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Ukrainian nationalism

Ukrainian nationalism is the promotion of the unity of Ukrainians as a people and the promotion of the identity of Ukraine as a nation state.[1] The origins of modern Ukrainian nationalism emerge during the 17th-century Cossack uprising against the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth led by Bohdan Khmelnytsky. Ukrainian nationalism draws upon a single national identity of culture, ethnicity, geographic location, language, politics (or the government), religion, traditions and belief in a shared singular history,[2] that dates back to the 9th century.[3]

St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery in Kyiv, reconstructed after Ukrainian independence

History

Nationalism emerged after the French Revolution while modern day Ukraine faced external pressure from the suzerainty of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Tsardom of Russia and the Ottoman Empire but the National Identity[4] dates back to the 9th century.[5]

Pre History

During the Iron Age, numerous tribes settled on the modern-day territory of Ukraine. In the first millennium BC, these tribes included the Cimmerians who settled the Dnieper river valley. On the Black Sea coast, the Greeks founded numerous colonies, such as Yalta. The Scythians, a semi-nomadic Iranic people who were from the Eurasian region known as Scythia, as well as Slavs and Varangians.[6]

The Ukrainian Language is an East Slavic language of the Indo-European language family.[7] The Ukrainian language was formed by convergence of tribal dialects from a common Proto-Slavic language, mostly due to an intensive migration of the population from the 6th to the 9th century.[8] The Varangians began referring to themselves as Rus as an identify separate from other East Slavic tribes.[9][10]

Kyiv Rus

During the 9th century the Varangians spread down the Dnipro River in the area of Kyiv and began to establish an identity as raids were made on Constantinople.[11] During this time a religious identity began to grow.

While the Varangians were not of Slavic descent, the adoption of Orthodox Christianity by Volodymyr the Great further strengthened the cultural links between the East Slavic tribes and created precursors to Ukrainian nationalism and identity such as a shared religious architecture. Volodymyr, who ruled Kievan Rus' from 980 to 1015, built a pagan temple on a hill in Kiev dedicated to six gods: Perun—the god of thunder and war, a god favored by members of the prince's druzhina (military retinue)"; Slav gods Stribog and Dazhd'bog; Mokosh—a goddess representing Mother Nature "worshipped by Finnish tribes"; Khors and Simargl, "both of which had Iranian origins, were included, probably to appeal to the Poliane."[12] The Primary Chronicle reports that, in the year 986, Vladimir met with representatives from several religions and settled on Eastern Christianity.

At the height of Kievan Rus' the state became the biggest in Eastern Europe cementing Ukrainian identity. Literature flourished, producing the Galician–Volhynian Chronicle.[13] Advancement in law occurred with the Slavic code of Russkaya Pravda. Religious architecture, which would become symbolism of nationalism also got built such as Saint Sophia Cathedral in Kiev and Saint Sophia Cathedral in Novgorod. Education in the area of Ukraine also got established at the founding of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra (monastery), which functioned in Kievan Rus' as an ecclesiastical academy.[14]

Kingdom of Ruthenia

The Kingdom of Ruthenia, or Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia, became the successor of Kievan Rus' and played a strong role in fermenting Ukrainian nationalism.[citation needed] The Principality united the western and southern branches of East Slavs, consolidating their identity and becoming a new center of political and economic life after the decline of Kiev.[15][unreliable source?]

Zaporozhian Cossacks

The Cossacks played a strong role in solidifying Ukrainian identity during the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Zaporozhian Cossacks lived on the Pontic–Caspian steppe below the Dnieper Rapids (Ukrainian: za porohamy), also known as the Wild Fields. They have played an important role in European geopolitics, participating in a series of conflicts and alliances with the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, Russia, and the Ottoman Empire.[16]

The Cossacks emerged as protection against Tartar raids but were given greater rights as their influence grew. Cossacks revolted as the Polish Kings tried to enforce Catholicism and Polish language on the people of Ukraine.[17][18] Precursors to the Ukrainian nation state identity emerged[citation needed] as Bohdan Khmelnytsky (c. 1595–1657), commanded the Zaporozhian Cossacks and led the Khmelnytsky Uprising against Polish rule in the mid-17th century. Khmelnytsky introduced a prop-government[clarification needed] based on a form of democracy which had been practised by Cossacks since the 15th century.

After a conflict between Ottoman-Polish and Polish-Muscovite Principalities, the official Cossack register decreased. This, together with intensified socioeconomic and national-religious oppression of the other classes in Ukrainian society, led to a number of Cossack uprisings in the 1630s. These eventually culminated in the Khmelnytsky Uprising, led by the hetman of the Zaporizhian Sich, Bohdan Khmelnytsky.[19]

Cossack Hetmanate

As a result of the mid–17th century Khmelnytsky Uprising, the Zaporozhian Cossacks briefly established an independent state, which later became the autonomous Cossack Hetmanate (1649–1764). It was placed under the suzerainty of the Russian Tsar from 1667, but was ruled by local hetmans for a century. The principal political problem of the hetmans who followed the Pereyeslav Agreement was defending the autonomy of the Hetmanate from Russian/Muscovite centralism. The hetmans Ivan Vyhovsky, Petro Doroshenko and Ivan Mazepa attempted to resolve this by separating Ukraine from Russia.[19]

These conflicts created the conditions for Ukrainian nationalism as Bohdan Khmelnytsky spoke of the liberation of the "entire Ruthenian people".[20] Following the uprisings and establishment of the Hetmanate state, Hetman Ivan Mazepa (1639–1709) focused on the restoration of Ukrainian culture and history during the early 18th century. Public works included the Saint Sophia Cathedral in Kyiv,[21] and the elevation the Kyiv Mohyla Collegium to the status of Kyiv Mohyla Academy in 1694.

During the reign of Catherine II of Russia, the Cossack Hetmanate's autonomy was progressively destroyed. After several earlier attempts, the office of hetman was finally abolished by the Russian government in 1764, and his functions were assumed by the Little Russian Collegium, thus fully incorporating the Hetmanate into the Russian Empire.[22]

On May 7, 1775, Empress Catherine II issued a direct order that the Zaporozhian Sich was to be destroyed. On June 5, 1775, Russian artillery and infantry surrounded the Sich and razed it to the ground. The Russian troops disarmed the Cossacks, and the treasury archives were confiscated. The Koshovyi Otaman, Petro Kalnyshevsky, was arrested and incarcerated in exile at Solovetsky Monastery. This marked the end of the Zaporozhian Cossacks.[23]

Russian and Habsburg Empires

An intense period of russification began for the areas of the Hetmanate. After 1785 the Romanov dynasty made a conscious effort to assimilate the Ruthenian and Cossack elites by granting them noble status within the Russian Empire. This led to a decline of the Ukrainian language among ruling elite. Ukrainian language and culture was preserved through folks stories and songs.[24] After the three partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the regions of Galicia (Halychyna) and Bukovina became part of the Habsburg Empire. Ukrainians living within the Austrian state did not face the same cultural repression and were influenced by the nationalism that spread after the French Revolution and the American Revolution.

After the Revolutions of 1848 in the Austrian Empire, the Ruthenian Council tried to establish a Ukrainian nation but this effort was thwarted. National identities developed among Belarusians, Ukrainians, and Carpatho-Rusyn (Czheck).[15]

World War I

 
Postcard published by the Ukrainian Brigade, "United Ukrainians defend against both Polish and Russian forces", 1920

With the collapse of the Russian Empire, a political entity which encompassed political, community, cultural, and professional organizations was established in Kyiv from the initiative from the Association of the Ukrainian Progressionists (TUP). This entity was called the Tsentralna Rada (Central Council) and was headed by the historian Mykhailo Hrushevskyi.[25] On 22 January 1918, the Tsentralna Rada declared Ukraine an independent country.[25] However, this government did not survive very long because of pressures not only from Denikin's Russian White Guard but also the Red Army, German, and Entente intervention, and local anarchists such as Nestor Makhno and Green Army of Otaman Zeleny.[25]

 
Territory that was claimed by Ukraine according to an old postcard dating 1919

Interwar period in Soviet Ukraine

As Bolshevik rule took hold in Ukraine, the early Soviet government had its own reasons to encourage the national movements of the former Russian Empire. Until the early 1930s, Ukrainian culture enjoyed a widespread revival due to Bolshevik concessions known as the policy of Korenization ("indigenization"). In these years an impressive Ukrainization program was implemented throughout the republic. In such conditions, the Ukrainian national idea initially continued to develop and even spread to a large territory with traditionally mixed population in the east and south that became part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.

At the same time, despite the ongoing Soviet-wide anti-religious campaign, the Ukrainian national Orthodox Church was created, the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church. The church was initially seen by the Bolshevik government as a tool in their goal to suppress the Russian Orthodox Church, always viewed with great suspicion by the regime for its being the cornerstone of the defunct Russian Empire and the initially strong opposition it took towards the regime change. Therefore, the government tolerated the new Ukrainian national church for some time and the UAOC gained a wide following among the Ukrainian peasantry.

These events greatly raised the national consciousness of the Ukrainians, and brought about the development of a new generation of Ukrainian cultural and political elite. This in turn raised the concerns of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, who saw danger in the Ukrainians' loyalty towards their nation competing with their loyalty to the Soviet State, and in the early 1930s "Ukrainian bourgeois nationalism" was declared to be the primary problem in Ukraine. The Ukrainization policies were abruptly and bloodily reversed, most of the Ukrainian cultural and political elite was arrested and executed, and the nation was decimated with the famine called the Holodomor.

