I received an email from Marsh Moyle, a friend who has long
been carried by a vision to bring a vision of culture and life shaped by the
gospel (www.citygate.org) to the nations that formerly languished under the
yoke of Soviet communist rule. “This came today from friends in Ukraine who are
quite reliable,” he wrote. “The news is very disturbing. They would appreciate
your prayers.” What follows is the content of the email:
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Dear friends,
Many of you have asked us, what is
going in Ukraine and how it affects our ministry. On the second issue I can say
that it doesn’t really affects for now and there are no real fights in Kryvyi
Rih. But many of our volunteers were in Kiev and many of our friends—both
believers and unbelievers participate actively, so we worry about them and try
to support as much as possible. Also we try to show our position—based on
Gospel, filled with love, justice and hope when the situation looks like hopeless.
Many people are absolutely zombified by Russian propaganda and they are really
blind and aggressive. Another try «to bury their heads in the sand» and they
hope that it never touches them. And the biggest group of people is absolutely
lost and disappointed. For us it’s a great chance to show them that “cursed be
the man that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm, and whose heart
departeth from the LORD.”
Concerning the whole situation, I’ve
found a letter from famous Ukrainian writer Yuri Andrukhovych. This is probably
the best short description in English. I can subscribe to his appeals in the
last paragraph, but for sure the main request is to pray—because only God can
provide the way out from this extremely difficult situation.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear friends,
These days I receive from you lots
of inquiries requesting to describe the current situation in Kyiv and overall
in Ukraine, express my opinion on what is happening, and formulate my vision of
at least the nearest future. Since I am simply physically unable to respond
separately to each of your publications with an extended analytical essay, I
have decided to prepare this brief statement which each of you can use in
accordance with your needs. The most important things I must tell you are as
follows.
During the less than four years of
its rule, Mr. Yanukovych’s regime has brought the country and the society to
the utter limit of tensions. Even worse, it has boxed itself into a no-exit situation
where it must hold on to power forever—by any means necessary. Otherwise it
would have to face criminal justice in its full severity. The scale of what has
been stolen and usurped exceeds all imagination of what human avarice is
capable.
The only answer this regime has been
proposing in the face of peaceful protests, now in their third month, is
violence, violence that escalates and is “hybrid” in its nature: special
forces’ attacks at the Maidan are combined with individual harassment and persecution
of opposition activists and ordinary participants in protest actions
(surveillance, beatings, torching of cars and houses, storming of residences,
searches, arrests, rubber-stamp court proceedings). The keyword here is
intimidation. And since it is ineffective, and people are protesting on an
increasingly massive scale, the powers-that-be make these repressive actions
even harsher.
The “legal base” for them was
created on January 16, when the Members of Parliament fully dependent on the
President, in a crude violation of all rules of procedure and voting, indeed of
the Constitution itself, in the course of just a couple of minutes (!) with a
simple show of hands (!) voted in a whole series of legal changes which
effectively introduce dictatorial rule and a state of emergency in the country
without formally declaring them. For instance, by writing and disseminating
this, I am subject to several new criminal code articles for “defamation,”
“inflaming tensions,” etc.
Briefly put, if these “laws” are
recognized, one should conclude: in Ukraine, everything that is not expressly
permitted by the powers-that-be is forbidden. And the only thing permitted by
those in power is to yield to them.
Not agreeing to these “laws,” on
January 19 the Ukrainian society rose up, yet again, to defend its future.
Today in television newsreels coming
from Kyiv you can see protesters in various kinds of helmets and masks on their
faces, sometimes with wooden sticks in their hands. Do not believe that these
are “extremists,” “provocateurs,” or “right-wing radicals.” My friends and I
also now go out protesting dressed this way. In this sense my wife, my
daughter, our friends, and I are also “extremists.” We have no other option: we
have to protect our life and health, as well as the life and health of those
near and dear to us. Special forces units shoot at us, their snipers kill our
friends. The number of protesters killed just on one block in the city’s
government quarter is, according to different reports, either 5 or 7. Additionally,
dozens of people in Kyiv are missing.
We cannot halt the protests, for
this would mean that we agree to live in a country that has been turned into a
lifelong prison. The younger generation of Ukrainians, which grew up and
matured in the post-Soviet years, organically rejects all forms of
dictatorship. If dictatorship wins, Europe must take into account the prospect
of a North Korea at its eastern border and, according to various estimates,
between 5 and 10 million refugees. I do not want to frighten you.
We now have a revolution of the
young. Those in power wage their war first and foremost against them. When
darkness falls on Kyiv, unidentified groups of “people in civilian clothes”
roam the city, hunting for the young people, especially those who wear the
symbols of the Maidan or the European Union. They kidnap them, take them out
into forests, where they are stripped and tortured in fiercely cold weather.
For some strange reason the victims of such actions are overwhelmingly young
artists—actors, painters, poets. One feels that some strange “death squadrons”
have been released in the country with an assignment to wipe out all that is
best in it.
One more characteristic detail: in
Kyiv hospitals the police force entraps the wounded protesters; they are
kidnapped and (I repeat, we are talking about wounded persons) taken out for
interrogation at undisclosed locations. It has become dangerous to turn to a
hospital even for random passersby who were grazed by a shard of a police
plastic grenade. The medics only gesture helplessly and release the patients to
the so-called “law enforcement.”
To conclude: in Ukraine full-scale
crimes against humanity are now being committed, and it is the present
government that is responsible for them. If there are any extremists present in
this situation, it is the country’s highest leadership that deserves to be
labeled as such.
And now turning to your two
questions which are traditionally the most difficult for me to answer: I don’t
know what will happen next, just as I don’t know what you could now do for us.
However, you can disseminate, to the extent your contacts and possibilities
allow, this appeal. Also, empathize with us. Think about us. We shall overcome
all the same, no matter how hard they rage. The Ukrainian people, without
exaggeration, now defend the European values of a free and just society with
their own blood. I very much hope that you will appreciate this.
Image 1: Map.
Image 2: Yuri Andrukhovych.
Image 3: Protest in Maidan Nezalezhnosti or Independence
Square (http://rt.com/news/ukraine-protests-court-ban-538/).
This entry was posted
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