Public radio’s longest-running daily global news program.
©2025 The World from PRX
PRX is a 501(c)(3) organization recognized by the IRS: #263347402.

Many Russians have mixed feelings about the Pussy Riot trial and what it says about freedom of expression in Russia.
“Pussy Riot” in court in Moscow on Friday. (Photo: REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin)
The Pussy Riot trial has sparked an international outcry.
Three members of the feminist punk band were convicted Friday for “committing hooliganism motivated by religious hatred.”
Many in the West say it shows the lack of freedom of speech under President Vladimir Putin.
But many Russians have mixed feelings about the case.
Natalia Antonova, playwright and deputy editor of the Moscow News, says many Russians were hurt and offended by the band’s illicit performance of a punk prayer in a famous Moscow cathedral.
Not many Russians are regular church-goers, says Antonova, but most Russians retain a symbolic attachment to the church.
Nevertheless Antonova agrees this could be a significant turning point for Russia, and many artists will start to worry about what they can and can’t do in future, without paying a very high price.