Why Ukraine had gotten rid of Russian holidays in favor of Western celebrations

Cleaning up the calendar
Mark the date
Day of Remembrance and Victory over Nazism in the Second World War
Dosvedanya, Victory Day... Bonjour, Europe Day!
They don't call it The Great Patriotic War for nothing
Different days, different meanings
Fighting for survival
Everything is political
Fighting for survival, again
Against the evil empire
Everything changed after Russia invaded Crimea
Even old New York was once New Amsterdam...
Lenin? What Lenin?
You say po-ta-to, I say po-tat-o
Fun fact: 'Volodymyr' and 'Vladimir' are the same name
Separation of Church and Russian State
De-russification
Do they know it's Christmastime?
Putin's crusade
Cleaning up the calendar

The Ukrainian government led by Volodymyr Zelensky has accelerated changing official holidays in the country to distance themselves from Moscow.

Mark the date

Back in May, Zelensky declared a law to radically change and Westernize public holidays in his country, the Kyiv Independent explains.

Day of Remembrance and Victory over Nazism in the Second World War

Since 2023 Ukraine celebrates May 8 as the Day of Remembrance and Victory over Nazism in the Second World War, as it is generally celebrated in Western Europe.

Dosvedanya, Victory Day... Bonjour, Europe Day!

Meanwhile, Victory Day, the traditional WW2 commemoration since the time of the Soviet Union, was turned into Europe Day, an EU observance commemorating “peace and unity” across the continent.

Pictured: 2023 Victory Day in Moscow.

They don't call it The Great Patriotic War for nothing

Victory Day is one of Russia’s biggest celebrations. Every May 9, the Eastern European country remembers the victory of the USSR over Nazi Germany.

Different days, different meanings

While Western countries tend to celebrate VE Day on May 8, Victory Day has a different meaning in countries that used to form the USSR.

Pictured: The Motherland Calls, one of the most iconic Russian Second World War monuments.

Fighting for survival

Under the leadership of Stalin, the Soviet Union not only fought one of the biggest battles that humanity has ever seen against the Axis, but it also suffered the biggest casualties any country has ever suffered during any armed conflict.

Everything is political

Unsurprisingly, Victory Day also has a political element attached to it. The Russian government headed by Vladimir Putin has freely used comparisons between World War 2 and the invasion of Ukraine, arguing it was cleaning its neighboring country from Nazism.

Fighting for survival, again

“We will never forget the contribution of the Ukrainian people to the victory over Nazism. And we will not allow lies as if the victory in that war could happen without the participation of any country or nation,” Zelensky stated in a video address, as quoted by Newsweek.

Against the evil empire

“Now, just like 80 years ago, we rely on the joint strength of free peoples and know that together we will always be part of a free Europe that will not submit to evil,” the Ukrainian President remarked.

Everything changed after Russia invaded Crimea

Ukraine stopped celebrating Victory Day in 2015, one year after the Russian invasion of Crimea.

Even old New York was once New Amsterdam...

At the same time, the Ukrainian government adopted the term Second World War in all official legislation, dropping the Soviet (and later Russian) name: The Great Patriotic War.

Lenin? What Lenin?

Similarly, Ukraine approved legislation prohibiting both Nazi and Communist symbols and changed Soviet names in streets, monuments, public spaces, and even entire cities.

You say po-ta-to, I say po-tat-o

A 2017 education law limited the use of Russian in education. It also restricted the importation and sale of books in Russia within Ukrainian territory.

Fun fact: 'Volodymyr' and 'Vladimir' are the same name

This measure was seen as extreme and a bit ironic considering that a large group in Ukraine, including Zelensky himself, are native Russian speakers.

Separation of Church and Russian State

And in 2019, the Orthodox Church of Ukraine established itself as a distinct institution from the Russian Orthodox Church, despite protests from the Moscow Patriarchate and the Kremlin.

De-russification

Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the process of de-Russification since have intensified in Ukraine.

Do they know it's Christmastime?

In December 2022, the Orthodox Church of Ukraine adopted for the first time Christmas on December 25 instead of January 7, as it’s usually celebrated in Orthodox Christianity.

Putin's crusade

It seems ironic that Putin’s war, one started among other things to defend historically Russian spaces in what today is Ukraine, seems to be pushing Kyiv far more into the West.

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