Main topics covered: EuroMaidan Revolution, war, attack on heritage, damage and losses, cultural response and art frontline, cultural emergency strategies, challenges. Context: almost a year ago Russian troops launched a massive missile attack on all sovereign territory of Ukraine and brutally crossed its border in tanks. Thus, how a full-scale Russian-Ukrainian war started.
Museums, libraries, archives and other cultural institutions responded to the threat in accordance with their capacities and military situation. The civilized world launched a "cultural lend-lease" for Ukraine, providing cultural institutions with packing and restoration materials, protective and emergency equipment, hard and cloud storages, humanitarian and financial assistance. Ukrainian museums, libraries, archives, scientific and art centers, getting such solidarity and help, began active rescue operations, assessing losses and risks, documenting crimes against culture. In a period of 11 months of the war, the Russians destroyed or damaged 1,189 cultural objects in Ukraine, according to records from the Ministry of Culture and Information Policy of Ukraine. Tens of thousands of artefacts were stolen from museum and private collections in the occupied regions. The looting of Ukrainian historical, cultural and artistic values, the purposeful destruction of museums, archives, libraries, theaters, cultural centers, monuments, and religious buildings is an intentionally planned military and ideological operation of the Kremlin regime. What should be done for complex processes of stabilization, early recovery and reconstruction of Ukrainian culture, an international tribunal against Russian military criminals, restitution of cultural values and promotion of Ukrainian culture worldwide? As well as for raising awareness of the experience of this war and measures to strengthen the stability of culture in times of crisis? These are the issues to discuss in the lecture.
Ihor Poshyvailo (Kyiv, Ukraine) ) is a general director of the National Memorial to the Heavenly Hundred Heroes and Revolution of Dignity Museum (Maidan Museum). He is a cultural activist, ethnologist, museologist, cultural manager and art curator. Dr. Poshyvailo is former chairman of the Museum Council at the Ukrainian Ministry of Culture, a former Vice-Chair of the ICOM DRMC International Committee on Disaster Resilient Museums. He holds a PhD in History, and was a Fulbright Scholar at the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage and an international fellow at the DeVos Institute of Arts Management at the Kennedy Center.
Greetings.
I'm Glenn Wharton, Chair of the UCLA Getty
Departmental Program
in the Conservation of Cultural Heritage.
Welcome to another event
in our distinguished lecture series.
UCLA is a land grant institution.
And we acknowledge the Gabrielino/Tongva
peoples as the traditional land
caretakers of the Tovaangar - the Los Angeles
Basin and South Channel Islands.
We honor the elders, past and present,
and the descendants,
who are part of the
Gabrielino/Tongva nation.
We honor and respect the many
first peoples still connected to the land
on which we gather.
And we commit our work and service
to these values.
In this lecture series,
we invite leaders in allied fields
to reflect on larger issues
of cultural heritage conservation,
which spanned from technical research
and intervention on cultural materials
to larger concerns
such as authenticity, illicit trade,
repatriation and protection
during times of war.
Many of us have been looking
forward to today's lecture by
Dr. Ihor Poshyvailo,
who will tell us about the current
situation in Ukraine with regards
to the Russian theft and destruction
of Ukrainian cultural heritage.
He'll also explore some of the
motivations behind these acts.
Given the large size of the audience,
we won't be able to take live questions
during our discussion
following the lecture.
But if you do have questions,
please post them in the Q&A box
at the bottom of your screen
and we'll try to get to some of them
and we'll certainly pass them all
on to our speaker
After the event. We
will record the lecture
and post it on our website
for those who are unable to attend.
Today's event is co-sponsored
by the Center
for European and Russian Studies at UCLA.
Laurie Hart, Director of the Center
and Professor of Anthropology
and Global Studies,
will introduce our speaker.
But first, I'd like to point out that
Dr. Hart is a socio-cultural anthropologist
with a research focus on the long-term
effects of persons and communities
who have experienced ethno-political conflict.
With this background, she will no doubt
nurture the discussion following the lecture.
Laurie. Good morning, everyone,
and thanks for being here with us
and thank you, Glenn and the UCLA
Getty Conservation Program, for
inviting our participation in this event.
This is a moment to do everything we can
to keep Ukraine in our awareness
and in our consciousness.
As the war continues into its 14th month,
we are increasingly aware
of the depth of the toll of material
and human destruction and the severity
of the threats to democracy and freedom
and the environmental, bodily,
social and psychological costs of war.
We urgently need
to keep international attention focused.
We're really fortunate
to have with us this morning a speaker
who's been a core actor in the struggle
for the preservation
of cultural memory
and material heritage in Ukraine.
Ihor Poshyvailo
is a cultural activist,
ethnologist, museologist,
cultural manager and art curator.
Dr. Poshyvailo is a former chairman
of the Museum Council at the Ukrainian
Ministry of Culture, a former Vice Chair
of the International Committee
on Disaster Resilient Museums
at the Internation Committee on Museums.
He holds a Ph.D.
in history and was a Fulbright scholar
at the Smithsonian Center for Folklife
and Cultural Heritage and an
international fellow at the DeVose
Institute of Arts Management
at the Kennedy Center.
