The Ukrainian Institute has lambasted the organizers of a prestigious German filmmaker residency program for inviting Russians and Belarusians to take part as well as Ukrainians, slamming the emergency program for the โperpetuation of both an outdated Soviet perspective and Russiaโs colonial logic.โ
In a letter sent by Ukrainian Institute Director General Volodymyr Sheiko in July, Sheiko urged Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg (MBB), the organizer of the emergency program for โrefugee and endangered filmmakers,โ to โframe the residency program in a different way and instead recognize that Ukrainians feel much more affinity with their neighbours across Eastern and Central Europe.โ
The letter was sent twice to MBB but MBB didnโt respond to the Ukrainian Institute, Deadline understands.
Several Ukrainian filmmakers subsequently refused to apply to the program in protest, according to a spokesman for the Institute, who said it was โnot the only initiative which was framed in this way,โ adding: โItโs time for all of us to reconsider the place of Ukraine and Russia in the world and the complexity of their mutual past.โ
The emergency residency program opened in early July and offers โฌ162,000 ($167,400) to 11 โrefugee filmmakers from Ukraine and endangered filmmakers from Russia and Belarusโ for six months. Under the professional supervization of the MBB-organized prestigious Nipkow program, the filmmakers will spend the months working in Germany and networking with the local film industry. Ordinarily, Nipkow is open to all writers, directors, producers and animators, who submit feature film project ideas and are given help with their scripts.
While thanking MBB for โyour efforts in supporting filmmakers in Ukraine who have suffered from Russiaโs brutal invasion,โ Sheikoโs letter said treating Ukrainians, Russians and Belarusians as part of the same group is โnot only ethically questionable and insensitive toward Ukrainians but, more fundamentally, perpetuates an ideological construct of โthree brotherly peoplesโ that originated in the Russian Empire and was later cemented by Soviet historiography.โ
โIt is the concept of the โthree brotherly peoplesโ that had been used by the Soviet regime as an excuse to homogenize the cultures of the three countries, which de facto meant the forced Russification of Ukraine and Belarus,โ added the letter.
โWhile Western academia and cultural institutions have been invested in decolonizing history and our knowledge of the world for the past decades, uniting Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine under the same umbrella is a perpetuation of both an outdated Soviet perspective and Russiaโs colonial logic.โ
The letter went on to say that forcing Ukrainians into joint projects with Russians โunwillingly prolongs the colonial violence Ukrainians have suffered for centuries.โ
While MBB didnโt respond at the time, CEO Kirsten Niehuus told Deadline the program was framed in such a way because โBerlin understands itself as a city of freedom,โ adding that there is โno obligation to meet or cooperate with other filmmakers of the same or other countries.โ
โThe city offers refuge to filmmakers whose existence is threatened by war or who are politicallyย persecuted by autocratic regimes without a democratic legal system,โ she added.
The controversy comes after several major film festivals have had to grapple with their approach to Russian films and filmmakers. Russian dissident filmmaker Kirill Serebrennikovโs Tchaikovskyโs Wife was the only Russian film that made it to Cannes, for example, a move that was widely debated due to the picโs links with Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich. (Deadline)