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Flash Points: All Crimea’s a stage

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Sun, Sep 25, 2022 01:59 PM

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And more reads on political theater. September 25, 2022 | To read unlimited articles featured in Fla

And more reads on political theater. [Foreign Policy Logo]( [Foreign Policy Flashpoints]( September 25, 2022 | [View in browser]( To read unlimited articles featured in Flash Points, [sign in]( or [subscribe today](. On Friday, four regions in occupied Ukraine began voting in Moscow-orchestrated referendums on whether to join Russia. The vote, denounced as a sham by Western and Ukrainian officials, recalls the disputed Crimean referendum in 2014, which Moscow used to justify its annexation of the peninsula. On the eve of the 2014 vote, journalist Dimiter Kenarov attended a satirical play by Nikolai Gogol in Simferopol, Crimea’s capital. The parallels between the production, which dealt with political corruption, and what he witnessed in the region were not lost on Kenarov. The referendum, he wrote, was “nothing more than theater-of-the-absurd: a group of people pretending to make a choice and others pretending to scrutinize the fairness of that choice, while in fact there was no choice at all.” Theater, repression, and political freedom are intertwined not just in Crimea, but around the world. This collection of reporting and essays from the FP archives explores these connections, as well as efforts to keep theater in all its forms alive.—Chloe Hadavas --------------------------------------------------------------- [Watching Gogol in Simferopol]( Life imitates art in Crimea, where nothing seems real anymore except the tears and the vodka. By Dimiter Kenarov --------------------------------------------------------------- [Orban’s Macbeth]( The tragic figure behind the Hungarian populist leader’s efforts to remake his country’s theater. By Dariusz Kalan --------------------------------------------------------------- [The Refugee Puppeteer]( Inside Zaatari Camp, one volunteer is on a mission to help war-weary children overcome their disabilities and fears with theater. By Alice Su --------------------------------------------------------------- [The Elephant in the Comedy Club]( A troupe of popular young comics avoids mixing humor and politics in Rwanda. By Kavitha Surana --------------------------------------------------------------- [Tashkent Underground]( The Ilkhom Theatre Company has kept freedom alive in Uzbekistan since before the fall of the Soviet Union. By Matteo Fagotto Photo: Matilde Gattoni for Foreign Policy --------------------------------------------------------------- SPONSORED [
Restoring Trust in Election Results]( [Restoring Trust in Election Results]( Lack of trust is becoming a defining element of elections in countries around the world. From the rejection of candidates to the refusal of electoral outcomes, election legitimacy is one of the most pressing issues of modern democracy. On 9/28, join FP in partnership with IFES, for a discussion on how to restore trust in elections and democratic institutions around the world. [Register Here](. --------------------------------------------------------------- The United Nations faces some of the most serious challenges to its mission yet: one of the greatest wars on European soil since the Cold War; new threats to nuclear security; a global food crisis; and many other crises. How have the high-level meetings between world leaders at UNGA 77 impacted the biggest international stories? Tune in to watch FP’s A-list team of reporters discuss the biggest stories in world affairs. [Sign up.]( FOLLOW FP ON This email was sent to {EMAIL} because you are subscribed to FP’s Flashpoints newsletter. Want a friend to receive this newsletter? [Forward it]( now. Want to receive other FP newsletters? [Manage]( your FP newsletter preferences. [unsubscribe]( | [privacy policy]( | [contact us]( | [partner with FP]( Foreign Policy magazine is a division of Graham Holdings Company. All contents © 2022 The Slate Group, LLC. All rights reserved. Foreign Policy, 1750 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC 20006. [Link](

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