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Ukraine: A Quiet Revolution
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17697 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
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6 / 1990 |
3,117 Words |
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Taras Hunczak Taras Hunczak, a professor of history and political science at
Rutgers University, is editor of Suchasnist, a Ukrainian
monthly published in the United States. He writes frequently
on Ukraine affairs. |
What does the future hold for the people of the Ukraine? As is evident with events in Lithuania, the process of change and of national self-assertion will, indeed, be difficult.
The Ukraine, a republic of 52 million people, was subjected to a variety of historical experiences that nearly tore it apart. Except for a brief period of self-rule from 1917 to 1921 (and on limited territory at that), the Ukraine has been under a foreign rule for the last 250 years. The western portion of the Ukraine was rules first by the Poles and, after the first partition of Poland in 1772, by the Austrians. The Ukraine was gradually annexed by Russia which, with its autocratic system, converted an autonomous Ukrainian state into a number of imperial provinces. As a centralist state, the Russian Empire sought to introduce uniformity at the expense of national cultures and languages. The policy of Russification introduced by Peter I remains a landmark of Moscow's approach to the numerous minorities who found themselves within the empire. The Ukrainians were among the victims of this policy.
The Polish and, subsequently, Austrian rule were more benign. Particularly since the middle of the nineteenth century, the Galician Ukrainians were able to develop institutions that provided an organizational framework for their cultural, economic, and, ultimately, political activity. It was essentially within the pluralist system of the Austro-Hungarian Empire that the Western Ukrainians developed a sense of national consciousness and political assertiveness. Hence, the Ukrainians entered the twentieth century divided not only by the borders of the Russian and the Austro-Hungarian empires but, even more importantly, by their knowledge, understanding, and
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