This will be Ukraine's first Christmas since Russia's full-on invasion in February. And in those intervening months, Moscow has revived dark historical ...
Markiw gave moving speeches and piano performances in remembrance of the Ukrainian lives lost both in Holodomor and the ongoing Russian invasion. The concert ...
Standing ovations from the audience at the end of this performance marked the success of the event. [Etude](https://www.byarcadia.org/post/an-analysis-of-chopin-s-etude-op-10-no-3),” which Chopin composed around the time of Russia’s invasion of Poland from 1830-1831. Schroeder urged the audience to “never stop listening to the voices of the past.” The professor transitioned from “Melody” to “He has Gone” by Canadian jazz musician, Oscar Peterson, by discussing Skoryk’s love for Peterson’s work. Markiw gave moving speeches and piano performances in remembrance of the Ukrainian lives lost both in Holodomor and the ongoing Russian invasion. The event began with a speech by Bradley Woodworth, an associate professor of history at the university.
Members of the Castlegar Ukrainian-Canadian community and their supporters gathered at Castlegar City Hall on Nov. 26 to mark Holodomor Memorial Day.
“We must ensure that Russia never again is able to demonstrate aggression to Ukraine or any other country in the world.” “The Soviet Union’s mass starvation of the Ukrainian people was a heinous attempt to suppress the nation’s culture and their dream of being an independent and free country. We do so in an uncertain global landscape, where Vladimir Putin’s illegal war in Ukraine threatens lives, freedom and democracy.”