A nation isn't just a 'historical essence'—it’s a daily choice made by millions of people to stand together.
The unity paradigm is a centuries-old belief held by Russian elites asserting that Russians, Ukrainians, and Belarusians are not distinct nations, but rather three branches of a single "all-Russian" entity. In this view, Ukrainians were historically referred to as "Little Russians," a term that strips away their independent agency. Vladimir Putin has reinforced this idea in modern times, arguing that a separate Ukrainian identity is an artificial invention by foreign enemies to weaken Russia. This ideology frames any Ukrainian move toward independence or Western integration as a betrayal of an "eternal" historical unity.
During the 19th century, Ukrainian lands were split between two empires with vastly different approaches to national identity. In the western regions governed by the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the authorities were relatively liberal and allowed Ukrainian culture and language to flourish. Conversely, the Russian Empire viewed Ukrainian nationalism as a threat to imperial stability. This led to aggressive suppression, including an 1863 decree that banned the Ukrainian language in schools and publications and the exile of prominent cultural figures like the poet Taras Shevchenko.
The Holodomor, which translates to "death by hunger," was a state-sponsored famine in the early 1930s orchestrated by Joseph Stalin. To fund Soviet industrialization, the government forcibly seized crops and livestock from Ukrainian peasants, resulting in the starvation deaths of approximately four million people in a region known as the "breadbasket of Europe." This event is regarded by many as a deliberate act of genocide and remains a permanent scar on the Ukrainian psyche, fueling deep-seated suspicion toward Russian claims of "unity."
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Ukraine inherited the world's third-largest nuclear arsenal. To prevent nuclear instability, the Budapest Memorandum was signed in 1994. Under this agreement, Ukraine agreed to dismantle its nuclear weapons and transfer them to Russia. In exchange, Russia, the United States, and the United Kingdom provided formal assurances that they would respect Ukraine’s existing borders and national sovereignty, promising never to use force against the country.
The Revolution of Dignity, or Euromaidan, began as a protest against President Viktor Yanukovych's sudden refusal to sign a trade deal with the European Union in favor of closer ties with Russia. After months of protests and the deaths of over 100 people, Yanukovych fled to Russia. Viewing the loss of a pro-Russian leader as a threat, Putin deployed "little green men"—unmarked Russian special forces—to seize government buildings in Crimea. Russia then held a disputed referendum under military occupation and formally annexed the peninsula, marking the first time a European country seized territory from another since World War II.
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