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Saturday felt like an ordinary day, no different from any other visit to Kolomyya. We arrived by bus from Ivano-Frankivsk, a typically overcrowded bus which was designed for maybe 40 people at most, including standees, but managed to carry 60 or more at one point. It was market day in town, with the main market heaving while the central street, Chornovola, was full of people trading cheese, fruit, flowers and other things.

The cafes seemed fairly full as we passed them. In Kolomyya, we covered the entire town centre and some suburbs by foot and noticed very little nationalist imagery, slogans, stickers or colours. Instead, the EU flag and the original objectives of the early civil revolution of November and December seemed more evident.

On the balcony by the flags there remains a plaque to Polish-Lithuanian revolutionary and freedom fighter who is also an American hero , Tadeusz Kosciuszko. Given the circumstances facing Ukraine, it seems apt that a trace of Kosciuszko remains in the town. Generally, though, the extent to which the past of other communities once significant in western Ukraine is remembered is a contentious issue and best left for another time. Below the Kosciuszko plaque, there is another, this time commemorating Ivan Franko , the man in whose honour Stanislaviv was renamed Ivano-Frankivsk in Kolomyya probably has a better claim to being named after him, since he was imprisoned here in , as the plaque notes, while he also spent a fair amount of time having his syphilis treated.

It seems apt that two democratic revolutionaries are honoured on this one building which is now the headquarters of the national resistance committee. Here the symbolism is dominated by the colours of the Ukrainian national flag, with the local crest the eagle prevalent alongside the Ukrainian trident within the circle of the EU starts. Even the small poster remembering the first Maidan dead is restrained and sombre, avoiding any nationalist symbolism.

Your contribution is important. So even this shop has some connection to the European ideal, this time reflected in cheap clothes — seconds, second hand or sales items — imported to Ukraine and sold at affordable prices. Seeing as no one from Right Sector was killed on Maidan, I interpret this as further evidence of the organisation attempting to appropriate the Maidan dead for its own cause of national revolution. Still, no one a hundred years on has thought to turn this monument into a symbol of anti-Russian sentiment.

There was one red and black flag, although the main message of the protest was anti-war and calling for Crimea to remain with Ukraine. It is also clear that young people, possibly students and college pupils, were largely involved, again suggesting something closer to the spirit of the early days of Euromaidan. They gathered, admittedly in very small numbers, by the main Shevchenko monument in the town, although there was no trace of their presence when we passed the monument.

In Ivano-Frankivsk yesterday there was also a student-led anti-war protest calling for national unity. The weather was pretty foul, while students also tend to go home on weekends here, so that probably limited the numbers present. None, unlike in those in Kolomyya, bore any EU symbols, though. Today in Ivano-Frankivsk, meanwhile, there was another rally although the pictures show that this too, like the one on Friday , was hardly well attended.

After all, English is a real pain in the arse to spell. What the visit to Kolomyya suggests is that the situation in Ivano-Frankivsk, with the domination of the urban space by nationalist imagery and marches, could be something of an aberration, a local specificity, rather than something that prevails across the entire region. Indeed, their main gripe was with the regional administration. For now, the regional administration is holding out against the attempts to usurp power although it seems unlikely that Right Sector will shift away from its attempts to impose its will by force.

Still, the trip to Kolomyya was a refreshing change from the atmosphere in Ivano-Frankivsk and revived a sense of the initial purpose of the protests in Ukraine. Just as focussing on Kyiv gave a false impression of the situation in Ukraine generally, it seems that focussing on a regional capital gives a misleading image of the situation in the surrounding area.

This whole year is being marked as Shevchenko year, with celebrations planned not only in Ukriane but also around the world among the diaspora and academic community. With the current events in Ukraine, however, the planned festivities have been somewhat overshadowed and muted. In Ivano-Frankivsk there was a poetry reading today on the Vichevyj Maidan Rally Square by the post office, while a much more widely attended event was held on the square outside the Administrative Office. Begun with the now obligatory Mass, the celebrations included music — including the playing of the bandura, the instrument of the Kobzar — various poetry readings as well as political speeches on the current situation.

Today, however, my wife and I avoided the large-scale events organised in the city — although we will attend some Shevchenko-related events in the coming week. As the photo below shows, her first home — where she lived into her early twenties is falling into disrepair.

