A documentary about interethnic relations in Russia as seen through the eyes of children and teenagers. The children in the film range in age from five to fifteen. The film was shot in Moscow, an enormous metropolis in which the problems of interethnic relations are particularly acute. At the center of the film are two groups of teenagers studying at the same school. The group of skinheads, confirmed fascists, believes that all blacks, Muslims and Jews should be kicked out of Moscow, and that life will then improve for Russians. Another group - their classmates - believes that people of various nationalities, ethnicity, and religious affiliations can and must live together in harmony. Apart from interviews with skinheads and their opponents, the film includes three vignettes. One was filmed at a Jewish school where children talk about their experience with anti-Semitism and how they only feel like themselves at their own school. Another vignette is dedicated to child-refugees from Chechnya and Abkhazia, where wars and interethnic conflicts had recently taken place. The third vignette tells of a black boy with the Russian name Lyosha Polyakov. His Russian mother abandoned him, and his father, a Tanzanian, returned home.