He is General Director of the
National Memorial to the Heavenly
Hundred Heroes and Revolution
at Dignity Museum,
also called the Maidan Museum.
That museum was founded
in the aftermath of the 2013-2014
rebellion against government corruption
and pro-Russian autocracy
that cost the lives of 108 protesters
and 13 police
and reestablished
the constitution in Ukraine.
Its aim was, and I quote
Dr. Poshyvailo's words here, to carve out
a space of freedom, a public space
of a new type, a place of lived stories
and true accounts,
a repository of collective memory
and laboratory of its reinterpretation.
From 2014 to the present,
he and his colleagues
have sought to sustain this vision
under the continuous violence
and plunder of war.
Please join me in welcoming Ihor Poshyvailo.
Ihor.
Oh, good morning, everyone.
I'm pleased and honored to join
the University of Los Angeles
speaker series program.
And thank you for this great opportunity.
Let me start.
Let me start my lecture.
I would like to have a talk
and discussion on the situation,
what's going on in Ukraine
concerning this dramatic war,
which we often name as identity war,
because cultural heritage, cultural sector
are the main targets in this situation.
So on February 22,
explosions woke me up in Kiev.
It was quite an easy situation
because Ukraine was not prepared.
Also, the war started in 2014, in fact.
Russian missiles, air strikes
and tank fires targeted not only
my family, my nation,
they targeted
our cultural identity, our centuries
old heritage.
Thus began
a full scale war.
Then it became a turning point
not only for Ukraine,
but for the whole of the world.
Despite all the narratives
spread by Russian propaganda,
the real motive behind
Russia's war is quite clear.
They are trying to destroy
Ukraine as a sovereign state
and to eliminate the Ukrainian people
as an independent and free nation.
So why did all this unprovoked
and unfair full scale aggression happen?
I will repeat Laurie, but
let me start by saying
that it is deeply symbolic for us
in Ukraine that the great Nelson
Mandela ended his earthly life
exactly the time when the Kiev
Euromaidan protest or Maidan briefly
was setting up its first barricades on the
other continent in the heart of Europe.
According to Paul Goble,
evaluation of Euromaidan, a new
nation was born in Ukraine,
was intrinsic
political belief in democracy and liberty.
This American analyst believes
that the name of the Ukrainian experience
of national genesis,
Maidan or the square, is
reminiscent of the ancient
Greek Agora, a public space
where people's assembly
would develop the principles
of people's authority, spreading
democracy all over the world.
This is another symbol, quite gloomy,
considering our present situation.
In 1961,
Moscow leader Nikita Khrushchev
declared that Russian missiles
would destroy Acropolis
in Athens, if necessary
for achievement of Russian goals.
The Greek prime minister of the time
replied to the Kremlin dictator
that Moscow could destroy the Acropolis
with its weapons,
but would never be able
to destroy the ideal of democracy
and personal freedom
that had been born there.
So the Euromaidan Revolution
was the first response to Russia's open
aggression towards Ukraine in 2014.
The biggest and longest in
European history, destroyed
Moscow's plans to seize
Ukraine stealthily, quietly,
through political collaborators
at the highest level of government
and using hybrid technologies.
So in the days following the corrupted
President Yanukovich's escape,
Russia attempted to split Ukraine,
making it look like a civil war
and occupied by part of its territory.
By invading Crimea in February 2014,
Russia started an armed war
against Ukraine.
Donetsk and Luhansk
regions have turned into a long-term
zone of temporary occupation
and military actions.
In response, the Maidan was transformed
into a powerful volunteer movement
in support of the Ukrainian armed forces.
Many of the protesters
replaced wooden shields
and makeshift, ammunition
for bulletproof body armor
and fire weapons, and set
out to defend the country.
The National Memorial to the Heavenly Hundred
Revolution of Dignity Museum, or briefly
the Maidan Museum, has progressed
from a public initiative to a state run
institution to become an important symbol
of the national memory,
freedom of rights
and cultural expressions.
We planned to launch the construction
of the Maidan Museum
in the very heart of Kiev this year.
The six storey building
was a total space of over 300,000
square feet is conceptualized
as a multi-functional space.
It was not only exhibitions
to display historical narratives,
but was House of Freedom
a children's museum,
creative laboratories,
art studios and platforms to experiment,
generate new senses and
perspectives, develop
cultural and civic activism.
Since Crimea and part of Donbas
were occupied by Russia in 2014,
It was a crucial need
for cultural activists in Ukraine
to obtain broader knowledge
on various aspects of emergency response
and resilience on the cultural sector,
to build capacities,
strengthen communities and inspire them
with the hope of sustainable future.
You can see the first museums
which were damaged in summer 2014
in Luhansk and Donetsk regions.
And in this situation, of course we needed
much more knowledge.
We needed to understand
how world responds to such situations.
And so in particular, we in 2014
had established a museum emergency
headquarters, which however, did
not exist for long as the conflict
was localized in eastern Ukraine.
And nobody believed that it would be
fueled into a full scale invasion.
And you can see on the slide
some guidelines, toolkits
which we transformed, adopted, translated
due to international standards
and practices.
And you can see some from United States,
some European
publications, which became very,
very instrumental and very helpful to us
in that very first moments
when we had to respond.
