+3 +3 +3 Ukraine has had a long and difficult path to democracy and freedom
It's easy to criticize the many half-steps,
reversals and injustices along the way - and the legacies and scars of all
those struggles and failures today - or even make use of them for propaganda
against Ukraine in its current struggle, but the truth is both more complex -
and ultimately more inspiring - than the romanticized and mostly false straight
line to freedom story many Western nations tell themselves.
Ukraine's unique position - at
the frontier of East and West, and caught between different cultures, empires
and languages - impeded, and sometimes enabled, its struggle for national identity
and freedom. In many ways, in a world torn by sectarian, ideological and
cultural division and strife, Ukraine shows a way - a difficult way to be sure
- but a way nonetheless, to build a pluralistic, tolerant and inclusive society.
Though in a completely different
context, in many ways it is an example of the American motto, 'Out of many, one'
- as we watch that 'one' being forged in the crucible of war.
Though by no means continuous,
democracy within the modern boundaries of Ukraine goes back to ancient times,
when the Greek trading colony of Olbia, now only an archeological site at the
confluence of the Southern Buh and Dnieper rivers, had a democratic government,
according to Herodotus. (from The Gates
of Europe, A History of Ukraine, Serhil Plokhy, p. 6).
Almost a thousand years later, Procopius,
a sixth century chronicler of the Byzantine Emperor Justinian, wrote of the
slavic tribes known to his day that they "... are not ruled by one man,
but they have lived from of old under a democracy, and consequently everything
that involves their welfare, whether for good or ill, is referred to the
people." (Plokhy, p. 15-16)
How the otherwise primitive
conditions Procopius described of these sometimes enemies, sometimes allies of
the empire were related, or not, to their political organization is less
important than the fact that the author, with broad knowledge of the Byzantine
empire and its relations with neighboring peoples, felt, among all the information he could relate,
that the Slav democratic practices were at the least noteworthy, possibly even
exceptional or praiseworthy, in his experience and knowledge.
The divided history of Ukraine
would also play a role in its democratic legacy almost another thousand years
later when Ukraine, under Mongol rule since the 1240 fall of Kyiv - which ended
the legendary dynasty of the Viking-descendant Kyivian Rus', including Vlodomyr
the Great, and divided it into different regions, roughly today's Russia and Ukraine - found
itself divided again as Mongol rule retreated in the 1340s, with what is today western
Ukraine conquered by the Kingdom of Poland, within which local nobles were exposed
to democratic practices (Plokhy, p. 44),
including electing a King. Eastern Ukraine came under Lithuanian control, while
the Mongol rule persisted a century longer, and more harshly, in Russia, which
had no exposure to such early modern,
albeit limited, democratic practices.
With the Union of Lublin in 1569
creating the Commonwealth of Poland and Lithuania, most of what would be
Ukraine was under one realm, and its nobles participated in the election of a
common ruler (Plokhy, p. 67). This was an intermediate but not unimportant step
toward democracy, like the House of Lords in England or, more than two centuries
later, the Continental Congress or the US Senate which originally represented
not the people directly but the existing colonies and later states.
On the other end of the social/economic
spectrum, the earliest Ukrainian Cossacks, escaped serfs, criminals, debtors
and others who found themselves on the wrong side of the legal and political
structures of the time, banded together for survival, trade, raiding and
banditry. Approached by the Byzantines, the pope and local princes at various
times to be employed as mercenaries, they were known to elect their commanders,
retaining the right to remove or even execute a leader who did not live up to
expectations (Plokhy, p. 79-80). And, after a series of alliances and confrontations led
to the growing power of the Cossacks as an increasingly effective and
semi-professional military force to be reckoned with, and they finally
successfully rebelled in the Great Revolt of 1648, their future legendary
leader, Bohdan Khmelnytsky was chosen -- by election. (Plokhy, p. 97) Though the autonomous region - really a state
in all but name - the Cossacks created, the so called Hetmanate, no longer had
such direct democracy, it did mirror the Polish model of local commanders in
this case electing leadership.
Later Ukrainian patriots would extol
the Cossack's democratic legacy: "unlike the Russians," Plokhy
summarizes, "the Ukrainians had no tsars, and unlike the Poles, they had
no nobility." (p. 158)
During the early Soviet period,
when Ukraine was divided largely between the Soviet Union and Poland, while
Polish language and cultural policies were not favorable to Ukrainians,
".. the Polish state had one feature that the Soviet Union never possessed
- a political system built on the principles of electoral democracy."
(Plokhy, p. 238) Once again the division and subjugation of Ukraine, while a
tragedy for its national aspirations, allowed it to keep a toehold on the
habits and institutions of a free society, unlike its Slavic brethren to the
east.
When in the wake of the Second
World War the Soviet Union expanded west, unifying and even expanding Ukraine,
Stalin inadvertently brought into the Soviet sphere "fairly well-developed
traditions of autonomy, parliamentary democracy, and communal and national
self-organization that had been all but absent in the central and eastern Ukrainian
land." (Plokhy, p. 288)
Like Poland's Solidarity
movement, those seeds of democracy and freedom would eventually sprout and grow
strong enough to topple the once seemingly invincible communist dictatorships
of Eastern Europe. In Ukraine's case, it would take pride of place as the
country that voted to dismantle the Soviet Union.
