Russian Culture Is Terror

Russian culture is terror

Russian Culture Is Terror

I sit in the dark like a bat. And I have to sympathize with the Russians who are doing nothing to solve their problems or issues. I have to rejoice that we are being destroyed. Kinzhals, cruise and ballistic missiles are now flying across the country. They are flying to my region.

More Posts from Neboskhyl and Others

1 year ago
neboskhyl - Neboskhyl

Tags
anyways russia is a terrorist state simple as that fuck russia russian invasion russian imperialism russian aggression imagine having sympathy for colonisers here’s a list of searches to help y’all realise that russians aren’t the ones being affected more BY THE WAR OF THEIR OWN MAKING (i know that’s a craaaazy thought but bear with me /sarcasm) kakhovka dam literally anything about mariupol or azovstal mass graves pictures from satellites torture chambers on liberated territories how many children were “evacuated (stolen) from ukraine any accounts of the victims from liberated/occupied territories blackouts from 2022 when russians damaged infrastructure so bad people were sitting in the dark with no heating and water what has been happening on zaporizhzhia nuclear powerplant or just google a fucking war crimes list idfk anymore do y’all really need us to be your suffer porn material for you to not make it a fucking competition for once because of course the russian village that lost their beloved war criminal feels the pain brought by war more profoundly than thousands of young men who were killed for speaking their own language than thousands of women who were raped by the same war criminals that y’all are uplifting in articles like this and than thousands of families that got torn apart whether by distance or by violent cruel death brought upon them by the same old war criminals there is no neutral position on this genocide because when you say you’re neutral or you’re on the side of the civilians what you’re really saying is ‘​i’m a coward and/or my views might not be socially acceptable so that’s why i’m staying silent on the matter’ you either support genocide or you don’t y’all stop supporting shit once it’s not trending anymore so fast it scares me
11 months ago
One Year Ago Russia Blew Up The Nova Kakhovka Dam.
One Year Ago Russia Blew Up The Nova Kakhovka Dam.
One Year Ago Russia Blew Up The Nova Kakhovka Dam.

One year ago russia blew up the Nova Kakhovka dam.

I'm remembering how desperate we all felt. We were screaming about it, sharing news. This is an act of terrorism and ecocide, huge flooded areas, unimaginable consequences for people and environment. But the world didn't care. Still doesn't.


Tags
1 year ago
I Often Think About Hlodan Family. Please Take A Moment To Learn About Them.
I Often Think About Hlodan Family. Please Take A Moment To Learn About Them.
I Often Think About Hlodan Family. Please Take A Moment To Learn About Them.
I Often Think About Hlodan Family. Please Take A Moment To Learn About Them.

I often think about Hlodan family. Please take a moment to learn about them.

On April 23, 2022, on Easter Eve, russian missile hit the Tiras residential complex in Odesa, Ukraine. Eight people were killed, including Yurii's family - his wife Valeriia, three-month-old daughter Kira and mother-in-law Liudmyla. Yurii survived, because at the moment he went to the shop.

Look at baby Kira's tiny pink hat. Cute little onesie. That baby was so wanted and loved. Mother's post on Facebook form February says "These were the best 40 weeks ever. Our girl is 1 month old now. Daddy got her her first flowers. It's a whole new level of happiness".

I Often Think About Hlodan Family. Please Take A Moment To Learn About Them.

Yurii donated diapers, one of the few things he could find in destroyed apartment, to the charity. He also took photo albums, his wife's collection of sugar packets, handwritten notes.

I Often Think About Hlodan Family. Please Take A Moment To Learn About Them.

Yurii spoke about his wife very lovingly and tenderly: "Her ability to communicate with different people, to understand people, the way she knew how to talk, how beautifully she wrote... You can’t even imagine how she wrote! And what kind of mother she was... You can’t even imagine! This is a mother, this is a friend, this is a daughter - with the best qualities... I simply cannot find another person like her. Person like this can only be given by God once".

After losing his family, Yurii decided to join the ranks of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. On 5 November, 2023, his colleague Oleksandr Yakovenko reported that Yurii was killed at the front. The whole family is gone.

I Often Think About Hlodan Family. Please Take A Moment To Learn About Them.