But still, it was not systematic
and unfortunately Ukraine
was not ready to effectively
protect its cultural heritage
due to the lack of relevant knowledge,
resources, coordination
and most importantly, awareness
at the highest levels
of the role of cultural heritage
and Ukrainian identity in this war.
So Putin's
regime ignored the basic international
military and humanitarian laws,
including the Hague Convention of 1954,
and its Protocols on the Protection
of Cultural Property in the event
of armed conflict. Not spontaneously,
due to so-called military necessity.
The desire to reboot
the cultural identity of Ukrainians
was at the core of the Kremlin's
genocidal policy.
The Guardian journalist
Luke Harding aptly observed
that Putin sought to satisfy
his political ambitions of
enslaving language and identity
by using tactics familiar
and tested from Russia's dark past.
So bombs, destruction
and killings of civilians
are quite illustrative evidences.
And really, why not?
As Putin cynically declared a few days
before the full scale attack,
that Ukraine is an inalienable
part of Russian history,
culture and spiritual space.
And Russia uses not only history
but also culture
as a tool of the imperial policy.
This was clearly expressed
by the Director of the Hermitage
and president of the ICOM Russia,
Mikhail Petrovsky last summer,
speaking about the importance
of culture in this aggression,
he emphasized
in his interview
the exhibitions abroad
by heritage
were a powerful cultural offensive,
a kind of a special operation.
So it was very similar
to military operation
announced by Kremlin regime,
the result of such like offensive
speak for themselves during 408 days
of the war,
objects of cultural infrastructure
in Ukraine were damaged,
including over 500
destroyed, completely destroyed.
This statistics is according
to the Minister of Culture,
Information and Policy,
and you can see how many hundreds
of cultural centers, historical buildings,
religious
religious sites,
monuments, libraries, museums, theaters
and philharmonic
have been damaged or destructed.
Before the war,
the cultural
sector of Ukraine was quite big.
It was consisted
of about 40,000 institutions
in which more than 200,000 people worked.
Of them, more than 7%
are occupied at the moment.
And about 2% were destroyed or damaged.
And this resulted in about 12,000
cultural workers
becoming forcibly displaced.
More than 600 of them
are serving in the armed forces
and 80,000 becoming unemployed.
Also, some statistics
about the scale of the damage.
According to a few days ago, you m
estimations, the war caused damage
to Ukraine's heritage and cultural sites
of approximately
Dramatic pictures of the destroyed
heritage sites, historical buildings,
museums, memorial memorials,
churches, mosques and synagogues,
cultural and art centers became
well known.
And of course, the scale of destruction
saw even the US
President Joseph Biden, who called the war
in Ukraine brutal and added
that Putin is not only trying to take over
Ukraine,
he's trying to destroy the culture
and identity of the Ukrainian people.
Here you can
see some iconic examples
of the cultural damage
starting from the Mariupol drama
theater, where hundreds of residents
tried to escape Russian air bombing.
But in vain.
They put the signs in front and beside
this building,
the children in the big letters sold.
The aircrafts with bombs can see about
at the moment to be killed
during those airstrikes.
One more example you can see here,
one of the first destroyed
wooden churches dated
and the History Museum
in the town of Taluka in the Sunni region.
On the left,
the official statistics
by the Ministry of Culture
and Information Policy, of course,
is shocking about incomplete,
as Ukraine has no access
to temporally occupied territories,
it cannot assess
the range of damage there.
Therefore, satellite laboratories
of the U.S.
and Great Britain help to monitor
the condition of cultural objects,
providing information from the regions
temporarily not under the control
of Ukraine, and documenting the facts
of intentional attacks on heritage.
A vivid example is the monitoring
of Ukraine's over
by the Smithsonian Institution
and the Cultural
Monitoring Lab in Virginia.
And there is an urgent need for this,
of course, for this monitoring,
satellite monitoring.
And according to one of our partners,
Bryan Daniels,
and an anthropologist
and director of research
and programs at the Center
for Cultural Heritage
at the University of Pennsylvania Museum,
he also works with the Smithsonian
Heritage Rescue Initiative
and the Heritage Monitoring Laboratory
at the Virginia Museum of Natural History.
And we got a lot of information
about intentional damage
of a number of Ukrainian cultural heritage
sites and museums in particular.
And according to a Brian Daniels,
a Russian theft of artifacts in Ukraine
is a strategy
to undermine the identity of Ukraine
as a separate, independent country.
This evidence is also confirmed
by other sources
official statements of representatives
of the military,
civilian administration,
private and public social networks,
materials
in the media, reports of cultural workers,
and even information
from the occupied territories.
So on October 14, 2022,
the Russian media Izvestia
published an article
about the so-called replenishment
of the Museum Fund of Russia
by 44,000 works of art
with a total value
of over a billion rubles.
And of course, all that artworks are from
art looted from from Ukrainian territory.
It's also important
that it seems all the world and.
STAMBERG The destruction of Ukrainian
culture becomes an objects of war.
And it's so special
in the case of Russia's attack on Ukraine.
And the researcher
in the former undersecretary
of the Smithsonian Institution clearly
put it in his article, which was published
in the Smithsonian magazine,
about the cultural destruction in Ukraine.
So the
war crimes against culture were enlarged
by looting and illegal
trafficking of cultural objects
from Keynesians and private collections
to non-controlled territories
and to the Russian Federation.
The cases of looting collections
from the Mariupol Art
and History Museum and Queens Art Gallery
and the Taupo Museum
are illustrative and so dramatic.
As soon as Mobile was captured,
the occupants whole the way
the original paintings of are hip, green
and even the use of unique icons
and other valuable exhibits
from local museums.
The Mariupol Museum of Local Law
was destroyed by shelling
and almost all of its stock collection
burned in the fire, except rarities
that were illegally relocated to Russia.
One more example Yukimura Beth's
unique collection of over 700 exhibits
was also stolen from the unique museum
of Medallion Art in Mariupol
in the occupied top
Russians hunted mostly in gold
and archeological collections
of the fourth century B.C.
At the Local History Museum,
its employees were kidnaped,
as is director Leyla Ibrahimova
and interrogated with torches.
As a result, historical weapons
and about 2,000 items
made of silver and gold were stolen,
including about 200 pieces
of golden jewelry from the [. . .]
fourth century B.C.
and about 100 golden
items of the [. . . ] period
third, fifth centuries A.D.
Russians also looted
dozens of thousands of exhibits
from the museums in the Kherson region.
Among them, almost all the paintings
from the Kherson Art Museum,
including the most valuable
dated 17th-19th
centuries, including unique items,
but they left intact only
some of this social realism,
paintings and 20th century
artworks by local artists.
The Kherson Museum of Local Law also lost
about 10,000 artworks of its collection,
including lapidary, archeology
and historical jewelry.
Some details of Russian
special operation in Kherson.
According to the witnesses
of that situation,
the museum collections were looted
by especially organized teams
of dozens of people.
About a half dozen
trucks come to the museum
to relocate the collections.
They organize that kind of security
and constructed special road
blocks around the building so
not many people can see what's going on.
And at the same time,
according to some witnesses,
they disregarded elementary museum
norms during this so-called operation
loading artistic values,
objects as ordinary load objects.
Interesting that
some of the stolen items
were taken to temporarily occupied Crimea
and some of them,
in particular paintings
from the Kherson Art Museum
were identified at the Tavrida Central
Museum in Simferopol and
in this slides
you can see these looted artworks
just stalled in the corridors of the museum
in temporary occupied Crimea.
There are so many such facts,
and this once again confirms
the systematic attack
on Ukrainian identity
in the context of so-called
de-Ukrainization
proclaimed by Russia.
Putin demonstrated his
readiness and willingness
to repeat the crimes of the first
gathering, the second Lenin, Stalin
and other leaders of Russian imperialism
and dictatorship, genocide by repressions,
starvation by hunger or warfare.
Thus, not only the looting of Ukrainian
historical, cultural
and artistic values,
but also the intentional
destruction of museums,
archives, libraries, theaters,
cultural centers, monuments,
religious buildings, is a carefully planned
military and ideological operation
of the Putin regime.
An intentional missile attack
on the Ivankiv museum also reported to be
is the first intentionally constructed
museum in key region was a unique
collection of works of painting,
including of the famed world
famous Maria Primachenko
whose paintings were
admired by Pablo Picasso,
as well as the [. . .]
museum, very, very symbolic,
iconic museum for
Ukrainian culture and history
in Kharkiv region has been confirmed
by international experts.
Such like crimes against humanity
are carefully documented
by law enforcement officers,
military prosecutors,
office advocacy groups, volunteers.
And the only one hope that Italy lead.
Later, all these documents will bring
the perpetrators of cultural genocide
in Ukraine
to the tribunal.
From the first days of missile
missile strikes,
Ukrainian museum libraries and archives
and other cultural institutions responded
to the threat through their capabilities
and the military situation.
Some have started the evacuation
of cultural values, but what others?
Unfortunately, it was already too late.
The territories were occupied
the same day on the 24th.
On the 25th of February.
At the same time, cultural activists,
in cooperation with local authorities
and communities, turned public spaces
into cultural barricades,
sheltering monuments and sculptures
for state decorations
and other artistic and historical objects
with OSB panels and sandbags
for protection.
The solidarity of the whole world
coming together to protect culture
in Ukraine
in times of war is unprecedented in scale.
The Heritage
Emergency Response Initiative, briefly
HERI, was launched to respond to this
crisis, and I am happy to be a co-founder
of this initiative.
Its goals are to promote
and contribute to the preservation
of cultural heritage during wartime.
Of course, coordination assessment
and documentation of losses
and damages,
also modification and mobilization of war.
And what is very important
for us, even today during the war,
ongoing war, we are thinking about
what will be in the future.
So we
we are thinking about postwar recovery,
a reconstruction and modernization
of our culture, of course, increasing
resilience to emergencies and increasing
our cultural sector in general.
And here you can see
some examples of partnerships and actions.
We created a wide national network
of museums, archives,
libraries, partnerships, coordinating
all activities with national
and international governments and NGOs.
And the primary founders of Haiti
were the Maidan Museum
and NGO Toussaint from Lille.
And of course, we coordinate
our activities Minister of Culture
and other
national international organizations.
