I, too, grew up in Ukraine and my encounters with religion were similar to Mentalist's. I used to live with my grandma while my mom was working in the city and while both my brother and me had been baptised the general family opinion was 'Yeah, look, there's god somewhere, but more importantly, be nice, respect people, be honest and don't waste resources.' I used to have a friend at school whose family was very religious, including bible study and going to church every sunday.. My grandma declared that a waste of time and claimed that if she wanted to talk to god she could just as well do that in her own kitchen.
So yeah, I mostly grew up with that special mix of soviet atheism and orthdox christianity. Nobody went out of their way to be religious but, you know, believing's not going to do you any harm. There weren't any at my grandma's house, but when we moved away from her, my mom started hanging some icons on the walls of her bedroom and she took me to church a couple of times, so she's more religious than my grandma used to be, yet she never insisted I do anything. Since nobody ever bothered to educate me about religion I just thought that's a whole bunch of weird stuff.
I had more encounters with religion when we moved to Germany, actually, than I'd had in rural Ukraine. When we moved here we had to decide whether I was going to attend Catholic or Protestant religious education classes at school and my mom went 'What the hell? Why are they making you do that?'. I went to Protestant classes just because I thought the kids there were less annoying
As to what I'd teach children, to be honest, I have no idea, I'd probably go a similar route to my mom's, but with more proper education about facts and history. I remember being very lost about this whole faith thing, I didn't understand what it was all about and what it's got to do with me.
This post has been edited by Puck: 23 June 2014 - 10:57 PM