When it comes to Timothy Snyder , any conversation becomes special and amazing. Here we are hearing about Freedom, and I hope that more people can listen to Mr Snyder 's thoughts , and also that more people can read his last book. Huge gratitude to Volodymyr Yermolenko for organising this event. Slava Ukraini ! 👏🇺🇦✌️💙💛
Thank you for great interview. Mr. Snyder is a very logical, knowlegable person. I always find it interesting to listen to Mr. Snyder and I always learn something from listening to him. Mr. Snyder thank you for sharing your knowledge
Thank you for your context to inspire Prof. Snyder in his delivery of the message we in the greater audience need to be connected to. It’s so easy to forget, to change the channel of connection.
Such an amazing event. Timothy Snyder is always extraordinary, but the questions were all excellent and added a true sense of reality to the conversation. Thank you all so much, and Slava Ukraini 🇺🇦
Sending my prayers and support and gratitude to Ukraine from California. ❤ I am so sorry for the suffering of Ukrainians and the destruction done to the country. I’m so grateful to Prof Snyder’s efforts to educate the American people about Ukraine. He continues to teach us, and we must learn. prof Snyder is so right in his assessment of positive and negative freedom. We would be wise to heed his words. God bless you all.
The things discussed here are most important and central to the future of not only Ukraine, but the rest of the world, as Prof. Snyder illuminated. What I wish is for conversations like this to become more central, and to be more important than they currently are in the world at large. I wish this also because it is inconceivable to me for Kharkiv and Dnipro to be anything other than centres of Ukrainian culture and places that define Ukrainian freedom. And for that we need people to pay attention. Thank you for this talk.
Thank you to Mr. Yermolenko, thank you to Mr. Snyder, thank you to the audience with the interesting questions and foremost thank you to all Ukrainian defenders in the trenches, fights, recoveries and volounteers who makes this event possible. Greetings from Western Europe to you all ❤❤️🇺🇦🇪🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦❤️.
I wonder... If a city can be rebuilt then is it possible to rebuild the world? Because there might be a time, and perhaps it is now, that this might be a requirement. Thank you, Kharkiv!
When we look at maps we are looking at reflections of ourselves. Ourselves is who we are in the place we are standing.,, that changes from people to people, and time to time. So everywhere and no whee is a borderline to where we are now.
This borderland metaphor is problematic, tons of people who don't live here and know the language think "Ukraine" means "borderland", which is just complete BS. It's ruzzian imperial nonsense. "Kraina" = country, and on old maps, Ukraine was spelt Vkraina, "v" = in, "kraina" = country, so more likely "Vkraina" (Ukraina) means "in country". No one really knows the etymology but its more likely this aforementioned explain.
I started learning Ukrainian (as my first Slavic language) in April 2022, and the content of your comment is basically one of the first things I learned! And I tell anyone who'll listen ☺💙💛 If I may ask a language question, I've noticed that the word край used in Ukrainian to mean "edge" or "rim" or "verge" but also, at times, an area of land, a region...? I'm a bit confused, and I want to get this right exactly because of what you say in your comment: morphology and etymology have been twisted and weaponised by imperialist orc propaganda, and there are sadly many people around the world who choose to believe that and repeat it, for even more people to hear 😒
@@1midnightfish It's actually very relevant you ask about "Krai", which form part of uKRAIna. My ancestry is the former Yugoslvia, and my first language was what used to be called Serbo-Croatian the word "Kraj" means exactly what you stated. - at the end, the verge or edge. The historical roots of the word to come to the Balkans can be traced an old Slavic tribe that lived in the area of what is now west Ukraine in Galicia, the "Bjeli Horvati" (White Croats), that migrated to the Balkans 1300 years ago, give or take, after the fall of ancient (Kyivan) Rus to escape the Golden Horde. There was also a Red Croat tribe too, hence the red and white checked flag of Croatia, representing these two old ancient tribes. I forget exactly now, pff the top of my head, but the red tribe lived either further to the north or south. Anyway, the closest proto-slavic language that was spoken in Kyivan Rus was modern day Ukrainian - there was no "ruzzian" - this is evidenced by one thousand year old graffiti on the walls of Saint Sofia cathedral in Kyiv,. I have seen this graffiti myself, it's mostly on the wooden panels on the upper floors of the church. To cut a long story short. that is the etymylogical line of that word "Krai" that is preserved in the Balkans and is evidence that old-Ukrainian of Kyivan Rus was the mother tongue of the "Red Croats". No wonder the Serbian lapdogs of Russia ere Jealous, they never came first and it bothers them, just like the Muscovites - Muscovy was just a "suburb" or the outskirts of Kyivan Rus and came later. I can't paste the link my comments get zapped but search for this title - The Walls Speak: Ancient Graffiti Deciphered In Kyiv Cathedral
The audience is concerned with very practical things. I appreciate that the questions are practical so Prof. Snyder has to be less philosophical I can never have time to learn about Ukrainian language and arts, or Russia or my home language. Ukraine is a necessary luxury.
