Episodes
Wednesday May 08, 2024
Wednesday May 08, 2024
Since Russia first invaded Ukraine in 2014, Ukrainian musicologist and former director of Kyiv Symphony Orchestra Anna Stavychenko has made it her mission to promote Ukrainian classical music to the world. She’s currently working on a novel about her experiences since Russia’s full-scale invasion, which she started during a Harriman Institute residency for displaced Ukrainian artists at Columbia Global Centers Paris and the Institute for Ideas and Imagination. Listen to her story.
Check out the Winter 2024 issue of Harriman Magazine to read an excerpt from Anna’s novel in progress and other essays and articles about Ukraine.
Click here to view a concert from Stavychenko's 1991 Project, hosted in collaboration with Columbia Global Centers | Reid Hall, which includes Maksym Berezovsky's Sonata for violin and harpsichord featured in the episode (23:19). Performed by Antonina Krysa and Olga Vardanyan. And click here to view the 1991 Project's concert featuring Zoltan Almashi's, Suite No. 1 for Cello Solo, performed by Olga Driga (14:14), and Victoria Poleva's Gulf stream for Two Cellos performed by Driga and Nataliia Ivanovska (45:53).
Watch the he National Philharmonic of Ukraine’s performance for the Paris Philharmonic in Kyiv.
Monday Jul 31, 2023
Episode 6: Fantasies from Azovstal - Zoya Laktionova Remembers Mariupol
Monday Jul 31, 2023
Monday Jul 31, 2023
Zoya Laktionova recalls her Mariupol childhood, her relationship with Ukrainian language and culture, and her journey to become a documentary filmmaker.
Wednesday May 24, 2023
Episode 5: Immoral People
Wednesday May 24, 2023
Wednesday May 24, 2023
Ukrainian writer and journalist Nikita Grigorov was a university student studying Russian literature at Donetsk National University when Russia launched its war in Donbas in 2014. He supported an independent Ukraine and watched in disbelief as friends turned against him, sometimes violently. Then he fled to Kyiv with his father. Listen to his story.
Monday Apr 24, 2023
Episode 4: Covering 2014 Donbas: A Spanish-Language Perspective
Monday Apr 24, 2023
Monday Apr 24, 2023
Spanish journalist Argemino Barro was one of the only foreign correspondents in Donbas when Russia ramped up its destabilization efforts there in 2014. He talks about what it was like to cover the story for a Spanish-language audience.
Thursday Feb 09, 2023
Episode 3: No Ordinary Fourteen-Year-Old
Thursday Feb 09, 2023
Thursday Feb 09, 2023
Tanya Kotelnykova was fourteen years old when Russian-backed separatists occupied Horlivka, her hometown in Eastern Ukraine. She was torn away from her family and has been displaced since. Listen to her story.
Thursday Jan 05, 2023
Episode 2: Donetsk Was My Second Home
Thursday Jan 05, 2023
Thursday Jan 05, 2023
Christopher Atwood lived in Donetsk in the early 2010s and found himself working in Russia during its initial invasion of Ukraine in 2014. Listen to his story.
Monday Nov 21, 2022
Episode 1: How History Smells
Monday Nov 21, 2022
Monday Nov 21, 2022
Katia Shraga Davydenko was born in Kyiv in the 1960s. She immigrated to New York in 1992. Since 2014, she has dedicated all her free time to protesting Russia's aggression and volunteering to help Ukrainians.
Wednesday Nov 09, 2022
Season 2: Trailer
Wednesday Nov 09, 2022
Wednesday Nov 09, 2022
Coming in mid-November with episodes dropping monthly. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
Thursday Jun 16, 2022
Episode 12: Waiting for Ukraine
Thursday Jun 16, 2022
Thursday Jun 16, 2022
Daniel Brennan was a Peace Corps volunteer in Hlukhiv, Ukraine when was forced to evacuate because of the pandemic. He's been trying to go back since, but the war has upended his plans.
Thursday Jun 09, 2022
Thursday Jun 09, 2022
Volodymyr Rafeyenko, a Russian-speaking novelist, was living in Donetsk when Russia invaded the Donbas in 2014. He fled to Kyiv, learned Ukrainian and wrote Mondegreen in Ukrainian. Mark Andryczyk translated the novel and was planning to bring Rafeyenko on book tour to the U.S. when Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
Voices of Ukraine
Voices of Ukraine is a new podcast from Columbia University's Harriman Institute. Since Russia started its brutal, senseless war on Ukraine we’ve been hearing a lot of firsthand accounts from friends and colleagues who are either in Ukraine or deeply connected to it. We’ll bring you their stories every week.