As a result, museums across the world have recognized Kyiv-born Kazimir Malevich[1], Kharkiv Oblast-born Illia Repin, and Mariupol native Arkhip Kuindzhi, among others, as Ukrainian rather than Russian artists..."
...ukraińska sztuka, kultura i tak dalej...
jakim cudem - zapytam - jeśli Wy nawet Drobowycz za prezydenta
rodowitego z dziada pradziada Ukraińca nie macie tylko
coś na podobieństwo pochodzeniem "ni psa ni wydry" czystej wody produkt postsowiecki
jakim jest z życiorysu komik Zelenskyy[2]
"...w polskim systemie politycznym są ludzie, którzy są gotowi przekroczyć czerwone linie"..." mówicie ?It was this fear that ensured relative peace for the last three quarters of a century. That fear is gone now. What is happening now is unthinkable in accordance with previous ideas about nuclear deterrence: in a fit of desperate rage, the ruling circles of a group of countries have unleashed a full-scale war in the underbelly of a nuclear superpower..."[4]
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has recently made a breakthrough for all of us by calling Russia, in the Foreign Policy Concept, a state-civilization. I would add: a civilization of civilizations, open to the North and the South, the West and the East. The main direction of development today is the South and the North, but primarily the East.
The confrontation with the West in Ukraine, no matter how it ends, should not distract us from the strategic internal movement – spiritual, cultural, economic, political, and military-political – to the Urals, Siberia, and the Great Ocean. We need a new Ural-Siberian strategy, implying several spirit-lifting projects, including, of course, the creation of a third capital in Siberia. This movement should become part of the efforts, so urgently needed today, to articulate our Russian Dream – the image of Russia and the world we want to see..." tamże...
[1] "...Kazimir Malevich was born Kazimierz Malewicz to a Polish family, who settled near Kiev in Kiev Governorate of the Russian Empire during the partitions of Poland. His parents, Ludwika and Seweryn Malewicz, were Roman Catholic like most ethnic Poles, though his father attended Orthodox services as well. His native language was Polish, but he also spoke Russian, as well as Ukrainian due to his childhood surroundings.
[...]
Both Polish, Ukrainian and Russian were native languages of Malevich, who would sign his artwork in the Polish form of his name as Kazimierz Malewicz.
[...]
In 2013, Malevich's family in New York City and fans founded the not-for-profit The Rectangular Circle of Friends of Kazimierz Malewicz, whose dedicated goal is to promote awareness of Kazimir's Polish ethnicity..." - Kazimir Malevich - Wikipedia