Publication |
2013.
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Summary/Abstract |
THIS IS NOT THE FIRST TIME that a congress of our compatriots has been held in St. Petersburg at the Tauride Palace. A large number of people, around one thousand, flocking together, enthusiastically discussed problems and heartily greeted acquaintances. From the outside, this function held in a historical building was somewhat reminiscent of a congress of teachers or doctors in Soviet times. But one nuance brought it back to the current day: the people were dressed as priests and Cossacks. And it was this, albeit external feature, that showed how different the people gathered together were, even they were all called Russian compatriots living abroad.
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