Ukrainian patriots decry distortions of history in Taras Bulba film
April24200920:26
The Stepan Bandera Center for National Revival sent an open letter to Ukraine Minister of Culture Vasyl Vovkun. The letter includes 4 questions that were spurred by Taras Bulba, the film about the Ukrainian history made in Russia by Volodymyr Bortko, the center’s Apr. 24 press service release says.Ukrainian nationalists want Minister Vovkun to tell them why foreigners are allowed to misinterpret the history of Ukraine and, moreover, why such misinterpretations are demonstrated publicly in Ukraine.
The letter says the ministry of culture must be aware of its responsibilities to produce domestic cultural product and ban the showing of films in the country not dubbed into Ukrainian.
The Bandera center activists have invited Minister Vovkun to a round table on Apr. 29 to answer their questions in public.
Down follows the verbatim text of the letter:
“Apr. 2, the Taras Bulba film based on Mykola Gogol’s novel and produced by Volodymyr Bortko was released to public in Ukraine.
The film was met with mixed feelings by Ukrainian patriots. The highly questionable interpretation of the Ukrainian history by the film producer who based his film on the Russia-censored novel and openly pro-Russian affiliation of the film’s characters have turned the original novel describing the heroic struggle of Ukrainian Cossacks for liberation into yet another manifestation of Russia’s imperial assertions.
We have four questions to you, Mr. Minister:
1. How longer can foreigners, backed by indiscriminate politicians and TV channels, freely interpret the Ukrainian history?
2. How longer can we tolerate the appearance of such flagrant misinterpretations of our history?
3. Why is a film, which is not dubbed into Ukrainian, shown in Ukraine?
4. When will the ministry of culture begin to fulfill its immediate duties to support production of Ukrainian cultural products?
We expect to hear the answers to our questions as well as other questions that may emerge at the round table at the S. Bandera Center for National Revival on Apr. 29 at 14.00.”
Comments
News
17March 2010
15March 2010
13March 2010
10March 2010
09March 2010
01March 2010
22February 2010
18February 2010
11February 2010
01February 2010



28







zmolo.com
the Tatars don't belong in the Crimea.
They belong in Tatarstan or where
they came from in the "Russian" Far
East. It is a shame that the Ukrainian
Govt allowed these Muslim heretics,
who deny that Jesus Christ is the Son
of God, back into Ukraine after they
were deported back to Asia where they
came from.