News
April 18, 2026
Fairytales of Karelia will become available in audio on the web

This year, audio versions of fairytales from Karelia in the Karelian, Veps, and Finnish languages will be added to the digital platform "Voices of Peoples of Russia." The project is supported by the Presidential Fund for Cultural Initiatives. The selection of texts in Karelia involved the Institute of Linguistics, Literature and History KarRC RAS, and the fairytales were voiced by actors of the National Theatre of Karelia.
A meeting between Irina Novak, Director of the Institute of Linguistics, Literature and History, Maria Statsenko, "Voices of Peoples of Russia" Project Leader and Director of the Ideas and Meanings NGO (St. Petersburg), and Irina Semyonova, Project Coordinator, was held at the KarRC RAS. Previously, the organization requested permission from the institute to use fairytales from the collections produced by scientists after years of expeditions across northwestern Russia. The ILLH KarRC RAS has been conducting such field studies since the 1930s. The materials gathered over several decades have been systematized, transcribed, translated into Russian, and published at different times in collected volumes.



The "Voices of Peoples of Russia" project is a digital platform of voiced fairytales, where native languages are presented in a modern format. Its initiators advocate the importance of maintaining cultural continuity between generations and languages, especially in the Year of Unity of Peoples of Russia. The project team selects folklore texts, conducts media expeditions, creates audio recordings, and makes them freely available on the digital platform and podcast services, thereby compiling a "Sounded Map of Voices of Peoples of Russia". The project's goal is to bring the mother tongue back into families through fairytales, to make it part of the contemporary cultural environment, and secure the connection between generations.

– I consider it a good result that fairytales from Karelia were included in the project already at the first stage of its implementation. Importantly, all the selected texts are voiced and recorded by professional actors in the studio. We have agreed with the project organizers that we will also feed these recordings into the VepKar platform in the 'Audio Map of Balto-Finnic Languages of Karelia' section, – informed Irina Novak.

VepKar is an open Veps and Karelian corpus, created through collaboration between linguists and mathematicians at the Karelian Research Centre RAS. It contains samples of both written texts and spoken Karelian and Veps speech. Currently, the platform holds over nine thousand texts with nearly three million word usages. The guests also showed interest in this resource because it contains lots of folklore materials, which may also be used in the course of the project.

The first fairytales selected for the project required no modification. Yet, in the future, the institute's staff would be willing to provide expertise, for example, if texts will have to be adapted for a wider audience while preserving genre conventions.




Andrey Gorshkov, actor of the National Theater of Karelia

As the project organizers explained, the first stage involves creating a series of audio fairytales of Finno-Ugric peoples of Russia: Karelian, Veps, Komi-Permyak, Mordovian, and Finnish. Each fairytale is released in two versions – in the native language and as a literary translation into Russian. A total of 25 fairytales will be recorded. High-quality sound design is created by professional audio engineers. The folk tales in Balto-Finnic languages were voiced by actors of the National Theatre of Karelia Andrey Gorshkov, Alexandra Aniskina, Yulia Kuikka, and Ronja Kinnunen.



– The fairytales that our grandmothers read to us when we were children are ready-made modern podcasts. Our task is to locate them, record them in the minority languages and in Russian, and make them most widely accessible on all Internet platforms. In the future, it will also be possible to listen to a fairytale in a minority language using Yandex’s virtual voice assistant, Alice, – added the Project Coordinator Irina Semyonova.

Photos: KarRC RAS and Maria Statsenko

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June 25, 2026
Admissions for 2026/2027 doctoral studies at KarRC RAS are underway

On June 20, Karelian Research Centre began accepting applications for doctoral studies. A total of 8 full-time positions are available this year, 6 of which are state-funded. The submission deadline is July 2.
Applicants willing to take a doctoral course at the Karelian Research Centre RAS can submit their papers between June 20 and July 2.
June 24, 2026
Scientists of the Karelian Research Centre RAS propose restoring Karelian forests using locally sourced and bred planting stock

Scientists of the KarRC RAS took part in a meeting of the Head of the Republic of Karelia, Artur Parfenchikov, with representatives of the scientific community, members of the regional Legislative Assembly, as well as heads of the republic’s agencies, enterprises, and organizations dealing with reforestation.
Speaking at the meeting, KarRC RAS CEO Olga Bakhmet and Director of the Forest Research Institute KarRC RAS Boris Raevsky focused on research results, analyzed the situation with forest regeneration in Karelia, and proposed recommendations for augmenting and accelerating forest regeneration using domestic production of seeds and seedlings.
June 23, 2026
Karelian Research Centre RAS will contribute to creating bio-ecovillages in the Arctic zone of Karelia

KarRC RAS leader Olga Bakhmet gave a talk at a working meeting with the leadership of the Kurchatov Institute, ministers, and CEOs of Karelian enterprises and organizations, chaired by the Head of the Republic of Karelia, Artur Parfenchikov. The talk focused on the development of technologies for bioeconomy and their application in bio-ecovillages.