Interwar period in the West

After World War I, what is now Ukraine was annexed by the newly created Second Polish Republic and by the Soviet Union. Both governments continued to view Ukrainian nationalism as a threat. In March 1926, Vlas Chubar (Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of Soviet Ukraine), gave a speech given in Kharkiv and later repeated it in Moscow, in which he warned of the danger that Symon Petliura, the exiled former President of the Ukrainian People's Republic, represented to the Soviet Government. It was as a result of this speech that the command was allegedly given to assassinate Petliura on French soil.[26]

On 25 May 1926, at 14:12, by the Gibert bookstore, Petliura was walking on Rue Racine near Boulevard Saint-Michel of the Latin Quarter in Paris and was approached by Sholom Schwartzbard. Schwartzbard asked in Ukrainian: "Are you Mr. Petliura?" Petliura did not answer but raised his walking cane. As Schwartzbard claimed in court, he pulled out a gun and shot him five times.[27][28]

News of Petliura's assassination triggered massive uprisings in Soviet-ruled Ukraine, particularly in Boromlia, Zhehailivtsi, (Sumy province), Velyka Rublivka, Myloradov (Poltava province), Hnylsk, Bilsk, Kuzemyn and all along the Vorskla River from Okhtyrka to Poltava, Burynia, Nizhyn (Chernihiv province) and other cities.[29] These revolts were brutally suppressed by the Soviet Government.[citation needed] The blind kobzars Pavlo Hashchenko and Ivan Kuchuhura Kucherenko composed a duma (epic poem) in memory of Symon Petliura. To date Petliura is the only modern Ukrainian politician to have a duma created and sung in his memory. This duma became popular among the kobzars of left-bank Ukraine and was also sung by Stepan Pasiuha, Petro Drevchenko, Bohushchenko, and Chumak.[30]

The core defense at the Schwartzbard trial, as presented by the noted French jurist Henri Torres, was that Petliura's assassin was avenging the deaths of his parents and the other Jewish victims of pogroms committed by Petliura's soldiers, whereas the prosecution (both criminal and civil) tried to show that Petliura was not responsible for the pogroms and that Schwartzbard was a Soviet spy. After a trial lasting eight days the jury acquitted Schwartzbard.[31][32]

Under the Polish rule, many Ukrainian schools were shut down in the 1920s, while the promise of national autonomy for Ukrainians was not fulfilled.[33] Tadeusz Hołówko, an advocate of concessions to the Ukrainian minority, was assassinated by the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) to prevent Polish-Ukrainian rapprochement.[34][35][33] Hołówko was killed while staying in a guest house owned by nuns of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church at Truskawiec on 29 August 1931. He was one of the victims of an assassination campaign waged by the OUN. His death, widely discussed in the Polish press, the international press, and even at a League of Nations session,[36][better source needed] was part of a vicious circle involving the OUN's violence and sabotage and the Second Polish Republic's brutal repression of ethnic-Ukrainians.[37][38][a] Some time later, a senior Polish police commissioner investigating Hołówko's assassination, Emilian Czechowski, also became an OUN assassination victim.[39][36] In the early 1930s, OUN members carried out more than 60 successful or attempted assassinations, many of them targeted at Ukrainians who opposed the organization's policies (for example a respected educator Ivan Babij).[39]

In 1933, the OUN retaliated against the Soviet State for the Holodomor by assassinating Alexei Mailov, a Soviet consular official stationed in Polish-ruled Lviv. On 15 June 1934, Poland's Minister of the Interior, Bronisław Pieracki, was also assassinated by the faction led by Stepan Bandera within the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists. Poland's Sanation government retaliated by creating, two days after the assassination, the Bereza Kartuska Prison. The prison's first detainees were the leadership of the opposition National Radical Camp (the ONR), who were arrested on 6–7 July 1934.[40] Many Ukrainian nationalists and Polish critics of the ruling party soon joined them there. Stepan Bandera and Mykola Lebed were arrested, tried, and sentenced to death for Pieracki's assassination. Their sentences were later commuted to life imprisonment.[41]

On 23 May 1938, OUN leader Yevhen Konovalets was assassinated by the NKVD inside a Rotterdam cafe. Konovalets was inside the cafe meeting with Pavel Sudoplatov, an NKVD mole who had infiltrated the OUN, and who gave Konovalets a bomb rigged to explode inside a box of chocolates. Sudoplatov walked calmly away, waited until he heard the bomb explode, then walked calmly to the nearest train station, and left the city. Sudoplatov later alleged in his memoirs to have been personally ordered by Joseph Stalin to assassinate Konovalets as revenge for the 1933 assassination at the Soviet consulate in Lviv. Stalin also felt that Konovalets was a figure maintaining the unity of the OUN and that his death would cause the organization to become further factionalized, torn apart, and annihilated from within.[42]

 
Flag of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and Ukrainian Insurgent Army during World War II. The red representing blood and the black representing the Black Soil of Ukraine. This flag is commonly used by modern far-right Ukrainian nationalists.

Due to his sudden disappearance, the OUN immediately suspected Sudoplatov of Konovalets' murder. Therefore, a photograph of Sudoplatov and Konovalets together was distributed to every OUN unit. According to Sudoplatov, "In the 1940s, SMERSH ... captured two guerilla fighters in Western Ukraine, one of whom had this photo of me on him. When asked why he was carrying it, he replied, 'I have no idea why, but the order is if we find this man to liquidate him.'"[43] Just as Stalin had hoped, the OUN following Konovalets' murder split into two parts. The older, more moderate members supported Andriy Melnyk and the OUN-M, while the younger and more radical members supported Stepan Bandera's OUN-B.

World War II

With the outbreak of war between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union in 1941, many nationalists in Ukraine thought that they would have an opportunity to create an independent country once again. An entire Ukrainian volunteer division of the SS had been created. Many of the fighters who had originally looked to the Nazis as liberators, quickly became disillusioned and formed the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) (Ukrainian: Українська Повстанська Армія), which waged military campaign against Germans and later Soviet forces as well against Polish civilians.[44]: 47–51  The primary goal of OUN was "the rebirth, of setting everything in order, the defense and the expansion of the Independent Council of Ukrainian National State." The OUN also revived the sentiment that "Ukraine is for Ukrainians."[44]: 48  In 1943, the UPA adopted a policy of massacring and expelling the Polish population.[45][46] The ethnic cleansing operation against the Poles began on a large scale in Volhynia in late February, or early spring,[46] of that year and lasted until the end of 1944.[47] 11 July 1943 was one of the deadliest days of the massacres, with UPA units marching from village to village, killing Polish civilians. On that day, UPA units surrounded and attacked 99 Polish villages and settlements in the counties of Kowel, Horochów, and Włodzimierz Wołyński. On the following day, 50 additional villages were attacked.[48] On 30 June 1941, the OUN, led by Stepan Bandera, declared an independent Ukrainian state.[49] This was immediately acted upon by the Nazi army, and Bandera was arrested and imprisoned from 1941 to 1944.[49]

 
Ukrainian nationalists demonstrate against the Soviet Union and for an independent Ukraine in 1941

There has been much debate as to the legitimacy of UPA as a political group. UPA maintains a prominent and symbolic role in Ukrainian history and the quest for Ukrainian independence.[44] At the same time it was deemed an insurgent or terrorist group by Soviet historiography.[44]

Ukrainian Canadian historian Serhiy Yekelchyk writes that during 1943 and 1944 an estimated 35,000 Polish civilians and an unknown number of Ukrainian civilians in the Volhynia and Chelm regions fell victim to mutual ethnic cleansing by the UPA and Polish insurgents.[50] Niall Ferguson writes that around 80,000 Poles were murdered then by Ukrainian nationalists.[51] In his book Europe at War 1939–1945: No Simple Victory, Norman Davies puts the number of Poles killed by Ukrainian nationalists between 200,000 and 500,000,[52] while Timothy Snyder writes that Ukrainian nationalists killed "between forty to sixty thousand Polish civilians in Volhynia in 1943."[53]

1945–1953

In the post-World War II era, Stalin would still be the leader until his death in 1953. Early on in this era, the policy of Zhdanovschina was instituted, or the cultural-ideological purification of the Soviet Union. In the Ukrainian variant of this, any vestiges of nationalism were suppressed. Media that had been produced during the war to encourage Ukrainian patriotism, such as Ukraine in Flames, was denounced.[54]

1953–1972

The Khrushchev Thaw started after Stalin's death. Under him, the first works of Samizdat appeared, and various people of Ukraine, whether it be ethnic Ukrainians, Crimean Tartars, and Jews, started publishing literature on both human rights and national/cultural rights issues.[55] Under Petro Shelest, who became leader of the Ukrainian SSR from 1963 to 1972, there was a revival of Ukrainian culture particularly in the '60s, as some decision making was allowed for a time to moved back to Kyiv from the center (Moscow). The Shevchenko National Prize was created, with Oles Honchar as the first awardee. The Ukrainian Sixtiers would be an important new generator of intelligentsia that appeared during this time, and had similarities to the Beat Generation in the west in cultural impact on later groups.[56]

There was also a resurgence of Ukrainian nationalist thought, associated with dissident writers such as Viacheslav Chornovil, Ivan Dziuba and Valentyn Moroz, which the authorities tried to stamp out through threats, arrests, and prison sentences.

