Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Ukraine erasing its links to the past

Vestiges of Soviet, Russian influence removed, renamed

- By Jamey Keaten Associated Press

KYIV, Ukraine — On the streets of Kyiv, Fyodor Dostoevsky is on the way out. Andy Warhol is on the way in.

Ukraine is accelerati­ng efforts to erase the vestiges of Soviet and Russian influence from its public spaces by pulling down monuments and renaming hundreds of streets to honor its own artists, poets, soldiers, independen­ce leaders and others — including heroes of this year’s war.

Following Moscow’s invasion on Feb. 24 that has killed or injured untold numbers of civilians and soldiers and pummeled buildings and infrastruc­ture, Ukraine’s leaders have shifted a campaign that once focused on dismantlin­g its Communist past into one of “de-Russificat­ion.”

Streets that honored revolution­ary leader Vladimir Lenin or the Bolshevik Revolution were largely already gone; now Russia, not Soviet legacy, is the enemy. It’s part punishment for crimes meted out by Russia, and part affirmatio­n of a national identity by honoring Ukrainian notables who have been mostly overlooked.

Russia, through the Soviet Union, is seen by many in Ukraine as having stamped its domination on its smaller southweste­rn neighbor for generation­s, consigning its artists, poets and military heroes to relative obscurity compared with more famous Russians.

If victors write history, as some say, Ukrainians are doing some rewriting of their own — even as their fate hangs in the balance. Their national identity is having what may be an unpreceden­ted surge, in ways large and small.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has taken to wearing a black T-shirt that says: “I’m Ukrainian.”

He is among the many Ukrainians who were born speaking Russian as a first language. Now, they shun it — or at least limit their use of it. Ukrainian has traditiona­lly been spoken more in the western part of the country — a region that early on shunned Russian and Soviet imagery.

Large parts of northern, eastern and central Ukraine are making that linguistic change. The eastern city of Dnipro on Friday pulled down a bust of Alexander Pushkin — like Fyodor Dostoevsky, a giant of Russian literature in the 19th century.

This month, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko announced about 30 more streets in the capital will be rechristen­ed.

Volodymyr Prokopiv, deputy head of the Kyiv City Council, said Ukraine’s “de-Communizat­ion” policy since 2015 had been applied in a “soft” way so as not to offend sensitivit­ies among the country’s Russian-speaking and even pro-Moscow population.

“With the war, everything changed. Now the Russian lobby is now powerless — in fact, it doesn’t exist,” Prokopiv said from his office overlookin­g Khreschati­k Street, the main thoroughfa­re in the capital city. “Renaming these streets is like erasing the propaganda that the Soviet Union imposed on Ukraine.”

During the war, the Russians have also sought to stamp their culture and domination in areas they have occupied.

Andrew Wilson, a professor at University College London, cautioned about “the dangers in rewriting the periods in history where Ukrainians and Russians did cooperate and build things together: I think the whole point about de-imperializ­ing Russian culture should be to specify where we have previously been blind — often in the West.”

Wilson noted that the Ukrainians “are taking a pretty broad-brush approach.”

He cited Pushkin, the 19th century Russian writer, who might understand­ably rankle some Ukrainians.

To them, for example, the Cossacks — a Slavic people in Eastern Europe — “mean freedom, whereas Pushkin depicts them as cruel, barbarous, antiquated. And in need of Russian civilizati­on,” said Wilson, author of “The Ukrainians.”

In its program, Kyiv conducted an online survey, and received 280,000 suggestion­s in a single day, Prokopiv said. Then, an expert group sifted through the responses, and municipal officials and street residents give a final stamp of approval.

Under the “de-Communizat­ion” program, about 200 streets were renamed in Kyiv before this year. In 2022 alone, that same number of streets have been renamed and another 100 are scheduled to get renamed soon, Prokopiv said.

A street named for philosophe­r Friedrich Engels will honor Ukrainian avantgarde poet Bohdan-Ihor Antonych. A boulevard whose name translates as “Friendship of Peoples” — an allusion to the diverse ethnicitie­s under the USSR — will honor Mykola Mikhnovsky, an early proponent of Ukrainian independen­ce.

Another street recognizes the “Heroes of Mariupol” — fighters who held out for months against a devastatin­g Russian campaign in that Sea of Azov port city that eventually fell. A street named for the Russian city of Volgograd is now called Roman Ratushnyi Street in honor of a 24-year-old civic and environmen­tal activist who was killed in the war.

A small street in northern Kyiv still bears Dostoevsky’s name but soon will be named for Warhol, the late Pop Art visionary from the United States whose parents had family roots in Slovakia, across Ukraine’s western border.

 ?? DNIPRO REGION ADMINISTRA­TION ?? Municipal workers dismantle a monument depicting Russian writer Alexander Pushkin on Friday in Dnipro, Ukraine.
DNIPRO REGION ADMINISTRA­TION Municipal workers dismantle a monument depicting Russian writer Alexander Pushkin on Friday in Dnipro, Ukraine.

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