Category Archives: usa

Biden & Yushchenko visit Holodomor memorial, talk women and churches at a bar and split a Coke (Updated)

Yesterday after landing in Kyiv, US VP Joe Biden and Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko went to a Holodomor memorial to lay candles and plant trees. After that they headed to the pub where they had a traditional American Coca-Cola. While Yushchenko was talking about Ukraine’s beautiful churches, Biden was overheard saying:

I cannot believe that a Frenchman visiting Kiev went back home and told his colleagues he discovered something and didn’t say he discovered the most beautiful women in the world. That’s my observation.

Full article is available at Ukrainian Pravda (now with an English Translation via Google)

Update: The NY Daily News has posted their top 10 hottest Ukrainian women, but I think they have missed TV actress and Ivano-Frankivsk native Oksana Lada who’s been on the Sopranos (that had a little Ukrainian in the final episodes), 30 Rock and CSI Miami.

US VP Joe Biden arrives in Ukraine

Photo: Biden in Ukraine, Dipping Bread into Salt

From the Washington Post:

KIEV, July 20 – US Vice-President Joe Biden arrived in Ukraine on Monday to reassure its leaders Washington has not forgotten the ex-Soviet republic following President Barack Obama’s push to improve ties with neighboring Russia.

…

"This is the balancing trip by Biden to Obama’s Moscow visit but the balance is very different to that under the Bush administration," said Christopher Granville of Trusted Sources, an emerging market research firm in London.

"It is the vice-president making the balancing trip and not the president, after all."

…

Biden is expected to signal support for Ukraine but the Obama administration is less strident than Bush in backing Yushchenko’s NATO bid.

At the bottom of the article it lists additional reporting by a Moscow correspondent and you can see that reflected in some of the suspicious wording in the article:

A snap poll by the English-language Kyiv Post found that 66 percent of respondents wanted Biden to tell Ukraine’s leaders: "Get your act together" while only 5 percent suggested "Resist Russia with all your might."

The author uses a newspaper website poll (as opposed to a more credible Angus Reid poll) to downplay the Russian threat.

President Viktor Yushchenko, vaulted to power in the 2004 Orange Revolution, has angered Moscow with an aggressive bid for Ukraine to join NATO and his promotion of Ukrainian nationalism.

There’s been a recent trend by Russian media to erase the Orange Revolution – labeling it ‘so-called’ as to downplay its importance and inferring Yushchenko was somehow placed into leadership by a coup as opposed to the reality that was a re-vote from a rigged election. And nationalism is just media slang for xenophobia.

Anyways, we’ll see what Biden does in Ukraine and on Wednesday he leaves for Georgia.

Update – UNIAN reports on what Biden is doing in Ukraine:

As UNIAN reported earlier, during the visit it is planned that Joe Biden will meet with President of Ukraine Victor Yushchenko and Prime Minister of Ukraine Yulia Tymoshenko.

It is expected that V. Yushchenko and J. Biden will honour a memory of victims of Holodomor (the Great Famine) in Ukraine in 1932-1933.

It is also planned that J. Biden will deliver  a speech before the representatives of business circles of the Ukraine.

Kyiv’s Ruslan Fedotenko helps Pens to Stanley Cup

From CBC:

Even without the services of captain Sidney Crosby for more than half the contest, the Pittsburgh Penguins stood tall in winning the Stanley Cup for the third time in franchise history Friday night.

Centre Max Talbot scored both goals, sending the Penguins to a 2-1 win over the defending champion Detroit Red Wings in Game 7 at Joe Louis Arena.

Pittsburgh secures the franchise’s first championship since the Mario Lemieux-led Penguins of 1991 and 1992.

Left Wing Ruslan Fedotenko hails from Kyiv and this isn’t his first championship, he also helped the Tampa Bay Lightning win the Cup in 2004 by scoring the game winning goal, and even brought Lord Stanley’s Cup to Kyiv.

Ruslan has played internationally for the Ukrainian national ice hockey team, appearing in one game for his nation at the 2002 Winter Olympics in a 5-2 defeat of Switzerland. He has been named to the 2009 roster as well. (Wikipedia)

Papa Dukes on PBS Buffalo-Toronto tonight

Famous Ukrainian violinist Vasyl Popadiuk and his band the Papa Dukes will be on PBS WNED TV (Buffalo-Toronto) tonight at 9:30pm from their Montreal Jazz Festival Performance. WNED will rebroadcast the special on June 6th at 5:00 PM.

We recently saw Vasyl performing at Carassauga a week and a half ago and put on quite a show. Here is his bio:

The journey for Vasyl Popadiuk from Ukraine to Toronto has been one of musical adventure, starting at Kiev’s Lysenko school for gifted children at the tender age of 7, and continuing at Ukraine’s national Tchaikovsky Conservatory of Music from age 18.  Vasyl Popadiuk’s father, himself a renowned composer and pan flute player, dreamt of his son following in his footsteps as a flutist but at the age of four Vasyl Jr chose to play the piano.  By age six he had discovered and fallen in love with the violin – an outcome predicted by a stranger before his birth – that love has remained steadfast through the years.

Continue reading Papa Dukes on PBS Buffalo-Toronto tonight

CS Monitor gets it right – it’s Kyiv, not Kiev!

It took almost 20 years, but the Christian Science Monitor has finally agreed to go with Kyiv when writing about Ukraine’s capital – and does a really good job explaining why:

But the swapping of a single letter in this case has political echoes and underscores an increasingly fractious divide between ethnic Russians and Ukrainians who live together in the same country.

The Russian spelling is Kiev. Ukrainians prefer Kyiv. Shortly after the country gained independence in 1991, it asked the rest of the world to go with the Y spelling. The US State Department (and the CIA), along with the United Nations, among others, have adopted the change. Most Western news organizations have not.

The issue is fairly sensitive. Many Ukrainians have lingering bad memories of the times when their lives were controlled by Moscow (the Monitor recently explored this here). That’s one reason why Ukrainians bristle a bit when Westerners describe their country as “the” Ukraine, as if it were still a territory. Kyiv/Kiev is a bit more subtle of a difference, but it’s rooted in the same desire by Ukrainians to be recognized as an independent country with a language and culture that are similar, but not identical, to Russia’s.

We applaud Christian Science Monitor’s efforts to use the correct spelling and while it will continue to add the Russian spelling in paranthesis’ the publication made the change due to reader feedback – viewers like you! It goes to show you that we can make headway correcting these newspapers, it only takes one click to their ‘Contact us’ page.