On April 3, 1917, Vladimir Lenin returned from exile to Petrograd and, upon arriving, the leader of the Russian revolution prepared the famous “April Theses”, which had three central pillars to direct the revolutionary process: “Peace, Land and Bread”. The slogans called for Russia’s exit from the First World War, the implementation of agrarian reform and the end of hunger in the country.

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O Good Living on TV this Saturday (13) recalls this story with a special report from the correspondent of Brazil in fact in Russia, Serguei Monin.

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The movement was marked as an important impulse to overthrow the provisional government and rally workers towards a socialist revolution that determined the course of the history of Russia and the world throughout the 20th century.

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However, the echo of the revolution and Lenin’s importance in today’s Russia is largely muted in current politics. According to Alexander Reznik, historian and professor at HSE University in Saint Petersburg, Russian political elites give history a purely instrumental character. The revolutionary process is marginalized to the detriment of the idea of ​​State strength, more represented by the Stalin period, and the consequences of the Second World War.

“The idea that at some point in history a mass of people determined their own destiny, that in Russia there was one of the most democratic systems at a certain period of time, that is very unpopular,” explains Reznik.

See too…

O Good Living continues to recover the memory of the 60th anniversary of the military coup: at the Memorial da Resistência, in São Paulo, the reporting team shows an exhibition about women who faced the dictatorship.

It’s never too late to start over and make dreams come true: in 2024, the University of Brasília (UnB) held the first entrance exam for people over 60 years old.

And at Comida de Verdade, chef Gema Soto teaches a recipe that has a connection with the black Venezuelan population: the warm okra salad.

When and where to watch?

No YouTube do Brazil in fact every Saturday at 1:30 pm, there is a new program. Just click here.

On TVT: Saturday at 1:30 pm; with reruns on Sunday at 6:30 am and Tuesday at 8 pm on channel 44.1 – open HD digital signal in Greater São Paulo and channel 512 NET HD-ABC.

On TV Brasil (EBC), Monday at 6:30 am.

On TVCom Maceió: Saturday at 10:30 am, with a repeat on Sunday at 10 am, on NET channel 12.

On TV Floripa: Saturday at 1:30 pm, reruns throughout the program, on channel 12 of NET.

On TVU Recife: Saturdays at 12:30 pm, with reruns on Tuesdays at 9 pm, on channel 40 UHF digital.

On TVE Bahia: Saturday at 12:30 pm, with a repeat on Thursday at 7:30 am, on channel 30 (7.1 on the device) of the digital signal.

On UnBTV: Fridays at 10:30 am and 4:30 pm, in Brasília on Channel 15 on NET.

TV UFMA Maranhão: Thursday at 10:40 am, on open channel 16.1, Sky 316, TVN 16 and Claro 17.

Tune in

On the radio, the Bem Viver program airs from Monday to Friday, from 11 am to 12 pm, with repeats on Sundays, at 10 am, on Rádio Brasil Atual. The tune is 98.9 FM in Greater São Paulo and 93.3 FM in Baixada Santista.

The program is also broadcast on Rádio Brasil de Fato, from 11am to 12pm, Monday to Friday. The Bem Viver program is also on Spotify, Google Podcasts, Itunes, Pocket Casts and Deezer platforms.

Editing: Matheus Alves de Almeida


Source: www.brasildefato.com.br



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