The Jerusalem Post

Online army deploys to save Ukraine’s art and heritage

- • By UMBERTO BACCHI

TBILISI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – As air raid sirens sounded over Kyiv in late February, some of the staff at Ukraine’s Ivan Honchar Museum decided to leave the relative safety of the bomb shelter and return to their desks to back up digital copies of its folk culture artefacts.

Days before Russia invaded, Russian President Vladimir Putin had called Ukraine an artificial creation – words the ethnograph­ic museum’s staff saw as a threat to the distinctiv­e Ukrainian culture they have dedicated their careers to documentin­g.

“We had a big responsibi­lity to save this culture,” said Myroslava Vertiuk, deputy head at the museum, whose collection includes art, paintings, clothing and musical instrument­s.

The employees’ rescue mission involved uploading digital copies of the exhibits, as well as intangible assets such as recordings of local folk music to a cloud database.

“We wanted to make sure that if the collection was damaged or destroyed, we could rebuild it,” Vertiuk told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone.

Cloud storage was made available by the American Folklore Society (AFS) – a nonprofit organisati­on at Indiana University in the United States – as part of a wider grassroots effort to save Ukraine’s cultural heritage following the February 24 invasion.

As Russian bombs started dropping, AFS contacted researcher­s, ethnomusic­ologists, heritage scholars, folklorist­s, museums and private collectors who might have field recordings, interviews, photograph­s and material, and offered to help them.

“What we’re doing then is providing individual cloud storage links so that folks can back up their data,” said AFS’s executive director, Jessica Turner.

“We can store it, make sure that it is clean (of viruses) and safe... and have it ready for them when they need it again.”

Hundreds of historians, librarians and IT specialist­s from around the world have joined forces since the invasion began to form an online army to backup everything from websites to libraries, before buildings and servers are hit.

Saving Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Online (SUCHO), a project launched by three researcher­s from the United States and Europe who met on Twitter, has been archiving at-risk websites and digital content, with help from about 1,200 volunteers.

“We’re trying to capture publicly available websites before they go down,” said co-founder Quinn Dombrowski, an academic technology specialist at Stanford University in California.

“Once we’ve archived one of these websites, we basically have a copy of it that people can navigate and view as if it were live.”

About 15% of the thousands of websites that volunteers have flagged as in need of back up are currently offline, although the number fluctuates, according to the group.

In some cases, this is due to servers, internet cables and powerlines being destroyed or damaged. In others, it is because bills have not been paid.

“Ukrainians have a lot of priorities right now other than paying for their website servers,” said Dombrowski.

The Ukrainian Research Institute at Harvard University has also been offering cloud storage to academics in need, and has created a digital library of the invasion.

The latter is made with an online tool that repeatedly captures a select number of web pages, such as news websites and politician­s’ social media, at different time intervals.

This provides researcher­s with a time machine of sorts that allows them to go back and see what was being reported or said online throughout the war.

“Our role is an extension of the librarian role in general: to collect, to preserve and give access to informatio­n,” said the project’s lead Olha Aleksic, a Harvard bibliograp­her.

“Whether we’re talking about the books, the printed materials, or digital data, the primary goal remains the same.”

Poland’s Pilecki Institute has been recording witness testimonie­s, mainly from refugees, to collect and preserve evidence of war crimes, including against cultural heritage, such as the destructio­n of museums and archaeolog­ical sites.

WEBSITES AND DATA

The success of such initiative­s has been mixed in the turmoil of war.

Sebastian Majstorovi­c, a co-founder of SUCHO, said they captured the website of the state archive of the embattled city of Kharkiv, including scans of census records and court files, just hours before it went down.

Yet, the list of websites they did not reach in time is painfully long, he added.

Iryna Voloshyna, a researcher at Indiana University, lamented the fate of the small museum of Ivankiv, near Kyiv, which housed works of renowned folk artist Maria Primachenk­o, and went up in flames even before AFS found out about it.

Back up efforts are ongoing almost two months after the war started.

SUCHO has a team following developmen­ts on the ground to draw up a priority list of websites that need archiving first.

AFS is receiving data from researcher­s who were only recently able to return to their homes, as Russian troops shifted their focus to the east – as well as others who sought shelter in rural areas with poor connectivi­ty, said Voloshyna.

“We’re often talking about terabytes of data, including videos and years of work. Even if the connection were stable, sometimes it takes a week to finish an upload,” she said.

There are other challenges: Turner of AFS said the material they receive is often littered with malware, which takes time to clear.

The group is also asking researcher­s unpleasant but necessary questions about what to do with their work, such as photos and videos, if they do not survive the war, she said as the initial agreement was only to provide short-term storage.

Meanwhile, SUCHO is crowdfundi­ng to ship equipment, such as scanners and cameras to institutio­ns lacking a digital version of their collection­s to back them up.

It said these digital records could be used to document potential war crimes, for example, if catalogued items were looted or destroyed.

SUCHO also hopes to use collected data for an online exhibition of Ukrainian works – an initiative that Vertiuk of the Ivan Honchar Museum said was urgently needed.

“A big part of this war is about informatio­n, history and culture,” Vertiuk said.

“Ukrainian culture is often shown abroad as part of a broader Russian culture. Now, it’s time to make our unique Ukrainian voice heard loud and clear.”

 ?? (Wikimedia Commons) ?? THE IVAN Honchar Museum in Kyiv.
(Wikimedia Commons) THE IVAN Honchar Museum in Kyiv.

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