Tags
1 year ago

Our (Georgian as in the country) government quietly made new additions to the foreign agent law today.

1. The foreign agent law will affect not only organizations, but individuals. Failure to comply with the law causes a 5000 lari fine.

2. The law will allow the government all of your personal information including your political stance and sexual relationships. It makes every organization forced to comply with handing over all of our information to the government. If you are queer, have differing political views, or are part of a non-governmental organization against domestic violence, your anonymity is no longer guaranteed.

3. Only thing this does not include is country's secrets, nothing else is off the table.


Tags
1 year ago
When The Anti "LGBT Propaganda" Law Passed In Russia, All Of You Were Going Insane And Cared. Give Georgia
When The Anti "LGBT Propaganda" Law Passed In Russia, All Of You Were Going Insane And Cared. Give Georgia

When the anti "LGBT propaganda" law passed in Russia, all of you were going insane and cared. Give Georgia the same energy. If you can have sympathy for our oppressors on the basis of them being queer, you should keep the same energy for us, if not more.

If this law passes, every Georgian queer person I know is so severely fucked, myself included. If you make jokes about "being illegal in several countries" you better fucking care about the countries you're apparently illegal in, or going to be illegal in.

Make sure to spread this around. This is important.


Tags
1 year ago

hi friends

as we boycott in support of palestine, here is a little reminder of the companies that specifically supported israel in their crimes against palestine (taken from the al jazeera website)

Hi Friends

do as much as you are able to during the boycott, but if you need essentials or need to go to work to support yourself, that is okay! anything helps and boycotting these companies specifically is great because of their direct role in the violence against people in gaza

free palestine


Tags
1 year ago

What Ukrainians ate to survive Holodomor

(translated excerpts from an Історична Правда article): + images source

The villagers would dig up the holes of the polecats to find at least a handful of grain hidden by these animals. They pounded it in a mortar, added a handful of oilcake (from hemp seed), beetroot, potato peelings, and baked something from this mixture.

Those who managed to hide at least a little grain would grind it in iron mills made from wheel axles and cook "zatyrukha" (a concoction made from a small amount of flour ground from ears of grain).

Acacia flowers were boiled and eaten raw, and green quinoa was mixed with crushed corn cobs. Those who could - and this was considered lucky - added a handful of bran. This food made their feet swell and their skin crack.

"Travyanyk" - a pancake made out of grass with added linen seeds

The peasants dried the husked ears of corn and millet husks, pounded them, ground them with weeds, and cooked soups and baked pancakes. Such dishes were impossible to chew, the body could not digest them, so people had stomach aches. Pancakes, the so-called "matorzhenyky", were made from oilcake and nettle or plantain.

It went so far that peasants would crumble straw into small chips and pound it in a mortar together with millet and buckwheat chaff, and tree bark. All this was mixed with potato peelings, which were very poisonous, and this mixture was used to bake "bread", the consumption of which caused severe stomach diseases.

There were cases when village activists took away and broke millstones, mortars, poured water on the heat in their ovens. After all, anything found or saved from the food had to be cooked on fire, and matches could only be purchased by bartering for their own belongings or by buying them in the city, which was impossible from villagers that were on "black lists".

"Palyanychky" - a bread made of potato peels

Chestnuts, aspen and birch bark, buds, reed roots, hawthorn and rose hips, which were the most delicious, were used as food substitutes; various berries, even poisonous ones, were picked; grass seeds were ground into flour; "honey" from sugar beets was cooked, and water brewed with cherry branches was drunk. They also ate the kernels of sunflower seeds.

Newborns had the worst of it, because their mothers had no breast milk. According to testimonies, a mother would let her child suck the drink from the top of the poppy head, and the child would fall asleep for three days.

In early spring, the villagers began to dig up old potato fields. They would bake dumplings from frozen potatoes, grind rotten potatoes in a mash and make pancakes, greasing the frying pan with wheel grease. They also baked "blyuvaly" (transl. "vomities") from such potatoes and oatmeal mixed with water, which was so called because they were very smelly.

"Khlybtsy" - "bread" made of covered straw, millet and buckwheat chaff,  and hemp seeds.

