Not many of us in the west know very much about Ukraine. We think of it primarily as a former Soviet satellite now desperately fighting to keep the democracy it has so boldly and determinedly fought for. Yet Ukraine has a long and dramatic history. Who the people are, how they think, what makes them tick, these are things we only have vague ideas about.
This book not only brings earlier and recent history into focus, it also gives a portrayal of the people that brings them closer and alive in our minds.
In the following paragraphs, I have put together a paraphrased version of the various authors’ written statements according to theme.
Ukraine’s Relationship with Russia:
Ukraine was a former colony of Russia. “Many Russian citizens…view Ukraine and Belarus as their own territories which have temporarily gone out of control. Russia’s historical matrix is monarchy. People in many countries tried to justify the existence of the aristocracy by claiming that they were descendants of conquering tribes. Russians believed that the tsar was given by God. Ukraine, on the contrary, abandoned the prince-feudal system in favor of the hetman-Cossack system, rejecting all forms of monarchy. Today, by defending itself against Russia, Ukrainians are re-inventing their Cossack myth..This might explain why so many current Ukrinian soldiers in the East even copy the hairstyles and moustaches of Cossacks.
The relationship has always been difficult. The Russians looked down on their neighbor as lesser human beings, as simple peasants who needed to be controlled and who submitted tamely to exploitation. It is probably due to this that Ukrainians became a people who hated anyone telling them what to do and who yearned for, more than anything, independence. This was in direct confrontation with the “Russian model of paternalistic deification of authority- “
The Russian cliché about a typical Ukrainian is that he is cunning and greedy, while they consider themselves open, simple and sometimes passionate. Urkainians imagine themselves as good hosts, while their cliché about Russians is that they are drunkards who neglect their households.
The Holodomor :
The Second Soviets (1944) took everything away from the Ukrainian peasantry that had not been taken away by the First Soviets (1919) or by the Nazis (1939). Everything was collectivized. Wealthy peasants had to be exterminated according to a plan devised by Lenin. Others were sent to Siberia in exile. Thus came the 1947 famine. Enthusiasts took away all the grain from peasants and shot people for three hidden pieces of wheat. The goal was to get rid of the Ukrainian-speaking peasantry and replace them with Russian-speaking people from the Soviet Union.
The war with Russia began in 2014 when Russia annexed the Crimea and occupied the Donbas as a response to Ukraine’s radical attempt to liberate itself from Russian influence during the Euromaidan of 2013-2014-
The language issue:
In general, there are two formulas for a nation—an ethnic one and a political one. Supporters of the ethnic concept embrace language as the main criterion of national identification. Ukrainian and Russian are different like German is from Dutch. Less similar that Italian is to French. In the large cities, mainly Russian is spoken. Intellectuals and young people tend to speak Russian, the older people and country folk Ukrainian. In the 70’s and 80’s in Kyiv, a child or adult speaking Ukrainian was immediately associated with the peasantry. Switching to Russian was used to obtain the aura of an urban person, to get a job, to be liked. Even during the first years of independence, Ukrainian was associated with peasantry.
While the country is bilingual, Russian is gaining ground, and many consider Russian as the superior language. Others strongly feel that Ukrainian needs to be preserved for cultural identification and an as a national security policy.
It was believed in the Soviet Union that Communism would speak Russian—just as feudalism “spoke” French and capitalism “spoke” English.” Back then, it was normal for the elite and the common people to speak different languages.
The People and their identity:
Since 2014, Ukraine has taken in up to 14 million internally displaced persons from Crimea and Donbas.
There was a large-scale deportation of Jews from Catholic Eruope in the 15th and 16th centures, and many of them found shelter in Ukraine.
Ukrainians did not have:
-the Renaissance
-the Reformation
-the Enlightenment
-the Industrial Revolution
-modernism and modernization
-the Sexual Revolution
Ther are two large groups of people in Ukraine. The one strives for an integral Ukrainian identity, while the second has this split between Ukrainian and Russian identities.
Past and Present:
Ukraine proclaimed its independence in 1991. The first Maidan (uprising) was in 2004, the second in 2014. As this book was written (before the Russian invasion of 2022), more than 70 per cent of Ukrainians pioritized peace with Russia at any price.
Ukraine is a nation born in violence and traumas. It is probably a world champion at survival. Ukrainians to a certain degree feel like victims, because they were throughout history tortured and suppressed. Our country has ended up in the early part of the 21st century broken down, messed up and deformed. One of the most aggressive elements of human nature embodies itself in military campaigns against foreign territories. These campaigns involve annexing territories and capturing women.
But they also have their own history of massacres of Poles in NW Ukraine.
Whatever we say about the past, the past does matter, It is like gravity, which we have to take into consideration when we construct our aerial devices of the future.
The land:
40% of Ukraine is covered by fertile black soil with an unparalled depth of 1.5 meters. Arable land is about 58%, a proportion that can hardly be found anywhere in the world, excepting Canada and the U.S. The image of millions of tons of grain harvested on Ukrainian lands in 1913 acted as a magnet for all superpowers, which started WW1 the following year. Both Lenin and Hitler coveted Ukrainian resources.
Donbas is Ukraine beyond all doubts.
Literature:
Prominent contemporary Ukrainian writer, Yuri Andrukhovych, one of the creators of modern Ukrainian literature. Won many prizes. Contributes in this collection. Andriy Kurkov (Maidan Diaries) probably best well known. Volodymyr Rafeekno, from Donetsk, forced to elave his native city after Russian aggression, never able to return.
Serhif Plokhy (a contributor to this book) is one of the most internationally known Ukrainian historians. Wrote many books, such as “The Gates of Europe.”
Mykola Gogol, “remarkable figure of Ukrainian literature.”
Taras Schevchenko (1814-61), writer and poet, created the myth of Ukraine’s Golden Age. He is revered in Ukraine. He is their “Christmas and Easter”, celebrated by all. Most recognized hero of our time. Should absolutely read poem “My Thoughts,” which has been translated into almost every language.
Movies: Watch “Chernobyl”, a six-part series. You will become an expert on the last days of the USSR. Or “Donbas”, a feature film/doc.
Misc:
Pacifism, which became the norm for post-Nazi Germany, has turned into indriect support for military aggression. Many German politicians are so-called “Putinversteher” or people who think they understand Putin.
“Ukrainr is no longer just a security recipient, but a security provider for Europe.”
“Is it logical to call the biggest country in Europe a buffer zone? More than a thousand kilometers from East to west, with the geographical center of Europe located on its western border, 46 million people—which is far too many for it to be a buffer zone.”
There is a popular opinion that “you cannot fight Russia,” as if we would be poking a bear. But this is simply giving in to the bigger violent aggressor, which no one would agree to on an individual basis. The cops and the law would intervene. Only an aggressor wants war. It is normal to seek negotiations. What is not normal is to appease an aggressor. At the same time western countries and businesses were doing their best to partner with Russia, Moscow considered the West and NATO a danger. While the west is adhering to international principles and norms, Moscow ignores them.
Lenin had a dream of erasing the difference bewteen ethnic groups and nations.
The word “Rus” comes from the finnish language and means “oarsmen.” Russian surnames end with –ov, -ev, and –in (Putin, Lenin, Stalin) while Ukrainian surnames end with –ko and –uk.