1972–1985

Volodymyr Shcherbytsky took power over the Ukrainian SSR in 1972 until 1989. He was a member of the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, and a close friend of Leonid Brezhnev. As such, he was a very influential person in the Soviet Union, and led a very reactionary administration, aimed at centralizing power and suppressing dissent.[57]

In 1975, the Helsinki Accords was passed, calling for a pan-European security structure. In 1976, Ukrainian Helsinki Group was formed to promote human rights, and this created a new nascent dissident movement.

1985–1990

Under Mikhail Gorbachev, a new era of Perestroika and Glasnost was instituted primarily to fix structural problems with the Soviet economy. In Ukraine, one year under Gorbachev, in April 1986, the disaster at Chornobyl occurred, and this incident did much to delegitimize the power of both the Communist Party and Volodymyr Shcherbytsky locally, after he ordered the children of the central committee and the Communist Party away from Kyiv to the Caucausus, while the city celebrated May Day. It also put Ukraine back on the world map, as the disaster was seen as an ecological problem not only locally, but potentially globally as well. The tragedy also started mobilizing the diaspora.[58]

1991–2014

As opposed to the Soviet era, when nationality was understood in primarily ethnic terms where to be Ukrainian was something one would purely inherit, a gradual shift towards Civic nationalism started in 1991 with the birth of the modern Ukrainian state.[59] Ukraine chose to adopt pluralistic citizenship laws, which made everyone within its territorial borders a citizen, rejecting the model of Latvia and Estonia which adopted German-style ethnic citizenship laws which disenfranchised (self-identified) ethnic Russians.[60]: 53  There has also been a gradual shift of self-identification of Russiophone Ukrainians away from a "Russian" self-identification. Even in the early 2000s, people from the Russian-speaking Odesa would often self-identify as "Russian" to foreigners and migrants, but not to Russians from the Russian Federation, indicating changes in identity.[61]

 
Lviv football fans at a 2010 game against Donetsk. The banner reads "Bandera – our hero."

In the first decade of the 21st century, voters from Western Ukraine and Central Ukraine tended to vote for pro-Western and pro-European general liberal national democrats,[62][63] while pro-Russian parties got the vote in Eastern Ukraine and Southern Ukraine.[62] From the 1998 Ukrainian parliamentary election[b][64][65][66] until the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election, no nationalist party obtained seats in the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's parliament).[67][68] In these elections, nationalist right-wing parties obtained less than 1% of the votes; in the 1998 parliamentary election, they obtained 3.26%.[68]

The nationalist party Svoboda had an electoral breakthrough with the 2009 Ternopil Oblast local election, when they obtained 34.69% of the votes and 50 seats out of 120 in the Ternopil Oblast Council.[68] This was the best result for a far-right party in Ukraine's history.[68] In the previous 2006 Ternopil Oblast local election, the party had obtained 4.2% of the votes and 4 seats.[68] In the simultaneous 2006 Ukrainian local elections for the Lviv Oblast Council, it had obtained 5.62% of the votes and 10 seats and 6.69% of the votes and 9 seats in the Lviv city council.[68] In 1991, Svoboda was founded as the Social-National Party of Ukraine.[69] The party combined radical nationalism and alleged neo-Nazi features.[70] Under Oleh Tyahnybok, it was renamed and rebranded in 2004 as the All-Ukrainian Association Svoboda. Political scientists Olexiy Haran and Alexander J. Motyl contend that Svoboda is radical rather than fascist and they also argue that it has more similarities with far-right movements like the Tea Party movement than it has with either fascists or neo-Nazis.[71][72] In 2005, Victor Yushchenko appointed Volodymyr Viatrovych head of the Ukrainian security service (SBU) archives. According to professor Per Anders Rudling, this not only allowed Viatrovych to sanitize ultra-nationalist history but also to officially promote its dissemination along with OUN(b) ideology, which is based on "ethnic purity" coupled with anti-Russian, anti-Polish, and antisemitic rhetoric.[73]: 229–230  The extreme right-wing now capitalizes on Yushchenkoist propaganda initiatives.[73]: 235  This includes Iuryi Mykhal'chyshyn, an ideologue who proudly confesses that he is a part of the fascist tradition.[73]: 240  The autonomous nationalists focus on recruiting young people, participating in violent actions, and advocating "anti-bourgeoism, anti-capitalism, anti-globalism, anti-democratism, anti-liberalism, anti-bureaucratism, anti-dogmatism." Rulig suggested that Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, sworn in on 25 February 2010,[74] "indirectly aided Svoboda" by "granting Svoboda representatives disproportionate attention in the media."[73]: 247 

In the 2010 Ukrainian local elections, Svoboda achieved notable success in Eastern Galicia.[75] In the 2012 parliamentary election, Svoboda came in fourth with 10,44% (almost a fourteenfold of its votes compared with the 2007 Ukrainian parliamentary election)[65][76] of the national votes and 38 out of 450 seats.[77][78] Following the 2012 parliamentary election, Batkivshchyna and UDAR cooperated officially with Svoboda.[79]

 
Fans of FC Karpaty Lviv honoring the Waffen-SS Galizien division, 2013
 
Euromaidan activists wave Ukraine's official flag, the flag of the Ukrainian People's Self-Defense and a red and black flag used by multiple nationalist organizations vying for Ukraine's independence after both World Wars; it dates back all the way to Ukraine's 16th century, March 2014.

2014–2022

During the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian War, Russian media attempted to portray the Ukrainian party in the conflict as neo-Nazi, with Russian president Vladimir Putin claiming in early 2022 that Ukraine was an 'artificial country run by Nazis'.[80] Scholars such as historians and political scientists generally regard such claims as unfounded.[80] Dutch historian of Ukraine Marc Jansen stated in 2022: 'There are far-right, anti-Semitic parties in Ukraine, but they play no significant role in the national government.'[80] Although certain neo-Nazi-like groups such as the Azov Battalion participated in Euromaidan (alongside many other groups), and some were incorporated into the Ukrainian military and deployed in Donbas, that didn't make the Zelenskyy government 'neo-Nazis', said Jansen, who pointed out that Volodymyr Zelenskyy (elected president in 2019) is Jewish and his family has suffered in the Holocaust, with several relatives being killed by the Nazis.[80] The main Ukrainian organisations involved with a neo-Banderaite legacy are Svoboda, Right Sector, and Azov Battalion.[citation needed] Andriy Biletsky, the head of the ultra-nationalist and neo-Banderaite political groups Social-National Assembly and Patriots of Ukraine,[81] was also the first commander of the Azov Battalion[82] and the Azov Battalion is part of the Ukrainian National Guard[83] fighting pro-Russian separatists in the War in Donbass.[84][85] According to a report in The Daily Telegraph, some individual anonymous members of the battalion identified themselves as sympathetic to the Third Reich.[82] In June 2015, Democratic Representative John Conyers and his Republican colleague Ted Yoho offered bipartisan amendments to block the U.S. military training of Ukraine's Azov Battalion.[83]

After President Yanokovych's ouster in the February 2014 Ukrainian revolution, the interim Yatsenyuk Government placed four Svoboda members in leading positions; Oleksandr Sych as Vice Prime Minister of Ukraine, Ihor Tenyukh as Minister of Defense, lawyer Ihor Shvaika as Minister of Agrarian Policy and Food, and Andriy Mokhnyk as Minister of Ecology and Natural Resources of Ukraine.[86] In a 5 March 2014 fact sheet, the U.S. State Department stated that "[f]ar-right wing ultranationalist groups, some of which were involved in open clashes with security forces during the Euromaidan protests, are not represented in the Ukrainian parliament."[87]

In the 2014 Ukrainian presidential election and 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election, Svoboda candidates failed to meet the electoral threshold to win. The party won six constituency seats in the 2014 parliamentary election and obtained 4.71% of national election list votes.[88] In the 2014 presidential election, Svoboda leader Oleh Tyahnybok received 1.16% of the vote.[89] Right Sector leader Dmytro Yarosh gained 0.7% of the votes in the 2014 presidential election,[89] and was elected to parliament in the 2014 parliamentary election as a Right Sector candidate by winning a single-member district.[90] Right Sector spokesperson Boryslav Bereza as an independent candidate also won a seat and district.[91]

The Euromaidan Revolution of Dignity, the Russian annexation of Crimea and the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian War in Donbas have in the post-2014 years led to profound political, socio-economic and cultural-religious consequences for Ukrainian society.[80] While it was a divided bilingual country between 1991 and 2014, the occupied parts became increasingly (pro-)Russian and the unoccupied parts more pro-European, pro-western and more monolingually Ukrainian.[80] Unoccupied Ukraine developed into an increasingly united society, characterised to a large extent by its opposition to the government of Putin and to a lesser extent Russia, the Russian language and culture.[80] In October 2018, there was also a schism between the Russian Orthodox Church and the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople when the latter granted autonomy to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine.[80] According to historian Marc Jansen (2022): 'It is precisely because of the war in eastern Ukraine, which has been raging since 2014, that Ukraine has become a largely unified country. Putin has done more for Ukrainian nation-building than anyone else.'[80] Other scholars also noted an acceleration of civic nationalism in a broad spectrum of Ukrainian society, such as political scientist Lowell Barrington of Marquette University, who said this type of nationalism bonds people through "feelings of solidarity, sympathy and obligation" rather than ethnicity. According to political scientist Oxana Shevel, author of the 2021 book From ‘the Ukraine’ to Ukraine, this was a result of aggression by Russia: 'In a paradoxical twist, Putin is basically unifying the Ukrainian nation.' This was also reflected in sociological data, despite Ukraine not having conducted a census since 2001.[92]

