Berliner Boersenzeitung - In Kharkiv, sandbags pile up to save Ukraine national poet's statue

EUR -
AED 4.087691
AFN 77.216219
ALL 99.146863
AMD 431.530556
ANG 2.008679
AOA 1031.493152
ARS 1071.444832
AUD 1.636718
AWG 2.00463
AZN 1.833968
BAM 1.951391
BBD 2.250335
BDT 133.190246
BGN 1.959446
BHD 0.419383
BIF 3230.238279
BMD 1.11291
BND 1.439161
BOB 7.701667
BRL 6.030747
BSD 1.114592
BTN 93.214008
BWP 14.663221
BYN 3.647491
BYR 21813.042196
BZD 2.246534
CAD 1.51141
CDF 3194.052731
CHF 0.943726
CLF 0.037557
CLP 1036.308283
CNY 7.866943
CNH 7.873957
COP 4649.605752
CRC 577.330644
CUC 1.11291
CUP 29.492123
CVE 110.016412
CZK 25.100356
DJF 198.449303
DKK 7.459502
DOP 66.909416
DZD 147.515328
EGP 54.01173
ERN 16.693655
ETB 128.268622
FJD 2.449794
FKP 0.847547
GBP 0.839886
GEL 2.985379
GGP 0.847547
GHS 17.554492
GIP 0.847547
GMD 76.791162
GNF 9630.326265
GTQ 8.61561
GYD 233.107099
HKD 8.674791
HNL 27.647777
HRK 7.566689
HTG 146.879437
HUF 394.157231
IDR 16915.513413
ILS 4.200674
IMP 0.847547
INR 93.082762
IQD 1460.014134
IRR 46859.088964
ISK 152.513253
JEP 0.847547
JMD 175.104342
JOD 0.788716
JPY 159.072742
KES 143.776286
KGS 93.790539
KHR 4523.940499
KMF 492.46545
KPW 1001.618654
KRW 1481.155606
KWD 0.339471
KYD 0.928697
KZT 533.744026
LAK 24610.612066
LBP 99807.176845
LKR 339.266457
LRD 222.881353
LSL 19.418996
LTL 3.286135
LVL 0.673189
LYD 5.309004
MAD 10.808577
MDL 19.446874
MGA 5021.6758
MKD 61.47802
MMK 3614.689295
MNT 3781.669204
MOP 8.946281
MRU 44.118708
MUR 51.049094
MVR 17.083347
MWK 1932.41655
MXN 21.523736
MYR 4.68484
MZN 71.113011
NAD 19.418996
NGN 1825.529362
NIO 41.012723
NOK 11.696776
NPR 149.160304
NZD 1.785843
OMR 0.428437
PAB 1.114592
PEN 4.184283
PGK 4.425001
PHP 61.979083
PKR 309.981864
PLN 4.27323
PYG 8700.419088
QAR 4.063319
RON 4.974488
RSD 117.080389
RUB 103.309148
RWF 1500.840195
SAR 4.176335
SBD 9.260263
SCR 15.165156
SDG 669.441157
SEK 11.332482
SGD 1.439622
SHP 0.847547
SLE 25.426999
SLL 23337.167151
SOS 636.966462
SRD 33.223683
STD 23034.996587
SVC 9.751965
SYP 2796.220485
SZL 19.401981
THB 36.94413
TJS 11.846103
TMT 3.906315
TND 3.375772
TOP 2.615116
TRY 37.881682
TTD 7.575033
TWD 35.593074
TZS 3032.057276
UAH 46.18624
UGX 4138.685594
USD 1.11291
UYU 45.786543
UZS 14199.044041
VEF 4031576.086267
VES 40.879734
VND 27355.33557
VUV 132.126949
WST 3.113325
XAF 654.50164
XAG 0.036076
XAU 0.000431
XCD 3.007696
XDR 0.826041
XOF 654.47817
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.617301
ZAR 19.454062
ZMK 10017.526769
ZMW 29.005331
ZWL 358.356668
  • RIO

