I wasn't following this discussion closely and probably won't do it in the future because it's too difficult for me to handle at the personal level. I don't have energy to add much to the discussion, but I can't be silent. For the last six days I have been trying to help my immediate family members in Ukraine to reach parts of the country where it's relatively safe. Still, air raid sirens sometimes don't let them sleep at night and force them to go to a bomb shelter. Most of my family and many of my friends are still in Kyiv and Chernihiv regions, in various towns and villages across Ukraine. Men and many courageous women are fighting angainst the enemy with everything they've got, children and grandparents hide in cellars, bomb shelters, underground parking structures with little to no food and water. I cannot begin to describe to you how hard this has been on everyone. One thing I'm certain of is that Ukrainians will fight and defend their land until their last breath. This is perhaps the most important miscalculation the russians made when they invaded my country.
There have been many symbolic and tragic parallels drawn during this war, from russians fighting with "neonazis" led by the only Jewish President (and Prime Minister) outside of Isreal to them bombing one of the largest massacre sites during the Holocaust---Babyn Yar in Kyiv, killing a family in the process; from them saying Ukraine should not exist and was created by Lenin to the realization that Kyiv is "the mother of Rus' cities" that was established centuries and centuries before Moscow was even on the map as a small village in Chernihiv knyazivstvo (Prnicipiality of Chernihiv in Rus'), and so on. They simply don't know our country, don't know our people, don't know our history. They have made many attempts to erase our identity, destroy and ban our language and national symbols, to starve us and shoot our intelligentsia. But this will be the last time they try, and they will ultimately pay the price.
I want to end on a positive note. Here's a beautiful arrangement of the Ukrainian Shchedryk, otherwise known as Carol of the Bells, performed recently in Worcester Cathedral to show solidarity with all Ukrainians. The music to this folklore song was written by Mykola Leontovych, who was murdered by a soviet agent.
to every russian warship, tank, plane, and soldier on my land---go you-know-where!
Thank you everyone who is supporting Ukraine!