Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations and Tables
- A Note about Transliteration
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- 1 Far from Heaven
- 2 The Missing Museum of the History of the City of Kyiv
- 3 Sketches from the Capital
- 4 Soviet Ways, Post-Soviet Days
- 5 Historical Memory
- 6 The Center of Kyiv
- 7 A Geography of Privilege and Pretension
- 8 Landscapes of Struggle
- 9 “Suburbia”
- 10 Seamy Stories
- 11 The Defenders of Kyiv
- 12 Reflections
- 13 Two Years Later
- References
- Index
Preface and Acknowledgements
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations and Tables
- A Note about Transliteration
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- 1 Far from Heaven
- 2 The Missing Museum of the History of the City of Kyiv
- 3 Sketches from the Capital
- 4 Soviet Ways, Post-Soviet Days
- 5 Historical Memory
- 6 The Center of Kyiv
- 7 A Geography of Privilege and Pretension
- 8 Landscapes of Struggle
- 9 “Suburbia”
- 10 Seamy Stories
- 11 The Defenders of Kyiv
- 12 Reflections
- 13 Two Years Later
- References
- Index
Summary
One of the main themes in this book is the anger of the Ukrainian people at the corrupt political system that they have been forced to endure since the time that their country became unexpectedly independent in 1991. The first edition of Kyiv, Ukraine was being put together as the people's anger mounted specifically against the president at the time, Viktor Yanukovych, and his close cronies in government, all members of the Party of Regions. Both the president and most of his inner circle are from Donetsk oblast (province) in eastern Ukraine, a part of the country where the Russian language is more prevalent than Ukrainian and where many citizens identify fondly with Russia and/or long for the old days of the Soviet Union. When on November 21, 2013, Yanukovych announced that he was pulling back on an earlier promise to move Ukraine's future in the direction of the West and the European Union, and would instead seek to ally the country with Russia, a new wave of protests turned against him. This was the beginning of “Maidan” or “Euromaidan,” a grassroots protest movement that was centered on the Maidan Nezalezhnosti, the Independence Square in the center of Kyiv, the national capital. The first protesters were mostly college students, but when riot police descended on Maidan on the night of November 30 and began beating protestors and journalists, the nation's anger quickened, and soon there were thousands of people on the square, and then hundreds of thousands, as well as protests in cities across the country. As the world knows, Euromaidan reached a crescendo on February 18-20, 2014 when riot police attempted to liquidate the tent encampment in the center of Kyiv by setting it ablaze. Even worse, trained snipers fired into the crowds from behind trees on hilltops and from rooftops, killing more than 100 civilians. Those who perished are referred to as the Nebesna Sotnya, “Heaven's Hundred.” The public's anger ignited still more, and as speakers on the Maidan stage began to urge the protestors, many of whom were now armed for all to see, to rush uphill and storm the presidential office building, Yanukovych abandoned the presidency and fled the country.
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- Kyiv UkraineThe City of Domes and Demons from the Collapse of Socialism to the Mass Uprising of 2013–2014, pp. 17 - 28Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2016