You can see that
in the first weeks of the war,
the biggest challenge
we face was the need to evacuate
the most valuable collections
to safe storage and to provide financial
and technical support to employees
of cultural institutions in the war zone.
And we have been constantly
monitoring information about the situation
and needs of museums, archives, libraries,
both individually
and at the specially developed
digital web platforms.
So we have provided
since the organization's active
organizational assistance,
direct operations consultations
to over 300 cultural institutions
from 24 regions of Ukraine.
And the protection of
national identity is impossible
without supporting people
who take care of national heritage.
And many of them have found themselves
in a particularly desperate situation,
forced to leave their homes,
lost the work place.
Some risked their safety
to preserve objects of cultural heritage.
Some have been completely absorbed
in volunteering
and helping their colleagues,
and some even lost their lives
protecting cultural heritage.
For example, in my museum, out of 50
staff members, eight people are in
the frontlines at the moment.
And to illustrate this, I would like to
tell you
one case, one story
about an electric generator.
On March 22, the city of [ . . .]
claimed a museum city because a lot of
churches, museum there, was sieged
by Russian troops,
unable to capture the city.
The Russian army heavily shielded
like many other city buildings.
The basement of our historical museum turns
into a 24/7 bomb shelter.
Dozens of townspeople
were hiding in the museum
without electricity, heat,
water, food in those days.
And to respond to the request
to provide them some help,
the HERI ordered, received from Italy,
one of the first generator electric
generators due to Cultural Heritage
International Emergency Force from Italy.
The bridges around
[. . .] were blown up,
the generator was fuel
and some food was handed
by us to volunteers in Kiev
who planned to deliver humanitarian
aid to Chernihiv by using field roads,
hidden field roads not open roads
and crossing the river.
On their way back,
the volunteers on the five
minivans planned to evacuate
more than
from local orphanages.
In the village of [. . .] near Chernihiv,
Russian troops shelled
the colony of five volunteer vans.
Volunteers were injured
and three of them killed,
including husbands
of a Ukrainian parliament member
and the 19 year old
girl named Anastasia.
We found the site later and brought
what has been left from the generator
to tell this story.
At our exhibition, that opened recently,
Identity, War, Power
of Cultural Resistance.
And you can see the pictures
from he site.
So protecting cultural
heritage is always quite dangerous
and it can cost the human lives.
Also,
we reproduced a lot of packaging materials
and can see
some of
materials.
We got protection, protective equipment
and which we got
from many international organizations,
museums, governments, equipment.
Here you can see very important for us
message which we
had found among the packaging materials
from the team of Louvre.
Good luck. We are with you.
So suchlike things are so
So what are you waiting for us?
And we are grateful
to this kind of support.
We also provide them a lot of expeditions
all over Ukraine, mostly to the occupied
or to endangered regions.
And here you can see
some of some of the pictures we provide.
Assessment of damage aerial photography
by drone
make laser
scanning for creating 3D models.
We rescue objects and records oral stories
from the ground.
And here you can see
also one of our field trips,
including Ikram and I Icomos
teams.
And we
we also created a mobile application
for damage and the risk assessment
on the job form platform.
So it's very,
very instrumental for us at the moment.
And also,
here's the example of the 3D model.
Unfortunately, it is not working here, but
we create a are
and we are a reality models and 3D models,
so they will help us also monitor
the situation of the buildings
to provide action plans to stabilize them.
And later, of course, they will be very
important for reconstruction processes
are also some example
of our rescue operations.
You've seen on the announcement
of this lecture, this famous and green
ceramic rooster,
and we one of the first our
cultural operation
to Urban, the town of Duncan near Kiel.
And we rescued the well known
at the moment kitchen cabinet
with ceramic rooster
a symbol of Ukrainian resilience
and it the only one object survived
in that building.
And we documented it and
how having fantastic materials
to to to share to display
also quite important for is to provide
educational consultations
to Ukrainian army
on protecting cultural property
in times of war.
According to 1954 Hague
Convention and its protocols.
And you can see some results.
We at least we have three cases
since to 2020 to
recall that when Ukrainian soldiers
saved archeological findings
during military actions
and pass them to the museums.
Of course, we have a lot of challenges and
most of them are well discussed
and we try to to respond to them.
We need crisis management leadership,
of course we need coordination.
We need a lot of very important things.
And I
so we we will over this and
we hope
we're looking for the future with hope,
working on
establishing of a cultural emergency
response and resilience system.
You can see just a draft of our vision
to respond to the challenges.
And of course
there are a lot of things to do.
A lot of things which should be done
means starting from very simple
on a tactical level
and finalizing on the strategic level.
At the moment we are looking over.
So the strategic plan for recovery.
Did you plan for Cultural Emergency
Response system in Ukraine, harmonization
of Ukrainian cultural legislation
to international laws
creating mobile groups
and documenting crimes
and trying and helping
ICC International Criminal Court?
Was this trying to digitize
not only mobile
but immovable cultural objects?
So a lot of things should be done
at the moment and international
expertise, international
capacities in this crucial for us
and to conclude, because I know that
I'm running out of my time,
you can see that basic actions needed.
