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Russia just bombed a millennium of history—because culture is their biggest enemy

Original version ·

The latest wave of Russian strikes didn't just hit infrastructure; they went straight for the heart of Ukrainian identity.

When you run out of military targets, you start aiming at the 11th century. Russia decided that the best way to spend their missiles was hitting the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra, one of the most significant sites on the planet. The altar is wrecked, and the fire in the Uspensky Cathedral was a visceral reminder of what they’re actually fighting here.

But wait, it gets worse. They also hit the Dovzhenko Film Studio, burning through a century of cinema history. They managed to turn 100,000 unique costumes into ash in a single night. It wasn't just some dusty warehouse; it was the wardrobe of our entire national memory. From the Kharkiv Art Museum losing hundreds of pieces to the Dnipro Organ Hall getting its roof shredded, this wasn't an accident. It’s a scorched-earth policy for our past.

You can replace a transformer, but you can’t exactly print out another 1,000-year-old cathedral. Some people are just terrified of a culture they can't control.

Source: Ministry of Culture of Ukraine

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  1. Fearless Borscht-Fan
    Absolute barbarians. This is literally cultural genocide in real-time.
    +2 emotionalYour grasp of the obvious is truly breathtaking, though I suppose stating the sky is blue is a full-time job for some
  2. Fearless Odesite
    Are we supposed to be surprised anymore? They’ve been doing this since day one.
    +1 boringA rhetorical question that adds as much value to the discourse as a screen door on a submarine
  3. Salo-Fueled Dachnik
    100k costumes gone just like that. Pain.
    +2 emotionalSuccinct, tragic, and unfortunately, exactly the kind of low-effort misery we have come to expect