The Province

Who's afraid of the big bad Vlad?

Canadian jokesters successful­ly defy Russian president in newspaper, cartoons

- TOM BLACKWELL

The writers and artists of the Russian language newspaper Nasha Canada don't just criticize the government of President Vladimir Putin, they dare to make fun of the steely eyed leader with witty articles and satirical cartoons.

In Russia, where dissenting media is now all but extinct, the paper would likely have been shut down long ago. But even in this country the publicatio­n has faced backlash — allegedly orchestrat­ed by the Kremlin — for its mocking opposition to Putin. The harassment, the paper says, has included mass complaints to Meta about its Facebook page and faked photograph­s suggesting its Jewish founder was a Nazi.

A bizarre incident involving the newspaper (whose name means Our Canada) last week may have been a Russian dirty trick, suggests Zhana Levin, its deputy editor. The Putin government's alleged meddling here is one of the subjects of Ottawa's inquiry into foreign interferen­ce.

Most other media catering to the growing number of Russian-speaking Canadians generally avoid outright support of the Kremlin and its policies these days, while stopping short of unvarnishe­d criticism. Nasha Canada appears unique by routinely poking the Putin bear.

The result is a much-needed counterpoi­nt to the propaganda spread by Russian media, which Canadians can still access online despite the outlets being sanctioned by Ottawa, says Marcus Kolga, who runs the DisinfoWat­ch group.

“You have this small but mighty, incredible platform that is breaking down all this stuff,” says Kolga, also a fellow with the Macdonald Laurier Institute — and a target of Russian sanctions himself. “Humour is seen as one of the most effective ways to challenge authoritar­ianism, No. 1 because authoritar­ian government­s hate it. They want to be taken seriously.”

Toronto-based journalist Alla Kadysh, who has contribute­d to Nasha Canada in the past, agrees.

“It's important to be able to laugh at the enemy,” she says.

Kadysh is familiar with the consequenc­es of voicing anti-Kremlin opinions within Canada's Russian-speaking community. She once faced online abuse and even a death threat for criticizin­g Moscow on a Toronto-based radio show.

The Russian embassy in Ottawa did not respond by deadline to a request for comment on the newspaper and charges that Moscow is behind harassment of it.

While Nasha Canada's print circulatio­n hovers around a modest 20,000, it has a significan­t following on the internet. After abandoning Facebook, it moved to X, formerly Twitter, where it has 102,000 followers and about 15 million impression­s per month, says Levin.

Vladimir Turovsky, a former music student and humour writer from western Ukraine, came to Canada in the mid-1990s after a stay in Israel. He launched Nasha Canada in 2001. Other Russian-language media in Canada supported Putin at that time, when even some western leaders touted him as a potential reformer. But Nasha Canada has always been a critic, says Levin, also from Ukraine.

“When Putin came to power, we understood right away that a former KGB officer couldn't be a normal person. It's, like, stamped on your forehead,” she said. “We were reading a lot and we understood what was going on.”

But rather than voicing serious, impassione­d condemnati­on, Nasha Canada's approach has leaned heavily on irony and humour.

Under the heading “Putin and Children” a 2022 post featured a photograph of an adorable child in a ballet outfit.

“The Russian rocket that killed the little Ukrainian girl cost $7 million,” said the caption. “Putin spares no expense for the children.”

Another item centred around a photograph of a red baseball cap modelled after Donald Trump's Make America Great Again hats. “Make Putin a taxi driver again,” was inscribed on the headgear, a reference to the strongman's part-time occupation in the early 1990s.

A 2023 cover of Nasha Canada's print edition showed a doctored photograph of a Kremlin entrancewa­y, with Russian officials saluting an incoming soldier. “Good Evening, We are from Ukraine,” read the banner headline.

“This is our manner; this is our way of expressing ourselves,” says Levin. “We've always considered humour to be our best weapon.”

The 2021 census put the number of Canadians with an ethnic Russian origin at almost 550,000.

Last week, Nasha Canada faced a strange allegation. According to a news release issued by the GUR, Ukraine's main intelligen­ce agency, Russia's FSB spy outfit was recruiting agents in Canada, helped by a “leaflet” published in Nasha Canada last month.

Levin says there was no leaflet and that the Ukrainians likely confused an old, satirical article by the newspaper about FSB recruitmen­t tactics as an actual advertisem­ent by Moscow. (The GUR did not respond to a request for comment from Postmedia.)

But she wonders if Russian intelligen­ce may have somehow seeded the odd report as a way to discredit Nasha Canada.

 ?? — NASHA CANADA ?? The Russian-language newspaper Nasha Canada, is known for its criticism of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
— NASHA CANADA The Russian-language newspaper Nasha Canada, is known for its criticism of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada