85-year-old artist Lyubov Panchenko passed away. During the occupation of Bucha, she could not leave the house because she was bedridden and starving. On the eve of Bucha's liberation, the artist's house was destroyed. Panchenko was taken to hospital, but soon died.
Lyubov Panchenko is a laureate of the award named after Stus, an honorary citizen of Bucha. She is one of the artists of the sixties: during the Soviet censorship her work, which had a pronounced Ukrainian flavor, was silenced, and the artist was persecuted.
Before the war, Panchenko transferred her creative heritage to the Museum of the Sixties in Kyiv.
Wanna know where my disdain for "leaders" putting individuals into groups comes from? Take one wild, single, solitary guess...to my dying effort I resist this...I hope you do too.
Want to know what I see when I look at this photo? 1 man, 5 times.
Kremlin’s most prized spies were sent in to Czechoslovakia to whip up the 1960s reform protests in a move then replicated across the eastern
This looks like a very interesting read.
During the spring of 1968, as revolutionary sentiment began to grow in communist Czechoslovakia, a group of friendly foreigners began arriving in Prague, on flights from Helsinki and East Berlin, or by car from West Germany.
Among them were 11 western European men, a Swiss woman named Maria Weber and a Lebanese carpet dealer called Oganes Sarajian. They were all supporters of what would become known as the Prague Spring, an ultimately doomed attempt to build a more liberal and free version of socialism and escape from Moscow’s suffocating embrace. Many of the visitors sought to get close to the movement’s leading lights, offering support in the battle to reform communist rule.
But these visitors were not what they seemed. They were spies from the KGB’s “illegals” programme – Soviet citizens who spent years training to be able to pose convincingly as westerners. Previously, illegals had been used to burrow into western societies and ferret out secrets for Moscow. But now the KGB was terrified that the Prague movement could end Soviet influence in the country, and decided for the first time to deploy its most prized spies inside the eastern bloc, in a mission called Operation Progress. To this day, Russia’s intelligence services have never admitted it took place.
Unpublished documents about the mission, along with interviews with participants, shed new light on how Moscow used its spies to keep tabs on reformers in Prague: informing on its leaders, planting fake evidence, and in one case getting a man who planned a dramatic self-immolation as protest committed to a psychiatric institution before he could carry out the deed.
The Illegals: Russia’s Most Audacious Spies and the Plot to Infiltrate the West by Shaun Walker, is out now (Profile Books, £22; Knopf in the US).
siberian shaman: please don't shoot me it was just a hunting ritual, i won't cause any trouble i swear. i have three children, please.
soviet death squad: fucking millennials