom.
But who are they, and are they fighting a lost battle?
Together with activists, journalists, artists, and people who can’t keep silent we’ll discuss how we, Russians, lost our freedom, why keep fighting and why there’s still hope.
This podcast is produced by Paper Media — independent media from St. Petersburg. If you enjoy Russian Resistance, please support our job.
All content for Russian Resistance is the property of Paper Media and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
We might not see millions in the streets, but the resistance is there. While the civil servants paint over hundreds of new anti-war graffiti, people in Russia are protesting and making their voices heard on social media despite risking their freedom.
But who are they, and are they fighting a lost battle?
Together with activists, journalists, artists, and people who can’t keep silent we’ll discuss how we, Russians, lost our freedom, why keep fighting and why there’s still hope.
This podcast is produced by Paper Media — independent media from St. Petersburg. If you enjoy Russian Resistance, please support our job.
Ten years in prison for anti-war messages. Here is the story of Russian activist Sasha Skochilenko
Russian Resistance
18 minutes 50 seconds
3 years ago
Ten years in prison for anti-war messages. Here is the story of Russian activist Sasha Skochilenko
Today, even the smallest protest in Russia might lead to years in prison. We’ve hardly seen such absurd verdicts since Stalin’s Great Terror in the 30s.
This is the story of Sasha Skochilenko — St. Petersburg artist and musician. Sasha did a tiny anti-war performance in a local supermarket. But after it was reported, the police organized a whole operation to capture Skochilenko. Together with Sasha’s girlfriend Sonya we are telling her story.
Are you enjoying this podcast? Your support helps us share more stories.
This podcast is produced by Paper Media — an independent media from St Petersburg.
We’ve been reporting on the Russian-Ukrainian war since the day it started. As a result, our website was blocked by the Russian government.
Credits:
Editor-in-Chief — Svetlana Kiseleva
Producer — Veronika Volkova
Music production & mix engineering, website & illustrations — Paper Media
This is our first project for international audience, and we are quite nervous about it. Please share your feedback with our team: russianresistance@paperpaper.ru
Russian Resistance
We might not see millions in the streets, but the resistance is there. While the civil servants paint over hundreds of new anti-war graffiti, people in Russia are protesting and making their voices heard on social media despite risking their freedom.
But who are they, and are they fighting a lost battle?
Together with activists, journalists, artists, and people who can’t keep silent we’ll discuss how we, Russians, lost our freedom, why keep fighting and why there’s still hope.
This podcast is produced by Paper Media — independent media from St. Petersburg. If you enjoy Russian Resistance, please support our job.