😂lol 😂😂 so Prof. Snyder thinks this place should be on another planet? But to appreciate that comment you have to make a lot of effort to understand that. Is it an accident or a luxury for the wealthy to have so many opportunities to be here in Japan? I would like to know the value of destination.
🇷🇺 is going to win and 🇺🇦 should have learned to get along with the ethnic Russian population but they didn’t. The US/NATO is using Ukrainians to fight a proxy war against 🇷🇺 so the US can maintain their hegemony 😞
When it comes to Timothy Snyder , any conversation becomes special and amazing. Here we are hearing about Freedom, and I hope that more people can listen to Mr Snyder 's thoughts , and also that more people can read his last book. Huge gratitude to Volodymyr Yermolenko for organising this event. Slava Ukraini ! 👏🇺🇦✌️💙💛
Thank you for great interview. Mr. Snyder is a very logical, knowlegable person. I always find it interesting to listen to Mr. Snyder and I always learn something from listening to him. Mr. Snyder thank you for sharing your knowledge
Thank you for your context to inspire Prof. Snyder in his delivery of the message we in the greater audience need to be connected to. It’s so easy to forget, to change the channel of connection.
Thank you, Volodymyr Yermolenko and Timothy Snyder, for your conversation in Kharkiv. Very much appreciated.
🇺🇦 Перемоги та миру всім українцям! 🇺🇦
God bless you both.
Such an amazing event. Timothy Snyder is always extraordinary, but the questions were all excellent and added a true sense of reality to the conversation. Thank you all so much, and Slava Ukraini 🇺🇦
Excellent conversations. Always interesting to hear Mr. Snyder’s well thought out and developed opinions. Thank you
Sending my prayers and support and gratitude to Ukraine from California. ❤ I am so sorry for the suffering of Ukrainians and the destruction done to the country. I’m so grateful to Prof Snyder’s efforts to educate the American people about Ukraine. He continues to teach us, and we must learn. prof Snyder is so right in his assessment of positive and negative freedom. We would be wise to heed his words. God bless you all.
🇸🇪🤗🇺🇦
The things discussed here are most important and central to the future of not only Ukraine, but the rest of the world, as Prof. Snyder illuminated. What I wish is for conversations like this to become more central, and to be more important than they currently are in the world at large. I wish this also because it is inconceivable to me for Kharkiv and Dnipro to be anything other than centres of Ukrainian culture and places that define Ukrainian freedom. And for that we need people to pay attention. Thank you for this talk.
Дуже дякую. 🦁🌻🇺🇦 Слава Україні! #SlavaUkraini #СлаваУкраїні #fightlikeaUkrainian
Forgiveness is for the forgiver, not the forgiven. An incredibly difficult realization and act. Also a path to freedom.
