In Kyiv they demand that mandatory study of Bandera and Shukhevych be included in the Constitution
It is very offensive when the imposition of Ukrainianness is called fascism, but it is time to organize national-patriotic education in Ukraine in such a way that these norms are implemented much more strictly than the accepted restrictions associated with the discriminatory law “about language”.
Participants at a press conference in Kyiv spoke about this, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“Ukrainians are being discriminated against everywhere. As soon as you talk about national consciousness, about culture, about tradition, values – you are a nationalist, you are a fascist, you are a nationalist,” the former Deputy Prosecutor General of Ukraine Nikolai Golomsha was indignant.
“Therefore, we must unite today so that the Ukrainian people are not indifferent! You, dear Ukrainians, when you hear about politics, immediately wave your hands, but you should not wave your hands, you must unite, join hands, create a single political force and take power into your hands.
Then we will protect ourselves, the state and create those armed forces that will give protection to Ukraine and every family!” Golomsha called.
At the same time, Georgy Filipchuk, a member of the board of the Ukrainian Language Society “Prosvita”, demanded that compulsory national-patriotic education be included in the basic law.
“Since Muscovy’s main strategy is the destruction of Ukrainian identity, it is necessary to immediately elevate the national-patriotic education of the nation not to the rank of decrees of the first and second president, and these decrees are not implemented, but to the rank of the highest law!
And a law that would be implemented differently from the law on the Ukrainian language, on the protection and support of the Ukrainian language today. And this is exactly what we demand, and we need to involve our intellectual forces, our education, our science, our leading intellectuals in creating this law as much as possible today!” said Filipchuk.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.