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SKY ABOVE KHARKIV by Serhiy Zhadan

SKY ABOVE KHARKIV

Dispatches From the Ukrainian Front

by Serhiy Zhadan ; translated by Reilly Costigan-Humes & Isaac Stackhouse Wheeler

Pub Date: May 16th, 2023
ISBN: 9780300270860
Publisher: Yale Univ.

A Ukrainian poet shares the resilient response by Kharkiv citizens and resistance by the armed forces over the first months of Russian bombardment.

By turns defiant, sentimental, and improbably optimistic, these dispatches, which comprise an installment in the publisher’s Margellos World Republic of Letters series, were posted on social media from the beginning of Russia’s invasion through June. Collectively, they bring a visceral sense of what the people of Kharkiv and Ukrainians in general have been enduring. Poet and musician Zhadan and his band, Zhadan and the Dogs, traveled the city to deliver humanitarian supplies and sometimes organize impromptu concerts in order to maintain morale. His daily reports praise the citizens’ sense of bravery in the face of the sudden Russian military onslaught; he also lauds their lack of panic and the work by the Territorial Defense Forces. As he chronicles his visits to volunteer units, checkpoints, stores, hospitals, schools, and subway stations where people were living, especially children, Zhadan interjects resentment of Russian attempts at subjugation, especially the suppression of the Ukrainian language. He argues that the great “culture of Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy” masks a contempt for Ukrainian identity, and he reflects on Ukrainian linguist George Shevelov’s writings during World War II as well as the work of national Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko. Zhadan shows how eight years of aggression by Russia have led to a stronger Ukrainian resistance and how the Russian propaganda attempts at “denazification” and demilitarization of the country have only strengthened Ukrainian resolve. “We simply cannot afford to lose,” he writes. “We have to crush our enemy and liberate our territory.” Curiously, the author doesn’t mention President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his nightly addresses to the nation or his international campaign for support.

A vivid, in-the-trenches report from a Ukrainian city and its “injured, yet unbreakable” citizens.