But I have to conclude
finally, and I'd like to express
my strongest belief
the culture has the power to inspire hope
it change the world around us.
We only have to be united
in our minds and actions.
And let me paraphrase Malala Yousafzai,
a young Pakistani
social activist and Nobel Prize winner,
who said one book, one pen, one child,
one teacher,
and I would add one
cultural institution can change the world.
And we cranium culture.
This dramatic time of the war for identity
becomes an opportunity
to regain our historical memory,
rediscover our cultural identity,
make our heritage
well protected and accessible
to the rest of the world.
And of course, for us, it's a chance
to tell our story
of fighting for freedom and the future.
Thank you so much
for your attention
and for standing with Ukraine.
Well,
thank you for that.
Your lecture's quite overwhelming.
You know, I was
so many questions came up to my mind.
And I see
we have a few in the Q&A already.
You know, I was struck by your labeling
the war as an identity war.
And also I saw that one of our audience,
audience members, Terry Shenkman,
suggested that it be characterized
as a brutal, illegal invasion.
But I'm just
I mean, clearly the Russian theft
and destruction of Ukrainian
cultural heritage from ancient artifacts
to modern materials, museums, archives,
cultural sites is intentional.
It's an effort to destroy
and take ownership of Ukrainian identity
and cultural memory.
You touched on this, but I'd like it
if you could expand a little bit
on the reaction to this
among the Ukrainian people.
Is it
strengthening the this
remarkable resistance
that we've witnessed over the past year
for Ukraine, for
for many Ukrainians, this war, especially,
it's for a full scale stage.
It came in kind of a shock and shock
and like a catharsis
because and also a great chance
and many motivation to rediscover
the historical memory, to discover
the identity level, the cultural,
but also national and even individual,
especially for those people,
for those communities
who lived for decades or even centuries
under the munition
of the Bolshevik, Soviet
or Russian propaganda
and the Rediscovering.
Since regaining
Ukraine's independence in 1919, as you won
a lot of information and a lot of cultural
facts,
cultural treasures, cultural objects
which were imprisoned for decades
and even centuries, became open to public.
A lot of historic
historical documents became open.
And so the process of really understanding
and understanding our past started.
And of course, the processes
like the immunization,
trying to get rid of those propaganda.
And we share and all the stereotypes
and all the myths which were created
and and substituted the real story,
the real history,
the real because you know
that we knew about a lot of historians
speak about Ukraine that we have
for centuries just to survive,
because we have every century,
we have with light,
like the communist time regime, 1930.
We had those communist repressions
in 1918, 1921,
we had Ukrainian revolution.
And not many people know about this.
The whole of the world even celebrates
the Russian Revolution in 1917,
but in fact it was attempts
for all of Ukraine
to gain its independence
in 1918, 1921, and the rest of the world
did not supported them.
It's interesting that
even speaking about the culture in 1918,
the Ukrainian governments
by plural, for example,
they sent a special choir
with a special cultural
diplomacy mission to Europe
and even United States.
And we call a little Polish composer,
young composer.
His music was played
because this choir had the mission
to tell the story about Ukraine.
Ukraine is not Russia.
Ukraine, this independent nation was was,
was a centuries old history
and their own personal cultural identity.
And this choir performed the concerts
and this Mikhail Olympia, which was killed
by a big uncover
their Russian agent in 1921
and the one of the famous
music by Polish Shadrach.
Today
it is well known as Kettle of the Bell.
So the whole of the world knows that
all of the world.
But they do not know the story.
Similar was in Ukraine.
We just revealed our history
recently, 30 years ago when Ukraine became
the regained independence.
So for many people try this,
you know, when people started to wake up,
they really try to understand
what's going on.
And the Russian propaganda,
of course, they were targeted only because
on the one hand they said that
we are one nation, that we are one people.
On the other hand, they understand
that our cultural identity,
that's what keeps us absolutely different.
And they tried to destroy this
by destroying people
bearers of our intangible culture
and of course, tangible.
So for us, it's quite clear this way
we speak about
about about identity war, because
Putin did not need new territories.
The Russia is so huge country.
They don't need only our territories.
Also the resources in eastern Ukraine.
They want to conquer Ukraine and to regain
a new kind of Soviet Union,
because as he admitted,
it was his personal biggest tragedy
and it was, according to him, the biggest
political mistake of the world.
When the Soviet Union collapsed.
So it's it's it's quite clear for us
why why this war is is identity war.
Let me follow up with a question about the
the actual sort of success,
you might say, of the Russian attempt
to appropriate
Ukrainian cultural heritage and artifacts
and the involvement of the professional
level of expertise that's gone into this.
Often people
assume that in context of war, plunder
is some kind of random
and as you clearly said,
this one is not a random kind of assault.
So I wonder if you could say some
something about the
the success, the
the success that that Russia
has accomplished in this sphere
as opposed to I mean, people have
said much about Russia's
military miscalculations and deficiencies.
But here in the cultural sphere,
they seem to have had,
as you say, a strategy in place that is
that has been despite,
you know, despite chaos,
uncannily effective.
And so I wonder if you could you could say
a little bit about the actors
involved in planning and executing this
initiative.
