Today I'm in Ruski Krstur (Serbia) - a town where the majority of people are Rusyn. Let's check it out! Гнеска єм в Рускым Керестурі (Сербія) - містечко в котрым векшіст мешканців сут Русини - подьме!
It is interresting, because I am Boyko from eastern Slovakia (Nova Sedlica), and this language they speak in video is exactly how non-Rusyn Slovaks speak in Snina, I think somebody has written that here in comment section :D We call them here Sotáci.
Za mnje rusnaka zoz ruskoho kerestura najbljizši jasik to slovacki ja bi barz ljubel naj kerestur ma vecej turistoh htorih zanjima o našej istoriji i kulturi
Thank you for sharing your experience. My grandfather was born in Ruski Kerestur. I would love to journey there and find out more information about my ancestry and his family. Are you from area as well? I’m half Serbian and half Rusyn scene, and I live in the United States.
Вельо лэпше би було кед би приповедал дахто хто зна голэм кеди написана Граматика и ище вельо койцо цо вельо важнэйше од того же пан нэ зна ходзиц у древянкох...
I wish we could hear how their language sounds. Those nameplates look pretty much Ukrainian. Also they belong to Greek-Catholic Church like many people in western Ukraine. I wonder if they ever visited mountainous Prešov region or Zakarpattia and spoke Ruthenian to the locals
@@Alex_PeresvetЧто за глупости? Эти люди никогда не жили с русскими в одном государстве. У них свой язык, своя конфессия и традиции. Даже поляки ближе к русским, чем русины
I am learning Ukrainian, have been working with Slovak 20 years and have friends from Russia. Rusinski is my first language and we can understand all these languages but ukrainian is the closest. Letters are almost the same, but there are many totally different words, so definitely not the same languages!