Wednesday, July 16, 2025

My time as a Student in Moscow

A few weeks ago, I received an invitation from a Sri Lankan friend to join a WhatsApp group of people, who had studied Russian at the Pushkin Institute in Moscow at the same time as me. I accepted this invitation, and am happy to read the memories of Moscow, shared by members of this group.

I studied Russian at the Pushkin Institute in Moscow in the late 1980s. As I was studying Russian at a university in Britain, I was entitled to spend part of the third year of my course (the Year Abroad) in Russia or a Russian-speaking country. I was fortunate to be given the opportunity to spend four months of my Year Abroad at the Pushkin Institute in Moscow as a member of a group of students of Russian from British universities.

I decided to spend the winter of the third year of my university course in Moscow. This allowed me to see for myself what a Russian winter was like, and experience cold that I was not used to, growing up in the UK. I bought a shapka and a heavy overcoat. I was a true Muscovite, in my mind at least!

I enjoyed the course. As the Pushkin Institute is an educational establishment, which provides tuition to international students, I met people from all parts of the globe, who shared the same interest in Russian and Russia as me.

I am not one to normally advocate spending a lot of time associating with your own people when living in a foreign country. However, I did benefit from this. As I was lucky enough to be living in Moscow, the British students on my course at the Pushkin Institute had unique access to the British Embassy. We were allowed to receive post from friends and family there. We were also invited to babysit for diplomats, if they were going out in the evening. This enabled us to do our washing and ironing at their residences. I profited from this.

But, the most important way I prospered from my connection with the British Embassy in Moscow were the networking opportunities it offered British students like me. The Embassy had a notice board, enabling Muscovites to place advertisements on it for British students to give tuition in English to the Russians’ children. I jumped at the chance to meet Muscovites in this way.

I was employed as a tutor of English for the entirety of my four-month Russian course. I taught English once a week at the home of my student. My student Dima was good-natured and receptive. It was a pleasure to teach him. Dima’s mother Lyuba was a native Russian speaker. After every class, she prepared my supper, making sure that I would not return to the Institute on an empty stomach. Lyuba was one of the kindest and most sincere people I have ever met.

Other highlights of my stay in Moscow were my meetings with Russians from all walks of life, my strolls on the Arbat, my attendance at a performance at the world-famous Bolshoi Theatre, and my visit to Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg).

Travelling abroad is always interesting. It allows us to open our minds to new ways of doing things. Further, meeting people with a different background to our own is socially enriching. My time in Moscow as a student was no exception. It was an experience, and a very good one at that!

Romer Cherubim                                                    
Freelance journalist 
UK