People's_Friendship_Arch

Arch of Freedom of the Ukrainian People

Arch of Freedom of the Ukrainian People

Monument in Kyiv


The Arch of Freedom of the Ukrainian People (Ukrainian: Арка свободи українського народу, romanized: Arka svobody ukrainskoho narodu) is a monument in Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine. It was opened on 7 November 1982, amidst the celebration of the 1,500th Anniversary of Kyiv, to commemorate the 60th Anniversary of the USSR and the "reunification of Ukraine with Russia in 1654" (the Pereiaslav Agreement as it was known in the Soviet Union).[2]

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The sculpture under the arch, which depicted a Ukrainian worker and a Russian worker standing together, was dismantled in April 2022 amidst the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[2][3] On 17 April 2024 the Ministry of Culture and Information Policy removed the official status of the monument and allowed its dismantling.[4] The previous month an expert commission of the Ukrainian Institute of National Memory had concluded that although the monument was renamed it did still "belong to the symbols of Russian imperial policy" and "therefore poses a threat to Ukraine's national security."[5] The commission stated that it was "subject to complete dismantling."[5]

Name

Official name of the monument in Soviet times was Monument to commemorate the reunification of Ukraine with Russia. After the restoration of Ukraine's independence until May 2022, the monument was renamed the Peoples' Friendship Arch (Ukrainian: Арка дружби народів, romanized: Arka druzhby narodiv), colloquially called the Yarmo (Ukrainian: Ярмо́, lit.'Yoke'[6][7]).

On 14 May 2022, according to the decision of the Kyiv City Council, it was named the Arch of Freedom of the Ukrainian People.[8]

Description

The Friendship Arch was constructed in 1982 by sculptor A. Skoblikov and architect I. Ivanov and others. The monument consisted of three sculptural elements: an arch and two statues.

The surviving arch is located next to a viewing deck where most of Kyiv's east bank can be viewed, Troieschyna and towards the north of the city, Podil and Obolon.

The monument was unveiled by the First Secretary of the Communist Party Volodymyr Shcherbytsky[citation needed] amidst the celebration of the 1,500th Anniversary of Kyiv, on 7 November 1982, to commemorate the 60th Anniversary of the USSR and the reunification of Ukraine with Russia in 1654.[2] Although the USSR was proclaimed on 30 December 1922; 7 November 1982 was the 65th anniversary of the October Revolution of 1917.[2] The monument was opened together with the All-Union Lenin Museum (today, Ukrainian House).

The arch had the local nickname "yoke" (Ukrainian: Ярмо; "Yarmo").[2]

Location

The whole People's Friendship Arch complex (and its surviving arch) was located on top of the right bank of the Dnieper river overlooking the Park Bridge and the Shore Highway (Ukrainian: Набережне шосе, romanized: Naberezhne shose). (Park Bridge is a pedestrian bridge that connects the city with Trukhaniv island.) This location is behind the buildings complex of the National Philharmonic Society of Ukraine in "Khreschatyi" Park (Ukrainian: Хрещатий парк) which at the time of opening was called the Pioneer Park.

Dismantling

On 20 May 2016, the Ukrainian government announced plans to dismantle the arch as part of its decommunization laws. In its place, a memorial dedicated to veterans of the Russo-Ukrainian War was planned.[9][10] The Director of the Ukrainian Institute of National Remembrance Volodymyr Viatrovych stated in February 2018, that "a sculptural group" of the monument should be removed according to the decommunization laws.[11]

For the Eurovision Song Contest 2017, the arch was temporarily painted as a rainbow and renamed the Arch of Diversity. It doubled as the symbol of the Kyiv Pride parade, and was illuminated as a rainbow at night.[12][13]

In 2018, human rights activists put a temporary sticker on the arch that looked like a crack. This was a sign of support for political prisoners who are illegally detained in Russia and annexed Crimea. According to the organizers, the action aims to draw attention to the fate of Ukrainian citizens, as well as to urge everyone to make as much effort as possible to free political prisoners in Russia.[14]

After the Russian invasion of Ukraine, on 25 April 2022, mayor of Kyiv, Vitali Klitschko, announced the dismantling of the sculptural part of the monument as having lost its ideological meaning.[15] The next day, during the dismantling of a bronze sculptural group, the head of a figure symbolizing a Russian fell off.[16][17] The arch itself was planned to be renamed and highlighted with the color of the Ukrainian flag.[18] Klitschko proposed to the Kyiv City Council to rename the arch of the People's Friendship Arch into the Arch of Freedom of the Ukrainian People (Ukrainian: Арка свободи українського народу, romanized: Arka svobody ukraïnskoho narodu).[2] One of the designers of the monument, Serhiy Myrhorodsky, agreed with the dismantling of the monument.[1]

The People's Friendship Arch was one of 60 monuments that the Kyiv City Council planned (in April 2022) to remove.[19] On 14 May 2022, according to the decision of the Kyiv City Council, it was named the Arch of Freedom of the Ukrainian People.[8]

An expert commission of the Ukrainian Institute of National Memory (UINM) concluded on 29 March 2024 that although the monument was renamed it did still "belong to the symbols of Russian imperial policy and is subject to complete dismantling."[5] The commission noted that it "therefore poses a threat to Ukraine's national security."[5] Prior UINM head Anton Drobovych had stated that it would be a good idea to reformat the monument into a rainbow and that such "an artistic solution" would have "clearly separated Ukraine from modern Russia, in which representatives of the LGBTQ+ community are persecuted."[5]

On 17 April 2024 the Ministry of Culture and Information Policy removed the monument from its State Register of Immovable Monuments of Ukraine,[4] adding that the monument "represents exclusively Soviet ideologues" and allowing for it to be dismantled.[4][5]

Park Bridge seen from Trukhaniv Island

See also


References

  1. "Kyiv pulls down Soviet-era monument symbolising Russian-Ukrainian friendship". Reuters. 27 April 2022. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  2. Tondo, Lorenzo; Koshiw, Isobel (26 April 2022). "Friends no longer, Ukraine removes Russian statues and street names". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 April 2022.
  3. "Kiev gets world's biggest rainbow to promote diversity". 26 April 2017. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
  4. "У Києві з Арки дружби народів прибрали "веселку" (фото)" (in Ukrainian). UNIAN. 17 May 2017. In Kyiv from the People's Friendship Arch took off the 'rainbow'
  5. Олена Рощіна (26 April 2022). "У Києві демонтують скульптуру під Аркою дружби народів". Українська правда.

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