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#17 - JRL 8478 - JRL Home
Ukraine: Youthful Protesters Find That 'Times Are
Changing'
By Valentinas Mite
Copyright (c) 2004. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
Russia, Ukraine Crisis - JRL 12-2-04
The Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, is flooded with young people demonstrating for
democracy amid the political crisis over the country's disputed presidential
election. Despite the cold and snow, the thousands of young protesters -- school
kids, college students, young workers, and civil servants -- never seem to tire
and always appear enthusiastic. The daily demonstrations in Kyiv's Independence
Square have the feel of a joyful youth festival, although participants say they
understand that reforms will be difficult.
Kyiv, 1 December 2004 (RFE/RL) -- A group of young people is standing outside
an entrance to the Kyiv metro, where a man is singing the country's national
anthem.
Oleg says he learned how to sing the anthem in good Ukrainian only a few days
ago, and says he can even play it on his guitar. "Times are changing, and we are
also changing," Oleg says. "In these days, our national songs are more dear to
us than Western rock music."
Thousands of opposition supporters -- many of them young people -- gathered
today in front of parliament and are also blocking government offices in Kyiv.
So far, the protests have remained peaceful, but during debate yesterday, a
group of Yushchenko supporters broke through a fence surrounding parliament
before being pushed back.
Anatoliy Riabucha, in his 60s, is a factory worker from Kyiv. He says he is
not surprised by what he calls this "revolutionary enthusiasm."
"It is natural [that there are so many young people here] because young
people have always made revolutions, not the old," Riabucha says.
Riabucha says that when he was young, he lived under Soviet rule and that he
and his friends were afraid to say what they thought. "We were made to abstain
from thinking," he says. "We perceived the world differently than they do now."
Riabucha says young people today are not afraid to say what they think. "They
want justice, as my kids and grandchild say. They are not so much interested in
the personality of a president, but they want justice and freedom," says
Riabucha.
Riabucha has a son, two daughters, and a 9-year-old grandson. Riabucha says
he even finds a big difference between the way his children think and how his
grandson behaves.
"I think my grandson will live better than my son. They are, of course,
different. This small kid knows more than me -- about technology and about
everything," Riabucha says.
Riabucha says he doesn't like the fact that young people seem to set no
limits on their behavior. "We did not go too far and did not cross some limits,"
he says. "But it is about personal things, not about politics, and maybe I am
too old to accept everything I should."
Elena graduated from university last year and now works in a bank. She says
her parents share her views on Ukrainian politics.
"The whole family is spending long hours in Independence Square. Now it is
late at night, but even my grandmother -- who is 74 -- is in the square," says
Elena. She says Ukraine's presidential election crisis has made politics
important to her life.
"I am interested in politics now, and I want to understand it as much as
possible. It interests me very much. My own future and the future of our nation
is important to me," Elena says.
She says a revolution is happening in Ukraine, "an event that happens once in
a century." She says it will help other nations to witness what is happening in
Ukraine, to see that people have the right to their opinions and that
politicians must pay attention to what the people want.
However, she says that from the Polish and Baltic experiences, she knows that
reforms will be difficult and that the "heroes of today might be cursed
tomorrow. But I agree to live through all this because I want to be a free
person in a free country."
Some fears remain, however.
Stanislav is a third-year university student who says he voted for opposition
candidate Viktor Yushchenko. But he won't say where he goes to school. "I don't
know which of the two candidates the head of our university prefers, and I don't
want some unpleasant things to happen to me when I go back to my studies,"
Stanislav says.
He says he does not want Ukraine to revert to its Soviet past. "I do not
remember very much about those times," he says. "But what I still hear is that
people thought they were the best in the world, but the biggest problem was how
to find sausage in the shops."
But Stanislav says he is realistic, that he does not believe in miracles. He
says he is skeptical that Ukraine can quickly prosper economically.
"I do not think our future is clear. We voted for Yushchenko, but I do not
think that there is one person who will be able to give us full employment, or
jobs after we graduate, which we deserve and are hoping to get," Stanislav says.
He says he has traveled to the Czech Republic, Russia, Turkey, and Israel,
and that he will be happy if life in Ukraine approaches that in Turkey.
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