In fact,
according to them,
that of the information we
we gather and analyze,
draw some damage goes of course is
is random damage
because of military actions
what's not but according
to even international analysts,
international or international police,
there is information that in Ukraine
where it operates, several groups of
experts
were hunting for four different types
of historical precious objects.
Art items
from different points of view.
For example, some groups are hunting for
art paintings
for paintings, for example, by artists
who whose origin can be disputed
so that Russia can claim
that they are not Ukrainian.
They are Russian artists, for example,
I mentioned
before, for example,
Queens,
or even I was asking people of maybe
Armenian origin or people
who were born in Russia or the German.
Jablonski For example,
or the Russian doll.
Some people who were born in Eastern
Ukraine, who were born
in Russia or what
in Ukraine and identify themselves
as Ukrainians.
So Russia claim
that they are Russian artists
and we at this collection of the relocate
and say, okay, then our
and we know that even internationally
there is an interesting process when
when metropolitan for
example museum
and in many European museums
Stedelijk museum for example
they try to identify in saying
that they are not Russian artist
but Ukrainian like Malevich, like Esther.
And so so this is one kind of
of of, of direction, the other direction.
This, of course,
some monetary and historical value.
So people would like to get
the most precious like keeping gold
excuse in gold but important for Russians
maybe you know that suit
the so-called let's in gold fields
in in the Netherlands the collection
in some museum disputed gold
from Crimea and Ukraine
finally one that suits
and that collection will return
not to occupied Crimea but to Ukraine
also a lot of private groups
who are looking only to one authority.
For example,
Archeological Blick is very active.
They were quite active
before the large scale aggression
because the the eastern Ukraine,
especially the border of military action,
the Cybulski Donetsk River,
a lot of burial mounds there.
And so the black archeologists work
so intensively
there now
and we cannot know what's going on there.
And a lot of individual looters,
like soldiers who looted
museums, cultural institutions,
a lot of private collection in the houses
and then in Belorussia,
there is a kind of a flea market where
people saw
not all the average objects which Russian
soldiers sell as a trophy, but
also art objects from private collections
and for public collections.
So there are a lot of and we work
a lot together now to launch the process.
For example, the red list
I comradely Ukraine was issued
for auction houses for Interpol
or for borders
also we work with I see with other groups
trying to create a database
on the looted objects. So
so the process is very complicated
and in some groups at the moment
think about repatriation and restitution.
What we should do
is a very complicated process.
And but still we have hope
that it will be successful.
I have another question, and fortunately,
a similar question just popped up
into the question answer box.
But I also want to ask you
another question came in
that you may not be able to answer right
now, but maybe we could do this
through email later.
One of our audience members was interested
in the source of your statement
by your Trajkovski.
If you don't know
that right away, we can maybe
email.
And whoever asked that question
could email me on that.
You can find my address on our Web site
and we could try to get that to you.
Do you have an answer to that or should?
Yes, Concerning concerning decisions,
you can find that online
because it was a kind of a scandal
concerning this.
You can see you can find it
in open sources in Internet.
The ICOM Ukraine even issued
the special statement concerning this,
so it's usable easily
you can easily find in open sources.
Okay,
I was going to save this
salubrious to the very end,
but since it came up in the question
and box,
I'll ask it.
I'm just really struck by the amount of
work that you're doing, the documentation,
even laser
scanning of damage,
developing this red list of objects.
Clearly
there's a lot of going on to prepare
for the aftermath of this war,
of the during recovery stages.
And even criminal prosecution
in international courts
is so
and I'm struck by the of help
you're getting by international NGOs.
And I know that the Getty just provided
or Getty Foundation
just provided
$1,000,000 and others have as well.
How can individuals,
educators and artists and conservators
and others help in your current effort?
Are there
in addition to sending money?
I suppose there might be some places
where we could just send checks.
But also, is there
other other things that we could be doing?
There are quite a number,
quite a big number
of different coalitions.
For example,
I, I, i commerce unit, school.
And so we work in groups, in clusters,
so you can join and see
what kind of projects are provided.
Because since one year
this cluster has already been formed
and they're specializing
in different kind of help.
For example, World Monument Fund,
quite a global heritage fine provided
together with the Aleph and Europa
Nostra funds for supporting individual
cultural, cultural people
all the, all the individual.
There are some clusters or coalitions
who work over stabilization efforts.
You can find some information on the
website of Ukrainian Ministry of Culture.
How is it possible to donate
money or resources expertise,
how to join the initiative?
Also,
you can find us here on social media.
We will launch the website soon
in in the months.
So we will provide all information.
What kind of initiative
already operates today in Ukraine
and the brought to help Ukraine.
But in fact, there are a lot of levels.
For example, in Lugano, our governments
President
presented the plan for recovery
and it will be a conference in London
very soon.
Also about recovery plan
for Ukraine and cultural heritage
and cultural sector will be included
the first time there.
So it will be also a great chance
to understand the what's,
what are the priorities and how possible
to join on different levels,
on a funding level, on expertise level.
So so thank you so much
for for this question because we
we got so many questions like this
even in the first day of full scale
aggression, How we can help you.
It was not easy to answer in that time,
but much easier today.
Maybe I'll follow up on that
with another question
regarding international assistance
and initiatives.