The radical nationalists group С14, whose members openly expressed neo-Nazi views, gained notoriety in 2018 for being involved in violent attacks on Romany camps.[93][94]

On 19 November 2018, Svoboda and fellow Ukrainian nationalist political organizations Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists, Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists, Right Sector, and C14 endorsed Ruslan Koshulynskyi's candidacy in the 2019 Ukrainian presidential election.[95] In the election, Ruslan Koshulynskyi's and all united nationalist party received 1.6% of the votes.[96] In the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election, a united party list with the nationalist right-wing parties Svoboda, Right Sector, Governmental Initiative of Yarosh, and National Corps completely failed elections with 2.15% of the votes and did not received enough votes to clear the 5% election threshold, and thus lost all seats in Verkhovna Rada.[97][98] Svoboda did win one constituency seat in the election.[97] Boryslav Bereza and Dmytro Yarosh lost their parliamentary seats.[97]

Volodymyr Zelenskyy won the 2019 presidential election in Ukraine. He ran for the Servant of the People party which has previously argued for "mild Ukrainization".[99]

2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine

 
Pro-Ukrainian protestors in Tokyo, Japan, demonstrating support with the flag of Ukraine

During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine there has been a large increase in pro-Ukrainian position inside Ukraine. In other countries, the Ukrainian flag has been used to show support for the Ukrainian cause during the war. There was also a rapid shift in pro-Ukrainian attitudes in the eastern part of the country, including people vowing to use the Ukrainian language more.[100] A study of survey data from 2019, 2021, and 2022 indicated that the eight-year war and major Russian invasion had strengthened pro-European and pro-democratic civic identity, rather than ethnolinguistic or ethnonational identity.[101]

A derussification campaign swept through Ukraine following the February 2022 invasion.[102][103] Among other renamings, in the central Ukrainian city Dnipro the Schmidt Street (the street was originally the Gymnasium Street but it was renamed to Otto Schmidt Street by Soviet authorities in 1934[104]) was renamed to Stepan Bandera Street.[103] Meanwhile several Ukrainian cities removed statues and busts of the 19th-century Russian poet Alexander Pushkin.[105]

Public school curriculum are no longer prescribing works by Russian authors, and publishing books written by Russian nationals was outlawed.[102]

Nationalist political parties

Current

Defunct

In literature

One of the most prominent figures in Ukrainian national history, the Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko, voiced ideas of an independent and sovereign Ukraine in the 19th century.[106] Taras Shevchenko used poetry to inspire cultural revival to the Ukrainian people and to strive to overthrow injustice.[106] Shevchenko died in Saint Petersburg on 10 March 1861, the day after his 47th birthday. Ukrainians regard him as a national hero, becoming a symbol of the national cultural revival of Ukraine. Beside Shevchenko, numerous other poets have written in Ukrainian. Among them, Volodymyr Sosyura stated in his poem Love Ukraine (1944) that one cannot respect other nations without respect for one's own.

Bibliography

See also

References

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Notes

  1. ^ "In the late 1920s and early 1930s, as a new Polish government sought reconciliation with its five million Ukrainian citizens, Ukrainian nationalists acted decisively to prevent any compromise settlement. Bandera was one of the main organizers of terror campaigns intended to prevent Ukrainians from accepting the Polish government by provoking Polish retaliation."[33]
  2. ^ In the 1998 parliamentary election, the radical-nationalist bloc of parties (All-Ukrainian Political Movement "State Independence of Ukraine" and Social-National Party of Ukraine) called Less Words (Ukrainian: Менше слів) collected 0.16% of the national vote but Oleh Tyahnybok was voted into Parliament from the bloc only.

Further reading

External links

  • Ukrainian Patriot's Credo, a poem by Basil Bucolic
  • Oleksandr Palchenko. Ukrainian nation and Ukrainian people. First Social Agreement.
  • "Bourgeois nationalists": as they were depicted by the Soviet propaganda. Ukrayinska Pravda

