Pro-women and pro-war?
While many Russian feminists have been outspoken critics of the war in Ukraine, some have sought to combine feminist and nationalist ideologies

The day after Russia invaded Ukraine, a group of Russian feminists banded together to found the Feminist Anti-War Resistance (FAS) online. The organisation quickly gained worldwide media attention, with its Telegram channel gaining more than 26,000 followers in its first month. Its most successful action, Women in Black, brought “thousands of women around the world” to the streets every Friday, FAS co-founder Lelya Nordik said in a 2022 interview with Radio Liberty. The women dressed all in black — and sometimes carried white roses — to memorialise Ukrainian victims and demonstrate their opposition to the war.
Without the patriarchal “myth of the warrior,” Garina said, in which a man is fundamentally a “defender,” it would have been much harder for the Russian authorities to rally support for its invasion of Ukraine.
These feminists “say that they are anti-war, but in reality they are employing propaganda tropes and disseminating them,” Rossman said. “This is very problematic.”

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