Life in the Soviet Ukraine by Western photographers, 1988
Clark.Kent
These photographs were taken in 1980 by Bruno Barbie and Carl De Keyser and show the everyday life in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.
By the end of the decade, the Soviet Union was a country descending into chaos, torn apart by natural and industrial catastrophes, political and economic crises.
Gorbachev’s policies of perestroika and glasnost (English: restructuring and openness) failed to reach Ukraine as early as other Soviet republics because of Volodymyr Shcherbytsky, a conservative communist appointed by Brezhnev and the First Secretary of the Ukrainian Communist Party, who resigned from his post in 1989.
The Chernobyl disaster of 1986, the russification policies, and the apparent social and economic stagnation led several Ukrainians to oppose Soviet rule.
Gorbachev’s policy of perestroika was also never introduced into practice, 95 percent of industry and agriculture was still owned by the Soviet state in 1990.
The talk of reform, but the lack of introducing reform into practice, led to confusion which in turn evolved into opposition to the Soviet state itself.
The policy of glasnost, which ended state censorship, led the Ukrainian diaspora to reconnect with their compatriots in Ukraine, the revitalization of religious practices by destroying the monopoly of the Russian Orthodox Church and led to the establishment of several opposition pamphlets, journals and newspapers.
Wedding at the City Hall, Kyiv.
Political revolution in Poland in 1989 sparked other, mostly peaceful revolutions across Eastern European states and led to the toppling of the Berlin Wall. By the end of 1989, the USSR had come apart at the seams.
An unsuccessful coup by Communist Party hard-liners in August 1991 sealed the Soviet Union’s fate by diminishing Gorbachev’s power and propelling democratic forces, led by Boris Yeltsin, to the forefront of Russian politics.
On December 25, Gorbachev resigned as leader of the USSR. The Soviet Union ceased to exist on December 31, 1991.
Concert of the rock band ABNA-AVIA, Kyiv.
Bessarabian market on Khreshchatyk street, Kyiv.
The local market in Pereslav, a town 60 km south of Kyiv.
St. Vladimir’s Cathedral, Kyiv.
Donetsk Mechanical Plant.
A kitchen at a collective farm in Donetsk.
A salon in Odessa.
Odessa. Orthodox priests bless the food for Easter.
Odessa. Posters for Glasnost and an exhibition of Stalin’s crimes.
Yalta sunbather (in a resort on the Black Sea).
A chess club for children in Yalta.
The maternity ward in Chernivtsi.
Buying tickets for a performance. Chernivtsi.
Lviv. View from the Rynok square to Russkaya street.
Synagogue in the city of Chernivtsi.
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O7
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Pole q lindos culos y tetas
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Food i am poor
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hue /o
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Everybody wants to be a cat
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These days are gone...
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good old days
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o7
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Chess runs deep pre- and post-Soviet Union.
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Finally found time to read your last two articles. Comprehensive and with nice photos.
Thank you.