Thank you to Mr. Yermolenko, thank you to Mr. Snyder, thank you to the audience with the interesting questions and foremost thank you to all Ukrainian defenders in the trenches, fights, recoveries and volounteers who makes this event possible. Greetings from Western Europe to you all ❤❤️🇺🇦🇪🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦❤️.
I wonder... If a city can be rebuilt then is it possible to rebuild the world? Because there might be a time, and perhaps it is now, that this might be a requirement. Thank you, Kharkiv!
When we look at maps we are looking at reflections of ourselves. Ourselves is who we are in the place we are standing.,, that changes from people to people, and time to time. So everywhere and no whee is a borderline to where we are now.
Professor Snyder is a necessary luxury
🩵💛
This borderland metaphor is problematic, tons of people who don't live here and know the language think "Ukraine" means "borderland", which is just complete BS. It's ruzzian imperial nonsense. "Kraina" = country, and on old maps, Ukraine was spelt Vkraina, "v" = in, "kraina" = country, so more likely "Vkraina" (Ukraina) means "in country". No one really knows the etymology but its more likely this aforementioned explain.
Agreed 👍🇺🇦
I started learning Ukrainian (as my first Slavic language) in April 2022, and the content of your comment is basically one of the first things I learned! And I tell anyone who'll listen ☺💙💛
If I may ask a language question, I've noticed that the word край used in Ukrainian to mean "edge" or "rim" or "verge" but also, at times, an area of land, a region...? I'm a bit confused, and I want to get this right exactly because of what you say in your comment: morphology and etymology have been twisted and weaponised by imperialist orc propaganda, and there are sadly many people around the world who choose to believe that and repeat it, for even more people to hear 😒
@@1midnightfish It's actually very relevant you ask about "Krai", which form part of uKRAIna. My ancestry is the former Yugoslvia, and my first language was what used to be called Serbo-Croatian the word "Kraj" means exactly what you stated. - at the end, the verge or edge. The historical roots of the word to come to the Balkans can be traced an old Slavic tribe that lived in the area of what is now west Ukraine in Galicia, the "Bjeli Horvati" (White Croats), that migrated to the Balkans 1300 years ago, give or take, after the fall of ancient (Kyivan) Rus to escape the Golden Horde. There was also a Red Croat tribe too, hence the red and white checked flag of Croatia, representing these two old ancient tribes. I forget exactly now, pff the top of my head, but the red tribe lived either further to the north or south. Anyway, the closest proto-slavic language that was spoken in Kyivan Rus was modern day Ukrainian - there was no "ruzzian" - this is evidenced by one thousand year old graffiti on the walls of Saint Sofia cathedral in Kyiv,. I have seen this graffiti myself, it's mostly on the wooden panels on the upper floors of the church. To cut a long story short. that is the etymylogical line of that word "Krai" that is preserved in the Balkans and is evidence that old-Ukrainian of Kyivan Rus was the mother tongue of the "Red Croats". No wonder the Serbian lapdogs of Russia ere Jealous, they never came first and it bothers them, just like the Muscovites - Muscovy was just a "suburb" or the outskirts of Kyivan Rus and came later. I can't paste the link my comments get zapped but search for this title - The Walls Speak: Ancient Graffiti Deciphered In Kyiv Cathedral
The audience is concerned with very practical things. I appreciate that the questions are practical so Prof. Snyder has to be less philosophical I can never have time to learn about Ukrainian language and arts, or Russia or my home language. Ukraine is a necessary luxury.
Харьков российский город.
😂lol 😂😂 so Prof. Snyder thinks this place should be on another planet? But to appreciate that comment you have to make a lot of effort to understand that. Is it an accident or a luxury for the wealthy to have so many opportunities to be here in Japan? I would like to know the value of destination.
🇷🇺 is going to win and 🇺🇦 should have learned to get along with the ethnic Russian population but they didn’t.
The US/NATO is using Ukrainians to fight a proxy war against 🇷🇺 so the US can maintain their hegemony 😞
Cope
The troll from the kremlin is proofing that the so called russia is still on a imperial mood.