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bemildred

(90,061 posts)
Sat May 24, 2014, 11:46 AM May 2014

In Lviv, Ukraine, the nation's east-west divide is on display

If this western Ukrainian city of Baroque fountains and cobblestone squares seems like a different country from the eastern rust belt besieged by pro-Russia separatists, that may be because, for most of its history, it was.

Wooden signs in Lviv's Rynok Square hawk homemade pirogies and stuffed cabbage rolls, tastes imparted by the Poles who ruled here for 400 years. Chestnut-shaded promenades and pastel-painted villas evoke Budapest, Prague and Vienna, sister cities of the Austro-Hungarian era when Lviv was called Lemberg.

The question of what it means to be Ukrainian is central to the dispute that has roiled the country for months, leading to an election Sunday to choose a new president. Petro Poroshenko, who has a commanding lead, is expected to win handily, either by gaining an absolute majority in the first round or in a June runoff.

Despite a history that includes virulent anti-Semitism and collaboration with Nazi occupiers, Lviv residents say they embody a Ukrainian character that includes a Western orientation and respect for human rights. Russian officials and leaders of the separatist movement characterize western Ukraine as a hotbed of unrepentant fascism. And many Russians question whether there is even a separate Ukrainian nationality or language.

http://www.latimes.com/world/europe/la-fg-ukraine-identity-20140525-story.html

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In Lviv, Ukraine, the nation's east-west divide is on display (Original Post) bemildred May 2014 OP
An (unusually) well balanced article newthinking May 2014 #1
LA Times has improved a lot the last few years. bemildred May 2014 #2

bemildred

(90,061 posts)
2. LA Times has improved a lot the last few years.
Sat May 24, 2014, 03:06 PM
May 2014

Not so much that they don't allow opinions, but you get to see all of them. They used to be corporate and right-wing all the way. But their demographics have changed a lot too.

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