ukrainian, nationalism, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, parts, this, article, those, related, 2014, 2022, need, updated, please, help, update, this, art. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages Parts of this article those related to 2014 2022 need to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information May 2022 This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Ukrainian nationalism is the promotion of the unity of Ukrainians as a people and the promotion of the identity of Ukraine as a nation state 1 The origins of modern Ukrainian nationalism emerge during the 17th century Cossack uprising against the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth led by Bohdan Khmelnytsky Ukrainian nationalism draws upon a single national identity of culture ethnicity geographic location language politics or the government religion traditions and belief in a shared singular history 2 that dates back to the 9th century 3 Flag of Ukraine St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery in Kyiv reconstructed after Ukrainian independence Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre History 1 2 Kyiv Rus 1 3 Kingdom of Ruthenia 1 4 Zaporozhian Cossacks 1 5 Cossack Hetmanate 1 6 Russian and Habsburg Empires 1 7 World War I 1 8 Interwar period in Soviet Ukraine 1 9 Interwar period in the West 1 10 World War II 1 11 1945 1953 1 12 1953 1972 1 13 1972 1985 1 14 1985 1990 1 15 1991 2014 1 16 2014 2022 1 17 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 2 Nationalist political parties 2 1 Current 2 2 Defunct 3 In literature 4 Bibliography 5 See also 6 References 7 Notes 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory EditNationalism emerged after the French Revolution while modern day Ukraine faced external pressure from the suzerainty of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth the Tsardom of Russia and the Ottoman Empire but the National Identity 4 dates back to the 9th century 5 Pre History Edit During the Iron Age numerous tribes settled on the modern day territory of Ukraine In the first millennium BC these tribes included the Cimmerians who settled the Dnieper river valley On the Black Sea coast the Greeks founded numerous colonies such as Yalta The Scythians a semi nomadic Iranic people who were from the Eurasian region known as Scythia as well as Slavs and Varangians 6 The Ukrainian Language is an East Slavic language of the Indo European language family 7 The Ukrainian language was formed by convergence of tribal dialects from a common Proto Slavic language mostly due to an intensive migration of the population from the 6th to the 9th century 8 The Varangians began referring to themselves as Rus as an identify separate from other East Slavic tribes 9 10 Kyiv Rus Edit During the 9th century the Varangians spread down the Dnipro River in the area of Kyiv and began to establish an identity as raids were made on Constantinople 11 During this time a religious identity began to grow While the Varangians were not of Slavic descent the adoption of Orthodox Christianity by Volodymyr the Great further strengthened the cultural links between the East Slavic tribes and created precursors to Ukrainian nationalism and identity such as a shared religious architecture Volodymyr who ruled Kievan Rus from 980 to 1015 built a pagan temple on a hill in Kiev dedicated to six gods Perun the god of thunder and war a god favored by members of the prince s druzhina military retinue Slav gods Stribog and Dazhd bog Mokosh a goddess representing Mother Nature worshipped by Finnish tribes Khors and Simargl both of which had Iranian origins were included probably to appeal to the Poliane 12 The Primary Chronicle reports that in the year 986 Vladimir met with representatives from several religions and settled on Eastern Christianity At the height of Kievan Rus the state became the biggest in Eastern Europe cementing Ukrainian identity Literature flourished producing the Galician Volhynian Chronicle 13 Advancement in law occurred with the Slavic code of Russkaya Pravda Religious architecture which would become symbolism of nationalism also got built such as Saint Sophia Cathedral in Kiev and Saint Sophia Cathedral in Novgorod Education in the area of Ukraine also got established at the founding of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra monastery which functioned in Kievan Rus as an ecclesiastical academy 14 Kingdom of Ruthenia Edit The Kingdom of Ruthenia or Kingdom of Galicia Volhynia became the successor of Kievan Rus and played a strong role in fermenting Ukrainian nationalism citation needed The Principality united the western and southern branches of East Slavs consolidating their identity and becoming a new center of political and economic life after the decline of Kiev 15 unreliable source Zaporozhian Cossacks Edit The Cossacks played a strong role in solidifying Ukrainian identity during the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth The Zaporozhian Cossacks lived on the Pontic Caspian steppe below the Dnieper Rapids Ukrainian za porohamy also known as the Wild Fields They have played an important role in European geopolitics participating in a series of conflicts and alliances with the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Russia and the Ottoman Empire 16 The Cossacks emerged as protection against Tartar raids but were given greater rights as their influence grew Cossacks revolted as the Polish Kings tried to enforce Catholicism and Polish language on the people of Ukraine 17 18 Precursors to the Ukrainian nation state identity emerged citation needed as Bohdan Khmelnytsky c 1595 1657 commanded the Zaporozhian Cossacks and led the Khmelnytsky Uprising against Polish rule in the mid 17th century Khmelnytsky introduced a prop government clarification needed based on a form of democracy which had been practised by Cossacks since the 15th century After a conflict between Ottoman Polish and Polish Muscovite Principalities the official Cossack register decreased This together with intensified socioeconomic and national religious oppression of the other classes in Ukrainian society led to a number of Cossack uprisings in the 1630s These eventually culminated in the Khmelnytsky Uprising led by the hetman of the Zaporizhian Sich Bohdan Khmelnytsky 19 Cossack Hetmanate Edit As a result of the mid 17th century Khmelnytsky Uprising the Zaporozhian Cossacks briefly established an independent state which later became the autonomous Cossack Hetmanate 1649 1764 It was placed under the suzerainty of the Russian Tsar from 1667 but was ruled by local hetmans for a century The principal political problem of the hetmans who followed the Pereyeslav Agreement was defending the autonomy of the Hetmanate from Russian Muscovite centralism The hetmans Ivan Vyhovsky Petro Doroshenko and Ivan Mazepa attempted to resolve this by separating Ukraine from Russia 19 These conflicts created the conditions for Ukrainian nationalism as Bohdan Khmelnytsky spoke of the liberation of the entire Ruthenian people 20 Following the uprisings and establishment of the Hetmanate state Hetman Ivan Mazepa 1639 1709 focused on the restoration of Ukrainian culture and history during the early 18th century Public works included the Saint Sophia Cathedral in Kyiv 21 and the elevation the Kyiv Mohyla Collegium to the status of Kyiv Mohyla Academy in 1694 During the reign of Catherine II of Russia the Cossack Hetmanate s autonomy was progressively destroyed After several earlier attempts the office of hetman was finally abolished by the Russian government in 1764 and his functions were assumed by the Little Russian Collegium thus fully incorporating the Hetmanate into the Russian Empire 22 On May 7 1775 Empress Catherine II issued a direct order that the Zaporozhian Sich was to be destroyed On June 5 1775 Russian artillery and infantry surrounded the Sich and razed it to the ground The Russian troops disarmed the Cossacks and the treasury archives were confiscated The Koshovyi Otaman Petro Kalnyshevsky was arrested and incarcerated in exile at Solovetsky Monastery This marked the end of the Zaporozhian Cossacks 23 Russian and Habsburg Empires Edit An intense period of russification began for the areas of the Hetmanate After 1785 the Romanov dynasty made a conscious effort to assimilate the Ruthenian and Cossack elites by granting them noble status within the Russian Empire This led to a decline of the Ukrainian language among ruling elite Ukrainian language and culture was preserved through folks stories and songs 24 After the three partitions of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth the regions of Galicia Halychyna and Bukovina became part of the Habsburg Empire Ukrainians living within the Austrian state did not face the same cultural repression and were influenced by the nationalism that spread after the French Revolution and the American Revolution After the Revolutions of 1848 in the Austrian Empire the Ruthenian Council tried to establish a Ukrainian nation but this effort was thwarted National identities developed among Belarusians Ukrainians and Carpatho Rusyn Czheck 15 World War I Edit Postcard published by the Ukrainian Brigade United Ukrainians defend against both Polish and Russian forces 1920 With the collapse of the Russian Empire a political entity which encompassed political community cultural and professional organizations was established in Kyiv from the initiative from the Association of the Ukrainian Progressionists TUP This entity was called the Tsentralna Rada Central Council and was headed by the historian Mykhailo Hrushevskyi 25 On 22 January 1918 the Tsentralna Rada declared Ukraine an independent country 25 However this government did not survive very long because of pressures not only from Denikin s Russian White Guard but also the Red Army German and Entente intervention and local anarchists such as Nestor Makhno and Green Army of Otaman Zeleny 25 Territory that was claimed by Ukraine according to an old postcard dating 1919 Interwar period in Soviet Ukraine Edit As Bolshevik rule took hold in Ukraine the early Soviet government had its own reasons to encourage the national movements of the former Russian Empire Until the early 1930s Ukrainian culture enjoyed a widespread revival due to Bolshevik concessions known as the policy of Korenization indigenization In these years an impressive Ukrainization program was implemented throughout the republic In such conditions the Ukrainian national idea initially continued to develop and even spread to a large territory with traditionally mixed population in the east and south that became part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic At the same time despite the ongoing Soviet wide anti religious campaign the Ukrainian national Orthodox Church was created the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church The church was initially seen by the Bolshevik government as a tool in their goal to suppress the Russian Orthodox Church always viewed with great suspicion by the regime for its being the cornerstone of the defunct Russian Empire and the initially strong opposition it took towards the regime change Therefore the government tolerated the new Ukrainian national church for some time and the UAOC gained a wide following among the Ukrainian peasantry These events greatly raised the national consciousness of the Ukrainians and brought about the development of a new generation of Ukrainian cultural and political elite This in turn raised the concerns of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin who saw danger in the Ukrainians loyalty towards their nation competing with their loyalty to the Soviet State and in the early 1930s Ukrainian bourgeois nationalism was declared to be the primary problem in Ukraine The Ukrainization policies were abruptly and bloodily reversed most of the Ukrainian cultural and