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Encyclopedia > Pionerskaya Pravda

Pionerskaya Pravda (Пионе́рская Пра́вда) is an all-Russian newspaper. Initially it was an all-Union newspaper of the Soviet Union. Its name may be translated as "Truth for Young Pioneers".


The newspaper has been founded in 1925 in Moscow. In 1970s and 1980s its circulation approached 10,000,000 (almost every child in the Soviet Union had supscription).


The newspaper continues to exist today, but now it is not associated with Young Pioneers, and the circulation is greatly reduced.


External links

  • The official city of Pionerskaya Pravda (http://www.pionerka.ru) (in Russian)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Pravda at AllExperts (2040 words)
Pravda (, "The Truth") was a leading newspaper of the Soviet Union and an official organ of the Central Committee of the Communist Party between 1918 and 1991.
For example, Izvestia — which covered foreign relations — was the organ of the Supreme Soviet, Trud was the organ of the trade union movement, Komsomolskaya Pravda was the organ of the Komsomol organization, and Pionerskaya Pravda was the organ of Young Pioneers.
Pravda today is often used in a negative sense, to criticise newspapers that are one-sided and bias, inparticular towards a leftist point-of-view.
NodeWorks - Encyclopedia: Pravda (1106 words)
Pravda was founded as a newspaper for workers in 1912; the Bolsheviks started legal publication of the newspaper in St.
Pravda was regarded by the communists as a successor to the socialist newspaper Iskra.
Pravda (the Slovak word for truth) is also the name of a newspaper in Slovakia, which in the past was the Slovak equivalent of the Russian newspaper.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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