    2.1400

    65.05

    +3.29%

  • CMSC

    -0.0250

    25.03

    -0.1%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    25.08

    +0.4%

  • SCS

    -0.7400

    13.37

    -5.53%

  • RBGPF

    3.5000

    60.5

    +5.79%

  • GSK

    -0.5600

    41.87

    -1.34%

  • BTI

    -0.3210

    37.559

    -0.85%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    6.95

    +5.76%

  • NGG

    -1.1910

    68.859

    -1.73%

  • BP

    0.5250

    32.955

    +1.59%

  • RELX

    0.6200

    47.99

    +1.29%

  • BCE

    -0.3100

    35.3

    -0.88%

  • AZN

    0.5500

    79.13

    +0.7%

  • VOD

    -0.1650

    10.065

    -1.64%

  • BCC

    6.5900

    143.65

    +4.59%

  • JRI

    -0.0350

    13.405

    -0.26%

In Kharkiv, sandbags pile up to save Ukraine national poet's statue
In Kharkiv, sandbags pile up to save Ukraine national poet's statue

In Kharkiv, sandbags pile up to save Ukraine national poet's statue

In Ukraine's second city of Kharkiv -- under daily Russian bombardment that has damaged or destroyed 1,000 buildings -- work has begun to erect sand barricades to protect its statues.

Text size:

The most symbolic of them all sits enthroned in the heart of the town centre in a vast park filled with century-old trees: Taras Shevchenko, Ukraine's national poet, who was the country's foremost nineteenth-century bard and one of the first to write in Ukrainian.

Since the country's independence in 1991 with the collapse of the Soviet Union, not a single Ukrainian city has been without its own Shevchenko Avenue or Square. The country's largest university in Kyiv is named after him.

Workers with lifting equipment busy themselves around the imposing black cast-iron statue.

At 16 metres (52 feet) high, it is the biggest in Kharkiv since the statue of Lenin on a nearby esplanade was taken down in 1994.

"We must protect the city so that future generations know it as we have known it," says Petro, a 72-year-old retiree sporting a leather cap and gold teeth, who is taking part in the operation.

Put up in 1935, the statue of Shevchenko is a mixture of socialist realism and baroque Stalinism, with the central character surrounded by revolutionary soldiers at his feet.

It's an example of Ukrainian patriotism long suppressed by "brother" Russia during the Soviet era.

The sandstone plinth and the Stalinist fighters have now disappeared beneath sandbags that are already up to the poet's waist, obscuring his conquering gait, but not yet his fierce gaze and drooping moustache.

"It seems a bullet ricocheted off his head during World War II," says one of the council workers with a smirk.

"Back then, the city was devastated, but the centre was relatively well-preserved, not bombarded like now," says Volodymyr.

Since the start of the Russian invasion on February 24, Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine has, along with southern Mariupol, been the most bombed Ukrainian metropolis.

From just a few kilometres (miles) away, Russian artillery has bombarded the north and east of the city daily, as well as its historic centre, targeting in particular administrative buildings.

- 'Another 1,000 years!' -

More than a thousand buildings have been destroyed or damaged in a city emptied of around a third of its 1.5 million inhabitants, according to local authorities.

A city of culture and history, Kharkiv has around 50 important monuments which will be protected with sandbags, according to the town hall.

"We hope that these monuments will last another thousand years!" it said.

As the protective wall surrounding the Shevchenko statue nears completion, dozens of town hall employees and volunteers turn their attention to the positioning of sandbags around the independence monument, a goddess brandishing the laurels of victory, celebrating Ukraine's proclamation of independence on August 24, 1991.

For the moment, one can still read, engraved in the Cyrillic alphabet, the slogan that one now hears everywhere in this country at war: "Glory to Ukraine."

"At the moment, we mainly collect branches and trees brought down by rockets. This year we will not plant anything, there will be no flowers," says council worker Ilona Kalashnikova who normally tends the city's green spaces.

"These sandbags are a symbol of our attachment to our city. We can rebuild destroyed houses, but not historical monuments," she adds.

(P.Werner--BBZ)