They ate mice, rats, frogs, hedgehogs, snakes, beetles, ants, worms, i.e. things that weren't a part of food bans and had never been eaten by people before. The horror of the famine is also evidenced by the consumption of spiders, which are forbidden to kill in Ukrainian society for ritual reasons.

In some areas, slugs were boiled into a soup, and the cartilaginous meat was chopped and mixed with leaves. This prevented swelling of the body and contributed to survival. People caught tadpoles, frogs, lizards, turtles, and mollusks. They boiled them, adding a little salt if there was salt. The starving people caught cranes, storks, and herons, which have been protected in Ukraine for centuries, and their nests were never destroyed. According to folk beliefs, eating stork meat was equated with cannibalism.

The consumption of horse meat began in 1931, before the mass famine. People used to take dead horsemeat from the cemeteries at night, make jelly out of it and salt it for future use.

"Weed soup" boiled from corn cob and weeds.

Dead horses were poured with carbolic acid to prevent people from taking their meat, but it hardly stopped anybody. Dead collective farm pigs were also doused with kerosene to prevent people from dismantling them for food, but this did not help either.

After long periods of starvatiom, the process of digestion is very costing for the human body, and many people who would eat anything would drop dead immediately out of exhaustion.

If a family had a cow hidden somewhere in the forest, they had a chance to survive. People living near forests could hunt/seek out berries and mushrooms, but during winter this wouldn't save them. People living near rivers could fish in secret, but it was banned and punishable by imprisonment/death.


Tags
4 months ago

Since 2014, millions of Uyghurs, Kazakhs and other minorities have been locked up in China and subjected to torture and forced labour. Some of those freed talk about trying to rebuild their lives in neighbouring Kazakhstan.

Photography by Robin Tutenges

Since 2014, Millions Of Uyghurs, Kazakhs And Other Minorities Have Been Locked Up In China And Subjected

A Chinese course book

Saliman Yesbolat used to live in Ghulja county, Xinjiang. After she refused to denounce her Uyghur neighbours to the police, she was forced to perform the raising of the Chinese flag every Monday at dawn, and to attend Chinese lessons twice a week in the basement of her building, where she would learn the Chinese language, patriotic songs and Xi Jinping's discourses by heart. This is her exercise book.

Since 2014, Millions Of Uyghurs, Kazakhs And Other Minorities Have Been Locked Up In China And Subjected

Forced to leave China

At 65, Imam Madi Toleukhan is one of the oldest refugees in Bekbolat, Kazakhstan, where more than 100 families took shelter after fleeing the Chinese regime. 'We were richer back there. I owned a herd, but I was too afraid for my sons, my grandchildren and their future: I came to Kazakhstan to save them. I didn't want them to be the fourth generation to suffer at the hands of the Chinese government, he says.

Since 2014, Millions Of Uyghurs, Kazakhs And Other Minorities Have Been Locked Up In China And Subjected

Remembering Uyghur culture in exile

Two members of the Dolan Ensemble, a Uyghur dance troupe based in Kazakhstan, get ready before performing a traditional dance to mark 40 days since the birth of a baby. Founded in 2016, the troupe performs at festivals or private events that bring together members of the Uyghur community, some of whom have had to leave Xinjiang.

Since 2014, Millions Of Uyghurs, Kazakhs And Other Minorities Have Been Locked Up In China And Subjected

Torture, infertility and damaged genitalia

In Kazakhstan, medical care for camp survivors is poor. Most victims can barely afford to see a family doctor. Anara*, an endocrinologist in a Kazakh hospital who has examined about 50 camp survivors since 2020, noticed recurrent infertility problems among her patients. 'Men or women, many have damaged genitalia. Some told me they'd been given drugs, others said they'd been raped. As they didn't come to us right after being released from the camps, it's impossible to know what kind of drugs they were administered in Xinjiang, she says. *Not her real name

Since 2014, Millions Of Uyghurs, Kazakhs And Other Minorities Have Been Locked Up In China And Subjected

