Berliner Boersenzeitung - For Russians in Ukraine, their homeland feels like the enemy

EUR -
AED 4.333076
AFN 80.805211
ALL 97.225078
AMD 452.421627
ANG 2.112445
AOA 1081.94207
ARS 1663.899274
AUD 1.78767
AWG 1.659194
AZN 2.00791
BAM 1.959214
BBD 2.3755
BDT 143.597207
BGN 1.955869
BHD 0.444897
BIF 3468.821289
BMD 1.179871
BND 1.51347
BOB 8.167299
BRL 6.294258
BSD 1.179435
BTN 104.078616
BWP 15.678057
BYN 3.996697
BYR 23125.475262
BZD 2.372094
CAD 1.631555
CDF 3268.243257
CHF 0.935042
CLF 0.028761
CLP 1128.299363
CNY 8.394432
CNH 8.395704
COP 4545.984689
CRC 594.526015
CUC 1.179871
CUP 31.266586
CVE 110.701435
CZK 24.241612
DJF 209.686733
DKK 7.464827
DOP 73.032466
DZD 152.814517
EGP 56.824603
ERN 17.698068
ETB 168.955359
FJD 2.653825
FKP 0.87477
GBP 0.873181
GEL 3.184119
GGP 0.87477
GHS 14.51462
GIP 0.87477
GMD 87.310221
GNF 10235.382219
GTQ 9.03371
GYD 246.731754
HKD 9.167027
HNL 30.888932
HRK 7.534068
HTG 154.512546
HUF 389.208238
IDR 19572.883119
ILS 3.953398
IMP 0.87477
INR 104.188348
IQD 1545.631255
IRR 49643.080059
ISK 142.598982
JEP 0.87477
JMD 189.136406
JOD 0.836483
JPY 174.308866
KES 152.799705
KGS 103.180089
KHR 4727.743468
KMF 493.185879
KPW 1061.886214
KRW 1641.590144
KWD 0.360144
KYD 0.982925
KZT 642.01886
LAK 25561.908939
LBP 105657.464472
LKR 356.791789
LRD 210.608803
LSL 20.447141
LTL 3.483853
LVL 0.713692
LYD 6.389026
MAD 10.653895
MDL 19.672951
MGA 5268.124688
MKD 61.518638
MMK 2477.751818
MNT 4241.580785
MOP 9.441274
MRU 47.100512
MUR 53.742579
MVR 18.063623
MWK 2049.436448
MXN 21.662668
MYR 4.958519
MZN 75.405607
NAD 20.447138
NGN 1763.117137
NIO 43.303972
NOK 11.705437
NPR 166.525385
NZD 2.011049
OMR 0.453657
PAB 1.17932
PEN 4.110712
PGK 4.944718
PHP 67.182039
PKR 332.098614
PLN 4.25632
PYG 8398.493873
QAR 4.295616
RON 5.075092
RSD 117.181263
RUB 98.663845
RWF 1703.733994
SAR 4.425285
SBD 9.70696
SCR 17.757867
SDG 709.689924
SEK 11.043063
SGD 1.512583
SHP 0.927194
SLE 27.492595
SLL 24741.313176
SOS 674.280896
SRD 45.180214
STD 24420.951417
STN 24.895282
SVC 10.320116
SYP 15340.619001
SZL 20.447399
THB 37.4848
TJS 11.03998
TMT 4.141348
TND 3.420152
TOP 2.763372
TRY 48.843008
TTD 7.99894
TWD 35.668805
TZS 2911.33316
UAH 48.797012
UGX 4129.724439
USD 1.179871
UYU 47.056622
UZS 14536.013138
VES 192.841504
VND 31169.247079
VUV 141.519224
WST 3.154733
XAF 657.090988
XAG 0.026822
XAU 0.000315
XCD 3.18866
XCG 2.125732
XDR 0.81721
XOF 656.60066
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.520527
ZAR 20.466055
ZMK 10620.251258
ZMW 28.041393
ZWL 379.918041
  • RBGPF

