
Following the 2004-5 Orange Revolution, President Viktor Yushchenko embarked on an ambitious project to rehabilitate the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) and its armed wing, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA). Following the Euromaidan Revolution and Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2014, a more systematic effort was made to affirm these groups as a center of a new historical canonical canon. This endeavor necessitated a highly selective rendering of these organizations' history, not least in regard to their role in the Holocaust and their systematic massacres of the Polish minority in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia in 1943-44. The attempts to rehabilitate some of the OUN's most prominent leaders - Mykola Lebed', Roman Shukhevych, Stepan Bandera, Yaroslav Stets'ko, and others - all faced significant obstacles as newly available archival materials undermined key tenants of the state-sanctioned memory.
The book's introduction to the intellectual history of Ukrainian nationalism and particular conditions of nation building of a stateless nation is followed by an investigation of post-Soviet memory management. The study engages the contentious issue of the taxonomy of the OUN's ideology before concluding with a chapter on how Ukraine's rehabilitation of this organization has been weaponized by the Russian Federation to justify its criminal war of aggression. In this war, Ukrainians defend not only their territory; their stubborn resistance is a defense of a rules-based order, democracy, fundamental human rights, and the right to self-determination. As a by-product of this is, it may also offer a way out of a memory impasse, beyond Bandera and the OUN.
" What makes the monograph a valuable contribution to understanding twentieth century Ukrainian nationalism is [. . .] its challenging of myths preserved by Ukrainian scholarship and the émigré community s determination to protect Ukraine s victimhood well into the post-Soviet era against accumulating evidence of wartime collaboration. [. . .] Overall, the monograph is thought-provoking and original in how it employs open critique of Ukrainian historical wrongs as a means of undermining Russia s contemporary propaganda, which invokes the OUN s past as part of a narrative of `saving Ukraine from Nazism, and thereby distracts Russian society and world opinion from the Kremlin s real agenda. Rudling sets out to confront long-standing Ukrainian efforts to sanitise the OUN s reputation with the historical and moral intent of warning all nations that mass political violence only preserves past grievances between neighbouring states. "
MARTIN J. KOZON, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee,
Europe-Asia Studies,
78:3.
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