It had been used as a teaching space for the pedagogical department and also as accommodation for lecturers and their families.

Unlikely to be saved any time soon, the collapse of the building would free up some prime city centre real estate. However, renovations which were begun — bizarrely — at the start of November have hardly progressed, leaving the street in quite a mess.

Here, though, some of the new paving stones and lamps are evident. Our walk did not, sadly, reveal any bloodied rags and scraps of mid-range navy or black suits, so we can only assume that this threat was not fulfilled. Shevchenko Street, at the city centre end, starts with a relief plaque to the Bard, placed there on the th anniversary of his birth, as the photo above shows.

It is modest, and now adorns a beauty salon, but is tasteful. Less successful, however, was the most recent monument — below — to Shevchenko, where the sculptor seems to have lost any sense of proportion giving this son of the peasantry a rather oversized head and huge hands.

By all accounts, Shevchenko was a stocky chap but here he seems to have been given the proportions of a hobbit. This statue, which was erected three years ago, is an exact replica of the Shevchenko monument in Ottawa. The sculptor is from the Ukrainian diaspora and there are plans to show a film made in the s in Canada on local television in Ivano-Frankivsk. More successful, however, was this original sculpture in the park, also featured at the start of this post. It shows Shevchenko is his later years, rather than the above sculpture which bears the image of a young Shevchenko that also features on the UAH banknote.

Here, by this statue we witnessed a young girl with her father who was explaining to her the importance of the poet and then with great reverence she laid a flower by the memorial, signally the respect with which he is treated in the country and features much more prominently in the life of the nation than, say, Shakespeare in Britain. The walk in the park did not pass without incident as we encountered — as is usual around here — a thoughtless and selfish driver who declared it his right to park inside Shevchenko Park.

My wife asked him whether he really needs to park right inside the park, since many other people with prams managed to cope without driving right into the park. The newspaper came under The Shishi Xinbao continued long after its political patron declined and was one of the four main Chinese commercial daily newspapers New content is added daily.

The newspaper is published six days a week. The newspaper's Sunday counterpart, The Sun-Herald, is published in tabloid format. Three employees of the The articles themselves were written by the Chinese journalists on staff. The newspaper grew in popularity due to its supportive stance towards the revolution against the The paper has a circulation of 19, daily, 21, Sunday. The paper is available throughout the Magic Valley region of south-central Idaho as well as in parts of Elko County, Nevada, as far south as Wells.

It is one of the oldest newspapers in Italy. Topics: newspapers, giornali. Once left-wing, it has been supportive of that party's successor parties, the Democratic Party of the Left, Democrats of the Left and from October until its closure the Democratic Party. The newspaper closed on 31 July It was restarted on 30 June , but it ceased again on 3 June The newspaper was published in Beijing during the wartime Japanese occupation of ththe city and was shut down during a consolidation of newspapers in the city at the end of The Zhongyang Ribao Central Daily newspaper was a mouthpiece of the Chinese nationalist party and its government.

The newspaper was launched in Shanghai in and moved to the capital of Nanjing later that year. During the course of Japanese conquest the newspaper moved to Changsha and Chongqing before returning to Nanjing after Japanese surrender until The newspaper came under Japanese military control after the occupation of Manchuria and became the largest newspaper in the region.

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Contact your company to license this image. Google News - Google News indexes thousands of newspaper websites from around the world and organizes news in clusters for easy reading. In addition to current news, Google News also offers access to stories published in old newspapers that you can search for free.

Although many of these newspaper issues are scanned images of the original printed version, you can use Google search to find stories inside the papers through the magic of OCR. These magazines are scanned and searchable and can be read online using the standard Google Book interface. Decades worth of material are available, and the magazines are laid out just as they were when they were originally printed. You can read archived magazines cover to cover, including the original articles, index, cover, and advertisements.

Trove - The National Library of Australia has a large selection of newspapers from across Australia archived online that anyone may read for free. All the newspapers are completely scanned and can be viewed online in any modern browser, or you may download them as a PDF for offline reading. Library of Congress - The Library of Congress has a large repository of historic newspapers published in America between and , available as PDFs.



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