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LVIV: Galicia's Moment

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  • LVIV: Galicia's Moment

    Galicia's Moment

    The Wall Street Journal (Online)
    December 2, 2004
    Commentary

    By Kamil Tchorek

    LVIV, Ukraine -- The statue of St. Yury depicts a towering rider lodging
    his lance straight through the mouth of a huge snake. As fate would have
    it, the monument sits opposite this western Ukrainian town's police
    headquarters, where crowds gathered to banish another scourge, Lviv's
    chief of police.

    As the "people's revolution" unfolded in Ukraine last week, Lviv's
    regional assembly was the first in the country to formally reject the
    results of the fraudulent presidential election. The assembly also fired
    the Kiev-appointed chiefs of police, customs and tax and elected its own
    governor, Petro Oliynyk, an ally of the opposition leader and
    presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko. "We will not sit down and play
    chess with an opponent who wields a club," said Mr. Oliynyk, rebuking
    suggestions that Lviv's unilateral dismissals and appointments are
    unconstitutional.

    Lviv has been waiting and preparing for years for this moment. As the
    cradle of Ukrainian nationalism, its people have resisted oppressors,
    both foreign and domestic, since the 14th century. When the candidate of
    the disliked central government, Viktor Yanukovych, tried to steal the
    election, Lviv decided to act, reforming the political system here
    without waiting for a green light from Kiev. However this national
    crisis ends, the region of western Ukraine, with Lviv at its center, has
    already gone a long way toward shaping its destiny.

    History and geography have given Lviv a unique, defiant character. With
    800,000 people, Lviv is one of the most affluent and cosmopolitan cities
    in the Ukraine, just 70 kilometers from the Polish border, the new
    eastern boundary of the EU and NATO. Like all border towns, Lviv has
    long been the site of both conflict and assimilation, a home to rebels,
    misfits and pioneers alike.

    In 1349, the then capital of the Kingdom of Galicia, Lviv was annexed by
    the Polish king. For centuries under Polish rule, the city had a
    thriving cosmopolitan community that included Poles, Ukrainians, Jews,
    Armenians, Germans and Hungarians. "We are all Ukrainian," said Witek
    Zembowski, a resident of the Lviv suburbs. "But many of us have
    grandparents who were not. We vote Yushchenko, and if we go to the
    east...." he jokingly drew his finger across his neck as if it would be
    severed by a knife.

    With the first partition of Poland in 1772, Lviv came under
    Austro-Hungarian rule. From then until 1918, Lviv was the capital of the
    Hapsburg province of Galicia, joining a network of cities such as
    Prague, Budapest, Vienna and for some time even Venice and Milan. Though
    now cut off from a united Europe by the border lines drawn by the past
    century of history, Lviv's stunning combination of medieval and
    Secessionist architecture puts its beauty on a par with every great
    European city. Here, there's no doubt in anyone's mind that Ukraine
    belongs in the West.

    Its people have an unswerving faith in the West as its protector. "If
    our country breaks up, there will be a national crisis," said Viktor, a
    taxi driver. "But Europe and America will help us. They will save our
    currency. They will save our economy."

    Lviv's elegant coffee houses and bars are now filled with groups of
    friends excitedly talking about the success of their revolution.
    Somewhere, on all of them, is a flash of "Yushchenko orange," the color
    adopted by the opposition campaign.

    The most famous example of Galician resistance is the West Ukrainian
    Republic, which had its capital in Lviv in 1918-23, until the region was
    swallowed up by Poland. Its political successors formed the Organization
    of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), an armed struggle against successive
    Polish, German and Soviet occupiers that fought well into the 1950s.
    Speaking from Kiev, Vasyl Kuk, the 91-year-old veteran commander
    -in-chief of the OUN said, "I spent years in a Soviet jail for fighting
    communism. And I voted Yushchenko because I believe in democracy, not in
    nationalism."

    After centuries of bitterness and conflict with Poland, and recent
    memories of wartime atrocities, the Galician Ukrainians have remarkably
    been able to make up with their western neighbors. Just over the EU
    border, Polish companies and groups are supplying the city with buses
    (now in short supply) for the convoys of activists that leave every day
    to protest in Kiev.

    The once-banned black-and-red flag, representing Ukrainian blood and
    soil, of the nationalist rebels also occasionally flies alongside the
    Solidarity flag in the sea of orange Yushchenko banners that now
    dominate the constant winter carnival being celebrated in the streets of
    Lviv. The flag is not flown in Lviv by armed partisans who aspire to
    Galician secession, chanting anti-Semitic or anti-Russian songs, as Mr.
    Yanokovych's propagandists would have it. These are euphoric people with
    a proud legacy. They have democracy in their hands, and the power to
    keep hold of it.

    The unilateral changes implemented in the past fortnight by leaders in
    western Ukraine, such as the decision in Lviv to oust its centrally
    appointed officials, raise concerns among the Russian-speakers in other
    parts of the country. In Soviet times, as well as in the last 13 years
    of independence, politicians in eastern region have exploited fears of
    Ukrainian nationalism to win votes or scare electorates. The regional
    governors who called for, then backed away from, a referendum on
    autonomy for the east earlier this week were doing just that.

    In reality, "Western Ukrainian nationalism" has evolved and matured into
    the democratic assertiveness of the city of Lviv and its surrounding
    region. This evolution has enabled the city to undergo a revolution that
    has not needed to overthrow the ruling elite, but in which local leaders
    are acting with the support of their people. In a city with St. Yury as
    its patron saint, no one should expect anything less.


    Mr. Tchorek is a journalist based in Warsaw.

    URL for this article:
    http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110194955779888834,00.html
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