political elite was arrested and executed and the nation was decimated with the famine called the Holodomor Interwar period in the West Edit After World War I what is now Ukraine was annexed by the newly created Second Polish Republic and by the Soviet Union Both governments continued to view Ukrainian nationalism as a threat In March 1926 Vlas Chubar Chairman of the Council of People s Commissars of Soviet Ukraine gave a speech given in Kharkiv and later repeated it in Moscow in which he warned of the danger that Symon Petliura the exiled former President of the Ukrainian People s Republic represented to the Soviet Government It was as a result of this speech that the command was allegedly given to assassinate Petliura on French soil 26 On 25 May 1926 at 14 12 by the Gibert bookstore Petliura was walking on Rue Racine near Boulevard Saint Michel of the Latin Quarter in Paris and was approached by Sholom Schwartzbard Schwartzbard asked in Ukrainian Are you Mr Petliura Petliura did not answer but raised his walking cane As Schwartzbard claimed in court he pulled out a gun and shot him five times 27 28 News of Petliura s assassination triggered massive uprisings in Soviet ruled Ukraine particularly in Boromlia Zhehailivtsi Sumy province Velyka Rublivka Myloradov Poltava province Hnylsk Bilsk Kuzemyn and all along the Vorskla River from Okhtyrka to Poltava Burynia Nizhyn Chernihiv province and other cities 29 These revolts were brutally suppressed by the Soviet Government citation needed The blind kobzars Pavlo Hashchenko and Ivan Kuchuhura Kucherenko composed a duma epic poem in memory of Symon Petliura To date Petliura is the only modern Ukrainian politician to have a duma created and sung in his memory This duma became popular among the kobzars of left bank Ukraine and was also sung by Stepan Pasiuha Petro Drevchenko Bohushchenko and Chumak 30 The core defense at the Schwartzbard trial as presented by the noted French jurist Henri Torres was that Petliura s assassin was avenging the deaths of his parents and the other Jewish victims of pogroms committed by Petliura s soldiers whereas the prosecution both criminal and civil tried to show that Petliura was not responsible for the pogroms and that Schwartzbard was a Soviet spy After a trial lasting eight days the jury acquitted Schwartzbard 31 32 Under the Polish rule many Ukrainian schools were shut down in the 1920s while the promise of national autonomy for Ukrainians was not fulfilled 33 Tadeusz Holowko an advocate of concessions to the Ukrainian minority was assassinated by the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists OUN to prevent Polish Ukrainian rapprochement 34 35 33 Holowko was killed while staying in a guest house owned by nuns of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church at Truskawiec on 29 August 1931 He was one of the victims of an assassination campaign waged by the OUN His death widely discussed in the Polish press the international press and even at a League of Nations session 36 better source needed was part of a vicious circle involving the OUN s violence and sabotage and the Second Polish Republic s brutal repression of ethnic Ukrainians 37 38 a Some time later a senior Polish police commissioner investigating Holowko s assassination Emilian Czechowski also became an OUN assassination victim 39 36 In the early 1930s OUN members carried out more than 60 successful or attempted assassinations many of them targeted at Ukrainians who opposed the organization s policies for example a respected educator Ivan Babij 39 In 1933 the OUN retaliated against the Soviet State for the Holodomor by assassinating Alexei Mailov a Soviet consular official stationed in Polish ruled Lviv On 15 June 1934 Poland s Minister of the Interior Bronislaw Pieracki was also assassinated by the faction led by Stepan Bandera within the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists Poland s Sanation government retaliated by creating two days after the assassination the Bereza Kartuska Prison The prison s first detainees were the leadership of the opposition National Radical Camp the ONR who were arrested on 6 7 July 1934 40 Many Ukrainian nationalists and Polish critics of the ruling party soon joined them there Stepan Bandera and Mykola Lebed were arrested tried and sentenced to death for Pieracki s assassination Their sentences were later commuted to life imprisonment 41 On 23 May 1938 OUN leader Yevhen Konovalets was assassinated by the NKVD inside a Rotterdam cafe Konovalets was inside the cafe meeting with Pavel Sudoplatov an NKVD mole who had infiltrated the OUN and who gave Konovalets a bomb rigged to explode inside a box of chocolates Sudoplatov walked calmly away waited until he heard the bomb explode then walked calmly to the nearest train station and left the city Sudoplatov later alleged in his memoirs to have been personally ordered by Joseph Stalin to assassinate Konovalets as revenge for the 1933 assassination at the Soviet consulate in Lviv Stalin also felt that Konovalets was a figure maintaining the unity of the OUN and that his death would cause the organization to become further factionalized torn apart and annihilated from within 42 Flag of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and Ukrainian Insurgent Army during World War II The red representing blood and the black representing the Black Soil of Ukraine This flag is commonly used by modern far right Ukrainian nationalists Due to his sudden disappearance the OUN immediately suspected Sudoplatov of Konovalets murder Therefore a photograph of Sudoplatov and Konovalets together was distributed to every OUN unit According to Sudoplatov In the 1940s SMERSH captured two guerilla fighters in Western Ukraine one of whom had this photo of me on him When asked why he was carrying it he replied I have no idea why but the order is if we find this man to liquidate him 43 Just as Stalin had hoped the OUN following Konovalets murder split into two parts The older more moderate members supported Andriy Melnyk and the OUN M while the younger and more radical members supported Stepan Bandera s OUN B World War II Edit With the outbreak of war between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union in 1941 many nationalists in Ukraine thought that they would have an opportunity to create an independent country once again An entire Ukrainian volunteer division of the SS had been created Many of the fighters who had originally looked to the Nazis as liberators quickly became disillusioned and formed the Ukrainian Insurgent Army UPA Ukrainian Ukrayinska Povstanska Armiya which waged military campaign against Germans and later Soviet forces as well against Polish civilians 44 47 51 The primary goal of OUN was the rebirth of setting everything in order the defense and the expansion of the Independent Council of Ukrainian National State The OUN also revived the sentiment that Ukraine is for Ukrainians 44 48 In 1943 the UPA adopted a policy of massacring and expelling the Polish population 45 46 The ethnic cleansing operation against the Poles began on a large scale in Volhynia in late February or early spring 46 of that year and lasted until the end of 1944 47 11 July 1943 was one of the deadliest days of the massacres with UPA units marching from village to village killing Polish civilians On that day UPA units surrounded and attacked 99 Polish villages and settlements in the counties of Kowel Horochow and Wlodzimierz Wolynski On the following day 50 additional villages were attacked 48 On 30 June 1941 the OUN led by Stepan Bandera declared an independent Ukrainian state 49 This was immediately acted upon by the Nazi army and Bandera was arrested and imprisoned from 1941 to 1944 49 Ukrainian nationalists demonstrate against the Soviet Union and for an independent Ukraine in 1941 There has been much debate as to the legitimacy of UPA as a political group UPA maintains a prominent and symbolic role in Ukrainian history and the quest for Ukrainian independence 44 At the same time it was deemed an insurgent or terrorist group by Soviet historiography 44 Ukrainian Canadian historian Serhiy Yekelchyk writes that during 1943 and 1944 an estimated 35 000 Polish civilians and an unknown number of Ukrainian civilians in the Volhynia and Chelm regions fell victim to mutual ethnic cleansing by the UPA and Polish insurgents 50 Niall Ferguson writes that around 80 000 Poles were murdered then by Ukrainian nationalists 51 In his book Europe at War 1939 1945 No Simple Victory Norman Davies puts the number of Poles killed by Ukrainian nationalists between 200 000 and 500 000 52 while Timothy Snyder writes that Ukrainian nationalists killed between forty to sixty thousand Polish civilians in Volhynia in 1943 53 1945 1953 Edit In the post World War II era Stalin would still be the leader until his death in 1953 Early on in this era the policy of Zhdanovschina was instituted or the cultural ideological purification of the Soviet Union In the Ukrainian variant of this any vestiges of nationalism were suppressed Media that had been produced during the war to encourage Ukrainian patriotism such as Ukraine in Flames was denounced 54 1953 1972 Edit The Khrushchev Thaw started after Stalin s death Under him the first works of Samizdat appeared and various people of Ukraine whether it be ethnic Ukrainians Crimean Tartars and Jews started publishing literature on both human rights and national cultural rights issues 55 Under Petro Shelest who became leader of the Ukrainian SSR from 1963 to 1972 there was a revival of Ukrainian culture particularly in the 60s as some decision making was allowed for a time to moved back to Kyiv from the center Moscow The Shevchenko National Prize was created with Oles Honchar as the first awardee The Ukrainian Sixtiers would be an important new generator of intelligentsia that appeared during this time and had similarities to the Beat Generation in the west in cultural impact on later groups 56 There was also a resurgence of Ukrainian nationalist thought associated with dissident writers such as Viacheslav Chornovil Ivan Dziuba and Valentyn Moroz which the authorities tried to stamp out through threats arrests and prison sentences 1972 1985 Edit Volodymyr Shcherbytsky took power over the Ukrainian SSR in 1972 until 1989 He was a member of the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and a close friend of Leonid Brezhnev As such he was a very influential person in the Soviet Union and led a very reactionary administration aimed at centralizing power and suppressing dissent 57 In 1975 the Helsinki Accords was passed calling for a pan European security structure In 1976 Ukrainian Helsinki Group was formed to promote human rights and this created a new nascent dissident movement 1985 1990 Edit Under Mikhail Gorbachev a new era of Perestroika and Glasnost was instituted primarily to fix structural problems with the Soviet economy In Ukraine one year under Gorbachev in April 1986 the disaster at Chornobyl occurred and this incident did much to delegitimize the power of both the Communist Party and Volodymyr Shcherbytsky locally after he ordered the children of the central committee and the Communist Party away from Kyiv to the Caucausus while the city celebrated May Day It also put Ukraine back on the world map as the disaster was seen as an ecological problem not only locally but potentially globally as well The tragedy also started mobilizing the diaspora 58 1991 2014 Edit As opposed to the Soviet era when nationality was understood in primarily ethnic terms where to be Ukrainian was something one would purely inherit a gradual shift towards Civic nationalism started in 1991 with the birth of the modern Ukrainian state 59 Ukraine chose to adopt pluralistic citizenship laws which made everyone within its territorial borders a citizen rejecting the model of Latvia and Estonia which adopted German style ethnic citizenship laws