The Boston Globe

Ukraine remembers the uprising that foreshadow­ed war

Honors those lost during the Maidan protests

- By Constant Méheut

KYIV — A war-battered Ukraine on Tuesday commemorat­ed the 10th anniversar­y of the so-called Maidan revolution, the popular uprising that toppled a pro-Russia president, showcased the nation’s embrace of European values, and foreshadow­ed the current conflict with Moscow.

Across Ukraine, people laid flowers at monuments honoring those killed during the protests, and officials hailed the uprising that started in 2013 as a milestone on the road to achieving greater democracy and to standing up to Russia.

In a video address released Tuesday morning, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said: “Ten years ago, we began a new chapter in our struggle. Ten years ago, Ukrainians launched their first counteroff­ensive.” During the Maidan revolution, he added, “the first victory in today’s war took place.”

The uprising, ignited by outrage at a decision by Ukraine’s president at the time, Viktor Yanukovych, to shelve a trade agreement with Brussels, was a powerful demonstrat­ion of the country’s commitment to Europe.

The current war has accelerate­d those aspiration­s, with Ukraine now officially a candidate to become a member of the European Union. Several top European officials visited Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, on Tuesday to reaffirm their support, including Charles Michel, president of the European Council, and Boris Pistorius, Germany’s defense minister.

The Maidan uprising “is also part of Europe’s history,” Kateryna Zarembo, an associate fellow at the Kyiv-based New Europe Center, said in an interview, adding that the visits Tuesday demonstrat­ed Europe’s strong commitment to Ukraine.

The commemorat­ions were shrouded in a particular­ly deep sense of sadness as Ukrainians reflected not only on the lives lost in the struggle for independen­ce over the past decade but also on the prospect that many more will die as bloody fighting continues.

“These men are now watching us from the sky,” Rostyslav Karandieie­v, Ukraine’s acting minister of culture, said during a memorial in Kyiv honoring the 100 or so participan­ts of the Maidan uprising killed by police.

“They were the first, but unfortunat­ely not the last,” he said.

Around him, mourners stood in the bitter morning cold holding bouquets of white and yellow chrysanthe­mums, next to marble portraits of the victims.

They recited prayers, sang the Ukrainian anthem, and shouted “Glory to Ukraine! Glory for the heroes!” — the slogan around which the nation has rallied since Russia invaded last year.

The Maidan protests erupted Nov. 21, 2013, hours after Yanukovych announced that he was rejecting the trade deal with the European Union in favor of closer economic ties with Russia.

The protests were peaceful at first but escalated into violence as police started firing live ammunition into crowds of demonstrat­ors, who armed themselves with makeshift shields and clubs. The fighting killed more than 100 people, including a dozen police officers.

Increasing­ly unpopular, Yanukovych fled to Russia and was removed from office by Ukraine’s parliament, a moment that the country celebrated as a historic democratic victory.

But Russia viewed the protests as a Western-backed coup intended to distance Moscow from a country that used to be in its sphere of influence. Shortly after, Russian troops seized Crimea and instigated a separatist uprising in eastern Ukraine.

At the memorial in Kyiv on Tuesday, Ohla Salo, a museum worker, said, “When Maidan won, Putin understood that it would not be possible to take control of Ukraine other than by military means.”

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