    -0.6000

    76

    -0.79%

  • CMSD

    -0.1200

    24.46

    -0.49%

  • RYCEF

    0.3200

    15.65

    +2.04%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    24.25

    0%

  • RELX

    0.0500

    47.08

    +0.11%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.9

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    0.8700

    70.96

    +1.23%

  • RIO

    1.2700

    63.65

    +2%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    11.39

    -0.18%

  • GSK

    0.2400

    40.91

    +0.59%

  • AZN

    1.2200

    77.5

    +1.57%

  • JRI

    0.0800

    14

    +0.57%

  • BCC

    -0.0300

    79.44

    -0.04%

  • BCE

    -0.1500

    23.07

    -0.65%

  • BP

    0.2500

    34.37

    +0.73%

  • BTI

    -0.8300

    53.87

    -1.54%

For Russians in Ukraine, their homeland feels like the enemy
For Russians in Ukraine, their homeland feels like the enemy

For Russians in Ukraine, their homeland feels like the enemy

The Kremlin's invasion of Ukraine is a personal tragedy for Russians living in Ukraine, many of whom now see their homeland as an enemy -- and some are ready to fight.

Text size:

Despite Ukrainian fury and mounting anti-Russian rhetoric, 40-year-old Andrei Sidorkin says the only time he has been rejected by his neighbours is when he tried to join the army.

Sidorkin, who was born in St Petersburg where his parents are buried, moved to the Ukrainian capital Kyiv 15 years ago "for a love story".

He had felt accepted in Ukraine but his Russian passport meant he was blocked on five attempts to join different elements of the Ukrainian armed forces, including the nationalist Azov Battalion.

"If Russian troops ever enter Kyiv, I would like to welcome them with weapons in hand, not empty-handed," Sidorkin said.

He is preparing Molotov cocktails with other volunteers, he added.

As a former Soviet republic where Russian is still widely spoken, and which has seen two democratic revolutions in 2004 and 2014, Ukraine has become a popular exile destination for Russian liberals.

Sasha Alekseyeva, a 32-year-old sociologist with multicoloured dreadlocks, moved from St Petersburg to Kyiv four years ago to escape what she saw as the authoritarian regime of President Vladimir Putin.

With Russian forces pressing towards the capital, she has now fled to the relative safety of Lviv in western Ukraine.

"I feel safer here than in Russia."

- 'Ashamed' -

There were nearly 175,000 Russians with a residence permit in Ukraine as of late January, the state migration service told AFP, with many more likely living illegally since there is no visa regime between the two countries.

The invasion has caught many of them off-guard, with some finding themselves torn between their homeland and their adopted country.

It is a potentially dangerous situation since a portion of Ukraine's 40 million inhabitants now consider every Russian an enemy.

"I was very ashamed to be Russian," said Galina Zhabina, who spent several days under bombardment in Kharkiv, Ukraine's second largest city in the east.

"Then I was very angry, ready to throw myself on a tank with my bare hands, but there were no tanks, just airstrikes," the 36-year-old copywriter said.

Maria Troushnikova, a 43-year-old English teacher who has lived in Ukraine for 20 years but has always felt Russian, says she is experiencing an identity crisis.

"Shame, rage, pride for Ukraine -- there is all of that in me," she told AFP, describing "a terrible emptiness instead of nationality".

For many, the war has broken relationships with relatives in Russia who support the invasion or are unwilling to condemn Moscow.

"I hardly talk to anyone anymore," said Zhabina.

"My friends hide their heads in the sand, my family invites me to go back to Russia and they don't understand why I don't."

- The enemy within? -

Of her family, Alekseyeva only communicates with her 88-year-old grandmother. It saddens her to think that she may never see her again.

"But when you hear that an 18-month-old child has been killed, you don't think about your grandmother anymore," she said.

Yulia Kutsenko, founder of a kindergarten in Kyiv, says her mother and sisters in Moscow support Ukraine but she finds it hard to understand their inaction, even though any protest is brutally suppressed by the Russian authorities.

"I am very afraid for them, but I would still like them to go out on the streets," said the 44-year-old.

She now feels entirely Ukrainian and considers Russia "an enemy".

Some hope that a defeat of their homeland will serve as a useful lesson, or even lead to Russia's disintegration.

"It would be convenient to say that only Putin is guilty -- that's not true," said Sidorkin.

"We have to dismantle this imperial myth of Russia altogether."

(A.Berg--BBZ)