While studying political science and communications in Bar-Ilan University’s International Program, I have met people from all over the world. My classmates, however, are predominantly Russian. The ratio of Russians to Ukrainians is about 6:1. Due to the Ukrainian crisis, the tension in the classes is palpable. As an uninvolved American, I listened quietly and attempted to unpack both sides of the conflict, and only recently came to a conclusion. I was moved the most, not by the arguments of a Russian or Ukrainian but by a Georgian.

At the outbreak of the war, I was consuming only Western media, convinced that Russian President Vladimir Putin was the devil incarnate: greedy, power-hungry, and selfish. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky embodied nobility, legitimacy, and selflessness. One of my professors, a New Yorker, basically said as much in class. This led to an uproar from the Russians, and then a debate ensued. Russia is only protecting itself from Western threats, they said. 

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