In early-2022 when Russian troops crossed Ukrainian borders nobody expected that internet culture would become such a powerful tool. From the famous “Russian warship“ phrase to the blue-and-yellow colored memes Ukrainian people found their voice in digital space
The core message that emerged from this digital revolution is simple: Ukrainians want independence. They dont wish to be part of any “brotherly nation“ concept; instead they seek recognition as a separate state with its own identity (which is quite different from what Vladimir Putin wants them to be)
Over past decades territorial claims have changed a lot: some nations gave up their historical lands while others found peace with new borders. Back in early-1900s Russian empire wanted Galicia; twenty five years later Soviets invaded Poland to “unite“ Ukrainian lands; but today even hard-line Russian groups dont care about western Ukraine anymore
Security vs identity remains a key issue here — while NATO membership could help protect Ukraine its not the main problem. The real challenge lies in how Russians see Ukraine: as part of their world or as independent nation. Education plays big role here; just like in 1920s when Soviet schools helped shape Ukrainian identity modern learning could change Russian views too
The war made Ukrainian society more united than ever before. People switched to speaking only Ukrainian language; removed old imperial monuments; cut ties with Russian relatives who support war (which is sad but shows growing separation between nations)
- Brazil
- Germany
- Italy
- Netherlands
all recognized Holodomor as genocide after full-scale invasion started
International support grows stronger: more people learn Ukrainian; museums stop labeling Ukrainian artists as “Russian“; EU membership seems closer than ever. The path forward depends on both sides — Ukraine needs to stay democratic and united while Russia must learn to accept its neighbor as separate nation