ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½

Skip to main content

How Ukrainians are trying to protect cultural landmarks from Russian attacks

Share

Faced with the constant threat of shelling, residents in Ukraine's cultural capital are doing what they can to protect their city's historic landmarks.

Statues around the western Ukraine city of Lviv can be seen completely covered, while stained glass windows are boarded up.

Efforts to protect these and other important monuments come as the recent escalation in the country's war with Russia enters its fourth week.

"Those who destroy the past, they have no future," Diana Borysenko, and a member of the Lviv Tourism Alliance, told CTV National News Washington Bureau Chief Joy Malbon.

"It's like forgetting about your grandparents, about your ancestors. These are your roots. This is where you come from."

Lviv joined the in 1998. Founded in the late Middle Ages, it holds most of Ukraine's and is known for its history as a religious and cultural centre in the country, inspired by its different ethnic communities.

While much of the fighting in Ukraine is taking place in the country's east and around the capital Kyiv, the "feeling of war is everywhere, in every corner of Ukraine," Borysenko says.

"People are desperate and they do not understand what kind of vandal you have to be, what kind of cruel creature you have to be, to be killing kids, to be killing people who are staying in a queue to buy bread, to be killing a family who's escaping to the west, I have no words to explain," she said. "It's very painful."

The city has remained largely peaceful, although air raid sirens go off every night warning residents about possible missile strikes.

Borysenko also can't help but look at what is happening in Kyiv, or the devastation in the Kharkiv to the northeast and Mariupol in the southeast.

"I think unfortunately, this generation that will survive the war — and we'll not only survive it we'll win this war, because God is with us, and we will not give away our land, that piece of our land — so this generation that grows up with the war, they will not be able to forgive all these atrocities," she said.

Watch the full video with CTV National News Washington Bureau Chief Joy Malbon at the top of the article.

CTVNews.ca ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½

Since she was a young girl growing up in Vancouver, Ginny Lam says her mom Yat Hei Law made it very clear she favoured her son William, because he was her male heir.

The province's public security minister said he was "shocked" Thursday amid reports that a body believed to be that of a 14-year-old boy was found this week near a Hells Angels hideout near Quebec City.

An Ontario man says it is 'unfair' to pay a $1,500 insurance surcharge because his four-year-old SUV is at a higher risk of being stolen.

Emergency crews in northern Ontario found the bodies of four people inside a home where a fire broke out Thursday night.

Local Spotlight

They say a dog is a man’s best friend. In the case of Darren Cropper, from Bonfield, Ont., his three-year-old Siberian husky and golden retriever mix named Bear literally saved his life.

A growing group of brides and wedding photographers from across the province say they have been taken for tens of thousands of dollars by a Barrie, Ont. wedding photographer.

Paleontologists from the Royal B.C. Museum have uncovered "a trove of extraordinary fossils" high in the mountains of northern B.C., the museum announced Thursday.

The search for a missing ancient 28-year-old chocolate donkey ended with a tragic discovery Wednesday.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police is celebrating an important milestone in the organization's history: 50 years since the first women joined the force.

It's been a whirlwind of joyful events for a northern Ontario couple who just welcomed a baby into their family and won the $70 million Lotto Max jackpot last month.

A Good Samaritan in New Brunswick has replaced a man's stolen bottle cart so he can continue to collect cans and bottles in his Moncton neighbourhood.

David Krumholtz, known for roles like Bernard the Elf in The Santa Clause and physicist Isidor Rabi in Oppenheimer, has spent the latter part of his summer filming horror flick Altar in Winnipeg. He says Winnipeg is the most movie-savvy town he's ever been in.

Edmontonians can count themselves lucky to ever see one tiger salamander, let alone the thousands one local woman says recently descended on her childhood home.