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NEWS | March 16, 2017

7th MSC Civil Affairs Soldiers learn Russian language basics

By Lt. Col. Jefferson Wolfe 7th Mission Support Command

KAISERSLAUTERN, Germany — Seven 7th Mission Support Command Soldiers are spending the week learning Russian.

The Army Reserve Soldiers are from the 361st Civil Affairs Brigade headquarters in Kaiserslautern and its direct reporting unit, the 457th Civil Affairs Battalion in Grafenwoehr.

The introductory class is taking place from March 14-17 at the 7th MSC headquarters building on Daenner Kaserne.

The Defense Language Institute mobile training team is conducting the training, said Maj. Zulma Andrews, the 361st CA BDE operations officer.

“It’s basically a foundation class,” said Irina Mikhailova, the course instructor, from DLI at Ramstein Air Force Base.

The goal is for the students to get comfortable reading words in Russian, which is rated as one of the more difficult languages for English speakers to learn, she said.

DLI ranks Russian as a Class III language, and the hardest languages are Class IV.

Students will be learning to read the characters in the Russian language, which consists of 33 letters from the Cyrillic script.

Remembering the different letters has been a challenge because some of the letters look the same as in English but represent different sounds in Russian, said Sgt. Justine Westbrook, 361st CA BDE.  

“The English N sounds like H in Russian,” she said.

Westbrook had to shift to run after speaking Hungarian. The day before the class started, she returned from a personal trip to Hungary.

“It was difficult, because I wanted to reply in Hungarian,” she said.

She is planning to attend college in Hungary this fall, and was stationed there on active-duty before she transitioned to the Army Reserve.

Sgt. Maj. Bobby White also speaks Italian, which he learned from living in Italy for 16 years.

“Russian is harder to learn than Italian,” he said.

He did have some experience with Russian before the class, however, as he worked with colleagues at United States European Command who spoke it.

Staff Sgt. Jared McCauley also speaks German and French.

“Every language is hard to learn,” he said. A student has to put in time and effort to learn any language, he added.

At the end of the week, the students should know the Russian alphabet, some basic greetings, politeness phrases, words for family and food as well as some military phrases, Mikhailova said.

There will be a final practical exercise as well, she said.

“We’ll be going to a Russian café, and they will interview the owners,” she added, noting that they will likely learn enough during the week for basic conversations.

“I think that will help prepare us real world,” Westbrook said.

The class is a pilot program to build proficiency by holding one day of language training every month, White said.

Five of the students are in positions that call for knowledge of the Russian language, Andrews said. Others are attending to broaden their knowledge.

“It's all part of our commander's directive to ensure Russian training and develop our Command Language Program that is still in its infancy,” she said.

This introductory class from DLI may open doors to future training opportunities, she added.