There's a question in the in the audience
from the audience about ICOM
Germany's call to ban ICOM
Russia members and whether or not cultural
heritage should be used to build bridges
or in fact if the travesties
being committed by Russia
so are so extreme that a stance
needs to be taken by the world community.
So I wonder if you could comment on
whether or not legal sanctions of any kind
we have international treaties
that are not being observed.
How you see the international community
and some of these legal sanctions
or official organizations
can contribute to the
initiatives that you have on the ground.
But also
for us, it's very, very painful subject
because we were very surprised
that no voice
in certainly this war
from the cultural sector, from Russia,
even like Russia, is quite silent
in this situation.
And of course, we would like to
make bridges, but in this situation,
it's look like big hypocrisy because
because there is
there is there is a systematic destruction
of Ukrainian cultural heritage
and icon museums, for example.
We have seen the statistics,
but Russia is just so silent.
And silence in many cases means
agree with just support
of the official Putin's policy.
So banning
banning, banning the Russian cultural
participation
or presence on international level,
it's also one of the
one of the kinds of of of how to say
of the
international voice what can be done
because not international
and thus committing to not done
a lot in the situation.
But when there will be
a kind of a position
that it would it should not be done
in this way, something should be changed
and we should, of course,
sit at the table, but not now.
Not when the aggression is
not is not completing.
It's west versus it's going is developing
and process.
It's a devastation.
It's such a tragic tragedy on the one hand
and on the other hand.
So we understand that we should
we should understand the reason
why it happens and what should be done.
All all those sites who are directly
or indirectly a part of this war,
I mean, initiator of this should be
punished this or that way or isolated
in in terms of that, maybe
as we get towards
the end of the discussion, I can ask you
a little bit about resistance
on the ground in the cultural sphere.
And I think it has two dimensions
perhaps you could comment on.
The first is the dimension
of just ordinary people.
What are they seizing on
to express their affiliation, identity,
their emerging new cultural
persona?
As you know, as you
as you have told us so well,
Ukrainian culture is in process,
and I am wondering how people
are expressing that on the ground.
And the other part of that question,
of course, is how
artists themselves are involved in
confronting this situation.
And at the moment,
speaking both local communities,
they they many of them are so active
and they participate in the process
of developing our cultural heritage
in a resilient, resilient forms.
For example, in many cases of the cultural
infrastructure of them, which
the local people
were main actors
because they helped to locate
famous artworks.
For example, in one Q
the collection of Mariupol
was rescued due to local people
and in many other situation,
even in occupied Donetsk
in 2014, that Donetsk museum was damaged
and local people
not thinking about any politic politics.
They just help museum staff to evacuate.
Speaking about an artist in avant garde
of creating identity of this resilience.
And so they organize exhibitions,
they work abroad.
I mean, they they they develop
a lot of joint international
and national art projects.
And for example, our even culture
institutions try to be very resilient
and active,
even in times of war, in times of constant
every day alarms,
because the creative collections,
they are empty,
but they organize new exhibitions,
they organize educational programs,
they try to be helpful
for local communities, providing bookings
to them, trying to take all of this
trauma, traumatic elements,
trying to talk to them.
And most of the museums are open to public
and we can see a lot of people
visiting museums.
So there is a big demand for cultural life
in Ukraine, even in times of war.
So this makes
our cultural sector quite resilient
because we understand
what are the real needs
and how people really appreciate and
and develop and what people read, but
they feel that this is a very important
part of their role
human life, their essence, their soul.
And so it's a very important part
for Ukrainian cultural heritage
and cultural sector
too, to have the second
how to say push of development
and modernization
and rethinking their missions
and strategies.
One of the things one of the things
that struck me about the work of young
Ukrainian artists at this moment
is that the form of resistance
they're engaging in is also
a resistance to extreme
ethno-nationalism on all sides
and their effort to
to forge a new identity,
not only for themselves,
but in reaction to events
in other parts of Europe, as well
as a pluralistic and multicultural
and non-exclusive kind of a new identity
that really incorporates sectors
of Ukrainian society that might not even
have been incorporated before.
And of course, of the international
community and reaching out across borders.
So they are a striking young generation
of creators.
And it's interesting to see how important
the cultural sector has become
in this particular moment
and that we consider to be political.
We are a few minutes over.
Maybe we should end
with that positive thought.
And certainly we've we've had a resurgence
of Ukrainian music and dance
and art exhibits in Southern California
over the last year,
which many of us have been attending.
There is one one other question, maybe
I'll just try to quickly answer that about
treating damage
to Ukrainian cultural materials,
postwar I think, you know,
I would like to hope that there will be
a lot of efforts among conservators
around the world to help in the
conservation here of damaged artifacts.
So we can all look forward to that
to get into that point.
So you are just like to thank you
for that really impactful lecture
and my discussion.
And to Lori and the Center for European
and Russian Studies
for co-hosting this event.
And I'd also like to thank those
that have provided financial support
for our program
and this distinguished lecture series.
The support helps us
create this programing and provide
opportunities for our students
as well, who are engaged in researching
critical issues
in the conservation of cultural heritage.
So thank you all.
As a reminder, the recording of
the lecture will be posted on our website.
Thank you for joining us. Thank you.