When in 1990 Mikhail Gorbachev,
under pressure from hardliners over the growing independence movements within
Soviet republics, tried to rein in the forces unleashed by his perestroika reforms, and communists
controlling the new Ukrainian parliament voted to ban demonstrations, students
from across the country gathered to protest and hunger strike in downtown Kyiv
in what would later be known at the First Maidan revolution. Kyivans came out en masse to support the
students as government forces threatened
to clear them out. (Plokhy, p. 317)
Like the Civil Rights movement
and Vietnam war protests, popular
resistance to injustice not only mobilized those most affected or concerned
about the issue, but pricked the conscience - or at least the political survival
instincts - of those in power.
The communists in Ukraine's
parliament eventually relented, firing the leader negotiating to bring Ukraine
into a new, allegedly reformed, union with the other, soon to be former,
republics of the Soviet Union.
And, on August 24, 1991, five
days after the attempted coup against reform in Moscow, the communists voted
with democratic reformers in the Ukrainian parliament for independence. On
December 1, the Ukrainian people in their historic referendum voted for
independence, across all party and ethic lines - Ukraine was free and the
Soviet Union - unable to survive politically by the Russian's own admission
without Ukraine, and with Gorbachev resigning Dec. 25 - was no more.
Thirteen years later the democratic
revolution continued when, in November 2004, the reforming, anti-corruption,
disfigured and nearly killed by Russian poison candidate Victor Yushchenko had
the presidential election stolen from him in a transparently rigged result by
the Putin-allied and oligarch-friendly Viktor Yanukovych, and 200,000 Ukrainians
this time protested at the Maidan, Kyiv's Independence Square, forcing, with
European pressure, the government to call a new election in response to this
"Orange Revolution" against corruption, crony capitalism and the
subversion of the people's clear desire for freedom and justice. (Plokhy, p.
334)
Independence had carried a heavy
price for Ukraine, first in the 1990s with extreme poverty and economic
depression brought on by the total failure of the old Soviet command driven and
mostly still state-owned enterprises to adapt to market forces or the needs of
a population struggling to manage or even survive in the post-Soviet world.
When reforms eventually allowed
oligarchs to snap up, often abetted by corruption or intimidation, old
state-owned industries at a fraction of their value, bringing back economic
growth at the price of crony capitalist subversion of nascent democratic
institutions, and Yushchenko attempts at reform and moving toward Europe seemed
to be coming to naught, protests again shook Ukraine with the Revolution of
Dignity starting in November 2013.
In the Maidan Revolution of Dignity in 2013, the Ukrainian people demanded democracy and an end to corruption
With the corrupt Putin-allied Yanukovych
elected in 2010, and the pillaging of Ukraine with over $70 billion in foreign
assets squirreled away by him and his cronies (Plokhy, p. 338), the people of
Ukraine, fed up with corruption, hoped
that closer ties with the European Union would bolster their fledgling
democracy, fight corruption and bring more transparent, Western business
practices to Ukraine. Yanukovych, playing a double game with Russia, first
considered and then refused to sign an EU association agreement in November
2013.
Government forces controlled by the corrupt Putin-allied Yanukovych used violence to try and stop the protests, killing at least 68 people
Ukrainians were outraged, taking
to the streets , this time a half million strong, in protests lasting until
February. Fearing a new Maidan revolution, Yanukovych responded with police and
violence, with at least 68 protesters killed. Ukrainians had their lives on the
line, and paid the ultimate price, for their freedoms. World leaders condemned
the violence, threatening sanctions, and the Ukrainian parliament banned the
use of force against the protesters. On February 21, Yanukovych, having lost
the support of parliament, fled. The next day, Putin decided to proceed with
his plan to take over Crimea. Weakened by revolution and the corruption of the Yanukovych
regime preceding it, Ukraine was in no position to resist, and Putin's hybrid
war spread to the Donbas region, preying on disaffected Russian speakers and
others unhappy with corruption with a different alternative, to 'return' to
Russia. (Plokhy, p. 339-340)
Ukrainians protested, died and are now fighting on the front line of freedom and democracy
Ukrainians responded, many with
volunteer efforts to resist Putin's aggression in the east, and the stage was
set for the eventual full scale Russian invasion and war launched against Ukraine
on February 24, 2022.
Not only had Ukrainians sacrificed
their individual lives in the fight for democracy, they had, as in many
revolutions, risked the security of their entire country - perhaps foolishly,
some would say - or perhaps believing - as they, the Poles and other nations at
times in their history finding themselves without a homeland - that their
nation was more than a state defined by a boundary, but an ideal of a
democratic, free and just people. That ideal is worth fighting for, and the
Ukrainian people, on the front line of that fight against cruel and evil tyranny,
are fighting that good fight not only for themselves, but for free and
freedom-aspiring peoples everywhere.
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