which disenfranchised self identified ethnic Russians 60 53 There has also been a gradual shift of self identification of Russiophone Ukrainians away from a Russian self identification Even in the early 2000s people from the Russian speaking Odesa would often self identify as Russian to foreigners and migrants but not to Russians from the Russian Federation indicating changes in identity 61 Lviv football fans at a 2010 game against Donetsk The banner reads Bandera our hero In the first decade of the 21st century voters from Western Ukraine and Central Ukraine tended to vote for pro Western and pro European general liberal national democrats 62 63 while pro Russian parties got the vote in Eastern Ukraine and Southern Ukraine 62 From the 1998 Ukrainian parliamentary election b 64 65 66 until the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election no nationalist party obtained seats in the Verkhovna Rada Ukraine s parliament 67 68 In these elections nationalist right wing parties obtained less than 1 of the votes in the 1998 parliamentary election they obtained 3 26 68 The nationalist party Svoboda had an electoral breakthrough with the 2009 Ternopil Oblast local election when they obtained 34 69 of the votes and 50 seats out of 120 in the Ternopil Oblast Council 68 This was the best result for a far right party in Ukraine s history 68 In the previous 2006 Ternopil Oblast local election the party had obtained 4 2 of the votes and 4 seats 68 In the simultaneous 2006 Ukrainian local elections for the Lviv Oblast Council it had obtained 5 62 of the votes and 10 seats and 6 69 of the votes and 9 seats in the Lviv city council 68 In 1991 Svoboda was founded as the Social National Party of Ukraine 69 The party combined radical nationalism and alleged neo Nazi features 70 Under Oleh Tyahnybok it was renamed and rebranded in 2004 as the All Ukrainian Association Svoboda Political scientists Olexiy Haran and Alexander J Motyl contend that Svoboda is radical rather than fascist and they also argue that it has more similarities with far right movements like the Tea Party movement than it has with either fascists or neo Nazis 71 72 In 2005 Victor Yushchenko appointed Volodymyr Viatrovych head of the Ukrainian security service SBU archives According to professor Per Anders Rudling this not only allowed Viatrovych to sanitize ultra nationalist history but also to officially promote its dissemination along with OUN b ideology which is based on ethnic purity coupled with anti Russian anti Polish and antisemitic rhetoric 73 229 230 The extreme right wing now capitalizes on Yushchenkoist propaganda initiatives 73 235 This includes Iuryi Mykhal chyshyn an ideologue who proudly confesses that he is a part of the fascist tradition 73 240 The autonomous nationalists focus on recruiting young people participating in violent actions and advocating anti bourgeoism anti capitalism anti globalism anti democratism anti liberalism anti bureaucratism anti dogmatism Rulig suggested that Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych sworn in on 25 February 2010 74 indirectly aided Svoboda by granting Svoboda representatives disproportionate attention in the media 73 247 In the 2010 Ukrainian local elections Svoboda achieved notable success in Eastern Galicia 75 In the 2012 parliamentary election Svoboda came in fourth with 10 44 almost a fourteenfold of its votes compared with the 2007 Ukrainian parliamentary election 65 76 of the national votes and 38 out of 450 seats 77 78 Following the 2012 parliamentary election Batkivshchyna and UDAR cooperated officially with Svoboda 79 Fans of FC Karpaty Lviv honoring the Waffen SS Galizien division 2013 Euromaidan activists wave Ukraine s official flag the flag of the Ukrainian People s Self Defense and a red and black flag used by multiple nationalist organizations vying for Ukraine s independence after both World Wars it dates back all the way to Ukraine s 16th century March 2014 2014 2022 Edit During the ongoing Russo Ukrainian War Russian media attempted to portray the Ukrainian party in the conflict as neo Nazi with Russian president Vladimir Putin claiming in early 2022 that Ukraine was an artificial country run by Nazis 80 Scholars such as historians and political scientists generally regard such claims as unfounded 80 Dutch historian of Ukraine Marc Jansen stated in 2022 There are far right anti Semitic parties in Ukraine but they play no significant role in the national government 80 Although certain neo Nazi like groups such as the Azov Battalion participated in Euromaidan alongside many other groups and some were incorporated into the Ukrainian military and deployed in Donbas that didn t make the Zelenskyy government neo Nazis said Jansen who pointed out that Volodymyr Zelenskyy elected president in 2019 is Jewish and his family has suffered in the Holocaust with several relatives being killed by the Nazis 80 The main Ukrainian organisations involved with a neo Banderaite legacy are Svoboda Right Sector and Azov Battalion citation needed Andriy Biletsky the head of the ultra nationalist and neo Banderaite political groups Social National Assembly and Patriots of Ukraine 81 was also the first commander of the Azov Battalion 82 and the Azov Battalion is part of the Ukrainian National Guard 83 fighting pro Russian separatists in the War in Donbass 84 85 According to a report in The Daily Telegraph some individual anonymous members of the battalion identified themselves as sympathetic to the Third Reich 82 In June 2015 Democratic Representative John Conyers and his Republican colleague Ted Yoho offered bipartisan amendments to block the U S military training of Ukraine s Azov Battalion 83 After President Yanokovych s ouster in the February 2014 Ukrainian revolution the interim Yatsenyuk Government placed four Svoboda members in leading positions Oleksandr Sych as Vice Prime Minister of Ukraine Ihor Tenyukh as Minister of Defense lawyer Ihor Shvaika as Minister of Agrarian Policy and Food and Andriy Mokhnyk as Minister of Ecology and Natural Resources of Ukraine 86 In a 5 March 2014 fact sheet the U S State Department stated that f ar right wing ultranationalist groups some of which were involved in open clashes with security forces during the Euromaidan protests are not represented in the Ukrainian parliament 87 In the 2014 Ukrainian presidential election and 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election Svoboda candidates failed to meet the electoral threshold to win The party won six constituency seats in the 2014 parliamentary election and obtained 4 71 of national election list votes 88 In the 2014 presidential election Svoboda leader Oleh Tyahnybok received 1 16 of the vote 89 Right Sector leader Dmytro Yarosh gained 0 7 of the votes in the 2014 presidential election 89 and was elected to parliament in the 2014 parliamentary election as a Right Sector candidate by winning a single member district 90 Right Sector spokesperson Boryslav Bereza as an independent candidate also won a seat and district 91 The Euromaidan Revolution of Dignity the Russian annexation of Crimea and the ongoing Russo Ukrainian War in Donbas have in the post 2014 years led to profound political socio economic and cultural religious consequences for Ukrainian society 80 While it was a divided bilingual country between 1991 and 2014 the occupied parts became increasingly pro Russian and the unoccupied parts more pro European pro western and more monolingually Ukrainian 80 Unoccupied Ukraine developed into an increasingly united society characterised to a large extent by its opposition to the government of Putin and to a lesser extent Russia the Russian language and culture 80 In October 2018 there was also a schism between the Russian Orthodox Church and the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople when the latter granted autonomy to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine 80 According to historian Marc Jansen 2022 It is precisely because of the war in eastern Ukraine which has been raging since 2014 that Ukraine has become a largely unified country Putin has done more for Ukrainian nation building than anyone else 80 Other scholars also noted an acceleration of civic nationalism in a broad spectrum of Ukrainian society such as political scientist Lowell Barrington of Marquette University who said this type of nationalism bonds people through feelings of solidarity sympathy and obligation rather than ethnicity According to political scientist Oxana Shevel author of the 2021 book From the Ukraine to Ukraine this was a result of aggression by Russia In a paradoxical twist Putin is basically unifying the Ukrainian nation This was also reflected in sociological data despite Ukraine not having conducted a census since 2001 92 The radical nationalists group S14 whose members openly expressed neo Nazi views gained notoriety in 2018 for being involved in violent attacks on Romany camps 93 94 On 19 November 2018 Svoboda and fellow Ukrainian nationalist political organizations Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists Right Sector and C14 endorsed Ruslan Koshulynskyi s candidacy in the 2019 Ukrainian presidential election 95 In the election Ruslan Koshulynskyi s and all united nationalist party received 1 6 of the votes 96 In the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election a united party list with the nationalist right wing parties Svoboda Right Sector Governmental Initiative of Yarosh and National Corps completely failed elections with 2 15 of the votes and did not received enough votes to clear the 5 election threshold and thus lost all seats in Verkhovna Rada 97 98 Svoboda did win one constituency seat in the election 97 Boryslav Bereza and Dmytro Yarosh lost their parliamentary seats 97 Volodymyr Zelenskyy won the 2019 presidential election in Ukraine He ran for the Servant of the People party which has previously argued for mild Ukrainization 99 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Edit Pro Ukrainian protestors in Tokyo Japan demonstrating support with the flag of Ukraine During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine there has been a large increase in pro Ukrainian position inside Ukraine In other countries the Ukrainian flag has been used to show support for the Ukrainian cause during the war There was also a rapid shift in pro Ukrainian attitudes in the eastern part of the country including people vowing to use the Ukrainian language more 100 A study of survey data from 2019 2021 and 2022 indicated that the eight year war and major Russian invasion had strengthened pro European and pro democratic civic identity rather than ethnolinguistic or ethnonational identity 101 A derussification campaign swept through Ukraine following the February 2022 invasion 102 103 Among other renamings in the central Ukrainian city Dnipro the Schmidt Street the street was originally the Gymnasium Street but it was renamed to Otto Schmidt Street by Soviet authorities in 1934 104 was renamed to Stepan Bandera Street 103 Meanwhile several Ukrainian cities removed statues and busts of the 19th century Russian poet Alexander Pushkin 105 Public school curriculum are no longer prescribing works by Russian authors and publishing books written by Russian nationals was outlawed 102 Nationalist political parties EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Current Edit People s Movement of Ukraine 1990 present Ukrainian National Assembly Ukrainian People s Self Defence 1990 present Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists 1992 present All Ukrainian Union Freedom 1995 present All Ukrainian Union Fatherland 1999 present Ukrainian People s Party 2002 present Ukrainian Republican Party 2006 present Radical Party of Oleh Liashko 2010 present European Solidarity 2014 present Right Sector 2013 present People s Front 2014 present National Corps 2016 present Defunct Edit Ukrainian