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Zelenskyy Signs Ban on Russian Place Names in Struggle Over National Identity

By Jeffrey Gettleman and Olha Kotiuzhanska, 2023-04-22
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A priest blesses the open grave of Ukrainian service member Oleksandr Dykiy, 41, who was killed last week near Bakhmut, during his funeral in his hometown of Mykhaylivsʹka Tserkva, in the Kyiv region of Ukraine on April 22, 2023. (Finbarr O’Reilly/The New York Times)

KYIV, Ukraine — President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine has signed two laws that strictly reinforce his country’s national identity, banning Russian place names and making knowledge of Ukrainian language and history a requirement for citizenship.

The moves late Friday were Ukraine’s latest steps to distance itself from a long legacy of Russian domination, an increasingly emotional subject since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine began last year. They also show how forceful Ukraine’s government has become about protecting its cultural identity in a conflict shaped by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s efforts to wipe it out.

Already, countless streets across Ukraine have been renamed, and statues of Russian figures like Catherine the Great have come toppling down in what officials have called “decolonization” or “de-Russification” projects. While such efforts to scrub away old Russian names have been going on since the fall of the Soviet Union, they have picked up pace since the war began in February 2022.

A law that Zelenskyy signed Friday prohibits using place names that “perpetuate, promote or symbolize the occupying state or its notable, memorable, historical and cultural places, cities, dates, events” and “its figures who carried out military aggression against Ukraine.”

The law will come into force in three months, according to a statement posted on the Telegram messaging app by Ukraine’s parliament, after which, local authorities will have six months to “free public space from the symbols of the Russian world.” A national board will draw up a list of what it considers questionable names, and then local councils in cities and towns must change them. If elected members of the local bodies cannot agree, the law says that the head of that body will have the authority to change the name.

Vakhtang Kebuladze, a philosophy professor at the Taras Shevchenko National University in Kyiv, Ukraine, said it was about time for such a measure. He, like many other Ukrainian intellectuals, supports the erasing of Russian names, even those of great writers like Leo Tolstoy.

“It’s not about literature,” Kebuladze said Saturday. “It’s about the imperialistic presence of Russia in our streets and our cities.”

He added, “We should read Tolstoy. We should investigate his literature. But why do we need to have a Leo Tolstoy Street in the center of Kyiv?”

Kebuladze also welcomed the new citizenship law signed by Zelenskyy on Friday that requires knowledge of Ukrainian language and history.

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A member of a demining team uses a metal detector to clear a field in Marakiv, an area near Kyiv that was occupied by Russian forces during the early months of the war in Ukraine, Friday, April 21, 2023. (Finbarr O’Reilly/The New York Times)

Many Ukrainian citizens are native Russian speakers — including Zelenskyy. An estimated 1 in every 3 Ukrainians speaks Russian at home, according to researchers, but many of them — outraged by the violence of Russia’s invasion — have been switching to Ukrainian as a show of defiance.

Yet Kebuladze, who speaks Ukrainian, Russian and Georgian, said it was fine for people to continue to speak what they want at home.

“It’s not about private language,” Kebuladze said.

“We have only one state language: Ukrainian,” he added. “And if people want to become citizens, they should know this language. It’s part of our identity, our culture, our history.”

As important as identity is to Ukrainians, it has also been a huge part of Putin’s justification for the invasion. Before ordering his troops to cross the border last February, Putin accused Ukraine of trying to “root out” Russian language and culture. He cited the need to protect Russian speakers as part of his spurious justification for the war and has repeatedly asserted that Ukraine is not a real state and that the Ukrainians are not a real people, but actually Russian.

In territory seized by Putin’s forces since then, Moscow has been trying to stamp out Ukrainian identity and tighten Russia’s hold through intense Russification efforts. Pressuring Ukrainians to get Russian passports has been one facet, as were attempts to enforce a Russian curriculum in schools and replace the Ukrainian currency with the Russian ruble like the Russian occupation authorities tried to do in Kherson, a city in southern Ukraine occupied by Moscow’s forces for more than eight months last year.

Russian troops retreated from Kherson in November but took up positions just across the Dnieper River and have continued to relentlessly shell the city. For months after the retreat, remnants of Russification efforts still remained — like faintly visible signs on billboards that read “Russia is here forever.”

Here’s what else is happening in Ukraine:

Attack drones: Ukraine’s air force said Saturday that it had shot down four of five Iranian-made attack drones launched by Russia overnight. The air force, in a statement posted on Telegram, did not provide further details about whether the drone that evaded air defenses had struck a target. It was the second time in 24 hours that Russia launched Shahed-136 drones; on Friday, the air force said it had destroyed eight of 12 drones deployed.

Nuclear safety: The United Nations’ nuclear watchdog reported hearing shelling “almost every day” over the past week at the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in southern Ukraine. In a statement Friday, the watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, said the shelling further underscored “the serious nuclear safety and security risks facing Europe’s largest nuclear power plant.” U.N. nuclear experts have repeatedly called for a cease-fire near the plant, which is occupied by Russian forces, warning of the risk of a nuclear accident.

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Nadiia Pavlivna, 66, takes a break in the corridor of a basement where she lives as explosions can be heard in the vicinity in Siversk, in eastern Ukraine, April 21, 2023. (Mauricio Lima/The New York Times)

Expelled diplomats: The Russian foreign ministry said Saturday that Moscow would expel a number of German diplomats in retaliation for a similar move by German authorities, calling it a “response to Berlin’s hostile actions.” The German foreign ministry confirmed that German officials had been in touch with Russian diplomats and that some of those had left the country Saturday. Although German officials denied the diplomats had been officially expelled, they acknowledged that the conversations with Russian diplomats had taken place “with the aim of reducing the Russian intelligence presence in Germany.” In December, German authorities arrested an employee of their own foreign intelligence service on suspicion of sharing state secrets with Russia.

Evacuation in border town : In the Russian city of Belgorod, on Russia’s border with Ukraine, authorities on Saturday ordered more than 3,000 people to evacuate their apartment buildings for several hours because of unexploded ordnance found at the site where another bomb dropped by Russia’s own air force had exploded Thursday, injuring three. Vyacheslav Gladkov, the regional governor, said in a video posted to the Telegram messaging app that sappers examining the site of the explosion had found an aerial bomb that did not explode. Seventeen apartment buildings in a 650-foot radius were evacuated for a few hours, he said.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times .

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