Radical Party 1890 1950 Revolutionary Ukrainian Party 1900 1905 Borotbists 1918 1920 Ukrainian Communist Party 1920 1925 All Ukrainian Political Movement State Independence of Ukraine 1990 2003 Social National Party of Ukraine 1991 2004 UKROP 2015 2020 In literature EditOne of the most prominent figures in Ukrainian national history the Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko voiced ideas of an independent and sovereign Ukraine in the 19th century 106 Taras Shevchenko used poetry to inspire cultural revival to the Ukrainian people and to strive to overthrow injustice 106 Shevchenko died in Saint Petersburg on 10 March 1861 the day after his 47th birthday Ukrainians regard him as a national hero becoming a symbol of the national cultural revival of Ukraine Beside Shevchenko numerous other poets have written in Ukrainian Among them Volodymyr Sosyura stated in his poem Love Ukraine 1944 that one cannot respect other nations without respect for one s own Bibliography EditMain article Bibliography of Ukrainian history John Alexander Armstrong Ukrainian Nationalism Columbia University Press 1963 John Paul Himka Galician Villagers and the Ukrainian National Movement in the Nineteenth Century Palgrave Macmillan 1988 Taras Hunczak The Ukraine 1917 1921 A Study in Revolution Harvard University Press 1990 John Paul Himka Religion and Nationality in Western Ukraine The Greek Catholic Church and the Ruthenian National Movement in Galicia 1867 1900 McGill Queen s University Press 1999 Taras Hunczak Ukraine The Challenges of World War II University Press of America 2003 Norman Davies Europe at War 1939 1945 No Simple Victory Macmillan Publishers 2006 Timothy D Snyder Bloodlands Europe Between Hitler and Stalin Basic Books 2010 Grzegorz Rossolinski Liebe Stepan Bandera The Life and Afterlife of a Ukrainian Nationalist Fascism Genocide and Cult Ibidem Press 2014 John Paul Himka Ukrainian Nationalists and the Holocaust Ibidem Press 2021 Taras Hunczak On The Horns Of A Dilemma The Story of the Ukrainian Division Halychyna University Press of America 2021 See also Edit Ukraine portalAntisemitism in Ukraine 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2012 Elections Jamestown Retrieved 2022 08 15 by Taras Kuzio Oxford Analytica 5 October 2007 Nations and Nationalism A Global Historical Overview ABC CLIO 2008 ISBN 1851099077 page 1629 Ukraine on its Meandering Path Between East and West by Andrej Lushnycky and Mykola Riabchuk Peter Lang 2009 p 122 ISBN 303911607X Elections of People s Deputies of Ukraine on March 29 1998 the Election programmes of political parties and electoral blocs Vernadsky National Library of Ukraine 1998 Central Election Commission of Ukraine Archived 2014 02 19 at the Wayback MachineCandidates list for Less words Archived 2012 02 13 at the Wayback Machine Central Election Commission of Ukraine a b in Ukrainian Vseukrayinske ob yednannya Svoboda Database ASD in Ukrainian Oleg Tyagnibok Ukrinform After the parliamentary elections in Ukraine a tough victory for the Party of Regions Centre for Eastern Studies 7 November 2012 a b c d e f Shekhovtsov Anton 2011 The Creeping Resurgence of the Ukrainian Radical Right The Case of the Freedom Party Europe Asia Studies Volume 63 Issue 2 pp 203 228 doi 10 1080 09668136 2011 547696 source also available here 1 Algemeiner The Svoboda Fuels Ukraine s Growing Anti Semitism Algemeiner com Retrieved 2022 08 15 2 Ivan Katchanovskiinterview with Reuters Concerning Svoboda the OUN B and other Far Right Organizations in Ukraine Academia edu 4 March 2014 Motyl Alexander J 21 March 2014 Experts on Ukraine World Affairs Journal Archived from the original on March 22 2014 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link Miller Christopher 17 January 2014 Svoboda s rise inspires some frightens many others Kyiv Post Retrieved 5 February 2014 a b c d Rudling Per Anders 2013 12 The Return of the Ukrainian Far Right The Case of VO Svoboda In Ruth Wodak John E Richardson Michelle Lazar eds Analysing Fascist Discourse European Fascism in Talk and Text New York Routledge pp 228 255 Retrieved 12 March 2014 New Ukraine president pledges neutrality Agence France Presse 24 February 2010 Archived 2 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine Local government elections in Ukraine last stage in the Party of Regions takeover of power Centre for Eastern Studies October 4 2010 Svoboda The rise of Ukraine s ultra nationalists BBC News 26 December 2012 Ukraine s Ultranationalists Show Surprising Strength at Polls Nytimes com 8 November 2012 in Ukrainian Proportional votes Central Electoral Commission of Ukraine Batkivschyna UDAR Svoboda to create opposition council to coordinate activity in Rada Kyiv Post 17 December 2012 Batkivschyna UDAR Svoboda to coordinate their actions at presidential election Interfax Ukraine 16 May 2013 a b c d e f g h i Chiem Balduk 1 March 2022 Waarom Poetin Oekrainers neonazi s in een gecreeerd land noemt NOS in Dutch Retrieved 31 August 2022 Ukraine conflict White power warrior from Sweden BBC News 2014 07 16 Retrieved 2022 08 15 a b Ukraine crisis the neo Nazi brigade fighting pro Russian separatists www telegraph co uk Retrieved 2022 08 15 a b Ukraine s Neo Nazis Won t Get U S Money Bloomberg com 2015 06 12 Retrieved 2022 08 15 Azov fighters are Ukraine s greatest weapon and may be its greatest threat The Guardian 10 September 2014 German TV Shows Nazi Symbols on Helmets of Ukraine Soldiers NBC News Ukraine s revolution and the far right BBC News 2014 03 07 Retrieved 2022 08 15 Office of the Spokesperson 5 March 2014 President Putin s Fiction 10 False Claims About Ukraine Fact sheet Washington DC U S Department of State Retrieved 11 March 2014 Poroshenko Bloc to have greatest number of seats in parliament Archived 10 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine Ukrainian Television and Radio 8 November 2014 People s Front 0 33 ahead of Poroshenko Bloc with all ballots counted in Ukraine elections CEC Interfax Ukraine 8 November 2014 Poroshenko Bloc to get 132 seats in parliament CEC Interfax Ukraine 8 November 2014 a b Poroshenko wins presidential election with 54 7 of vote CEC Radio Ukraine International 29 May 2014 Archived from the original on 29 May 2014 in Russian Results election of Ukrainian president Telegraf 29 May 2014 Kandidati na mazhoritarnih okrugah Odnomandatnyj izbiratelnyj okrug 39 Candidates in majority districts Single mandate constituency 39 in Russian RBK Ukraine 26 October 2014 Archived from the original on 23 December 2014 Extraordinary parliamentary election on 26 10 2014 Data on vote counting at precincts within single mandate districts Central Election Commission of Ukraine 29 October 2014 Archived from the original on 29 October 2014 Kandidati na mazhoritarnih okrugah Odnomandatnyj izbiratelnyj okrug 213 Candidates for single mandate constituencies single mandate constituency 213 in Ukrainian RBK Ukraine 25 October 2014 Archived from the original on 9 December 2014 RBK Ukraine in Ukrainian Boryslav Bereza very short bio Archived 2014 12 09 at the Wayback Machine RBK UkraineVideo of first brawl in Verkhovna Rada becomes a YouTube hit Kyiv Post 5 December 2014 Gupta Sujata 2022 04 12 Ukrainian identity solidified for 30 years Putin ignored the science Science News Society for Science amp the Public Retrieved 2022 06 09 Ukrainian Militia Behind Brutal Romany Attacks Getting State Funds RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved 2022 08 15 Ukraine Roma camp attack leaves one dead BBC News 2018 06 24 Retrieved 2022 08 15 in Ukrainian The nationalists have been identified with a presidential candidate Ukrayinska Pravda 19 November 2018 Haring Melinda 2019 04 04 Zelenskiy wins first round but that s not the surprise Atlantic Council Retrieved 2022 08 15 a b c CEC counts 100 percent of vote in Ukraine s parliamentary elections Ukrinform 26 July 2019 in Russian Results of the extraordinary elections of the People s Deputies of Ukraine 2019 Ukrayinska Pravda 21 July 2019 in Ukrainian Yarosh Tyagnibok and Biletsky have all formed a single list for the elections Glavcom 9 June 2019 Ukrainization should be quite mild Zelensky s envoy to Verkhovna Rada Interfax Ukraine Retrieved 2022 08 15 Walker Shaun 2022 06 04 Written at Kharkiv Ukraine Enemy tongue eastern Ukrainians reject their Russian birth language The Guardian London Retrieved 2022 06 09 Onuch Olga 2022 09 26 European Ukrainians and their fight against Russian invasion Nations and Nationalism 29 53 62 doi 10 1111 nana 12883 ISSN 1354 5078 S2CID 252583979 a b Mansur Mirovalev 15 September 2022 How Ukrainians de Russify themselves Al Jazeera English Retrieved 28 October 2022 a b In the center of Dnipro the street of Stepan Bandera appeared the mayor Ukrayinska Pravda in Ukrainian 21 September 2022 Retrieved 16 October 2022 L M Markova About the renaming of streets in the city of Katerynoslava Dnipropetrovsk in the 1920s and 1930s gorod dp ua in Ukrainian Retrieved 16 October 2022 David L Stern Robert Klemko and Robyn Dixon 12 April 2022 War impels many in Ukraine to abandon Russian language and culture The Washington Post Retrieved 28 October 2022 a b Kleĭner Izrailʹ Kleiner Israel 2000 From Nationalism to Universalism Vladimir Ze ev Zhabotinsky and the Ukrainian Question Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press ISBN 978 1 895571 25 7 Notes Edit In the late 1920s and early 1930s as a new Polish government sought reconciliation with its five million Ukrainian citizens Ukrainian nationalists acted decisively to prevent any compromise settlement Bandera was one of the main organizers of terror campaigns intended to prevent Ukrainians from accepting the Polish government by provoking Polish retaliation 33 In the 1998 parliamentary election the radical nationalist bloc of parties All Ukrainian Political Movement State Independence of Ukraine and Social National Party of Ukraine called Less Words Ukrainian Menshe sliv collected 0 16 of the national vote but Oleh Tyahnybok was voted into Parliament from the bloc only Further reading EditMain article Bibliography of Ukrainian history Alexander F Tsvirkun History of political and legal Teachings of Ukraine Kharkiv 2008 John Alexander Armstrong Ukrainian Nationalism Columbia University Press 1963 LCCN 62 18367 Alexander J Motyl The turn to the right the ideological origins and development of Ukrainian nationalism 1919 1929 Published Boulder Colo East European quarterly New York distributed by Columbia University Press 1980 ISBN 0 914710 58 3 Kenneth C Farmer Ukrainian nationalism in the post Stalin era myth symbols and ideology in Soviet nationalities policy Kluwer Boston 1980 ISBN 90 247 2401 5 Andrew Wilson Ukrainian Nationalism in the 1990s A Minority Faith Cambridge University Press 1996 ISBN 0 521 57457 9 Ernst B Haas Nationalism Liberalism and Progress Cornell University Press 1997 ISBN 0 8014 3108 5 Chapter seven Russia and Ukraine pp 324 410 Ronald Grigor Suny Revenge of the Past Nationalism Revolution and the Collapse of the Soviet Union Stanford University Press 1993 ISBN 0 8047 2247 1 Paul Robert Magocsi The Roots of Ukrainian Nationalism Galicia As Ukraine s Piedmont University of Toronto Press 2002 ISBN 0 8020 4738 6 Stephen Velychenko Putin Preludes Secret Russian Police Reports on the Ukrainian National Movement lt Stephen Velychenko PUTIN PRELUDES Secret Russian Police Reports on the Ukrainian National Movement gt Andrew Wilson The Ukrainians Unexpected Nation Yale University Press 2002 ISBN 0 300 09309 8 External links EditUkrainian Patriot s Credo a poem by Basil Bucolic Oleksandr Palchenko Ukrainian nation and Ukrainian people First Social Agreement Bourgeois nationalists as they were depicted by the Soviet propaganda Ukrayinska Pravda Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ukrainian nationalism amp oldid 1152886578, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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