The tiger chair

Ospan* spent a year in a re-education camp. He says his mind and body were crushed by the tortures he experienced in a tiger chair - a steel apparatus with handcuffs that restrains the body in painful positions. Aged about 50, this former shepherd, who took refuge with his family in eastern Kazakhstan, is no longer fit for work. Physically wrecked and prone to headaches, he mourns the loss of his memory above all. 'I used to know a lot of songs and I loved to sing; I also knew poems by heart ... Now, I can't sing any more, I can't remember the words,' he says. *Not his real name

Since 2014, Millions Of Uyghurs, Kazakhs And Other Minorities Have Been Locked Up In China And Subjected

Broken families and imprisonment

Aikamal Rashibek saw the dreadful efficiency of the CCP's brainwashing on her husband, Kerimbek Bakytali, after he was released from a Chinese psychiatric hospital. 'He disappeared for a year. When he came back, he didn't tell me anything about what happened to him. He was highly unhinged, always nervous, and got angry whenever I asked questions. He couldn't stop repeating that he hated Kazakhstan now, and that he wanted to go back to China with the kids to give them a Chinese education, says Aikamal. They are now separated.

Since 2014, Millions Of Uyghurs, Kazakhs And Other Minorities Have Been Locked Up In China And Subjected

Missing loved ones in China’s camps

In March 2017, Miyessar Muhedamu, left, a Uyghur woman, was arrested in Xinjiang under the pretext that she had studied Arabic in Egypt when she was young. Her husband, Sadirzhan Ayupov, right, and her three children have not seen her since. Now that Miyessar has left the camp, Sadirzhan receives a short call every few months. He suspects she might have suffered abuse, yet Miyessar can’t speak freely. ‘She told me she’d been in a re-education camp, and that she’d been released. When I ask her what she went through there, she doesn’t answer,’ says Sadirzhan.

Since 2014, Millions Of Uyghurs, Kazakhs And Other Minorities Have Been Locked Up In China And Subjected

Life after fleeing China

Sent to a re-education camp in 2018 at the age of 64, Yerke* saw her health quickly deteriorate. Locked a tiny cell with dozens of other women, she almost lost the use of her legs due to the cold floor she had to lie on. She was in the camp when she learned of her son’s death: pressured by the Chinese authorities, he took his own life. After her release, Yerke fled to Kazakhstan with some family members, but two of her children remain in China. *Not her real name

Since 2014, Millions Of Uyghurs, Kazakhs And Other Minorities Have Been Locked Up In China And Subjected

Forced labour and confessions

Dina Nurdybay, 32, was arrested in Nilka county, Xinjiang, because her traditional Kazakh clothing business made her a separatist, according to the Chinese authorities. She spent 11 months between two re-education camps, a CCP school and a forced-labour sewing factory. After proving she was capable of being ‘well behaved’ and having performed a self-criticism in front of the whole village, Dina was released and managed to escape when she obtained a week’s leave to visit her ailing father in Kazakhstan.

Since 2014, Millions Of Uyghurs, Kazakhs And Other Minorities Have Been Locked Up In China And Subjected

Cultural genocide

China’s repression of ethnic minorities also involves cultural genocide. As Muslim rituals are forbidden in Xinjiang, people are trying to keep their traditions alive across borders. Here, a family is praying together in Kazakhstan after the death of one of their relatives in Xinjiang. They could not repatriate the body because the border between the two countries was closed at the time.

(continue reading)


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • airedelalmena
    airedelalmena reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • dontpanicatallbut
    dontpanicatallbut liked this · 1 year ago
  • myrosrava
    myrosrava liked this · 1 year ago
  • glitteringlizard
    glitteringlizard liked this · 1 year ago
  • drownedgirlsstuff
    drownedgirlsstuff liked this · 1 year ago
  • microhvylyova
    microhvylyova liked this · 1 year ago
  • batwh0ry
    batwh0ry liked this · 1 year ago
  • l0vesp333ll
    l0vesp333ll liked this · 1 year ago
  • brabaxie
    brabaxie liked this · 1 year ago
  • dougielombax
    dougielombax liked this · 1 year ago
  • yuliyakhomenko
    yuliyakhomenko reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • macabrues
    macabrues liked this · 1 year ago
  • cha0ticneutralcat
    cha0ticneutralcat liked this · 1 year ago
  • perfectlycuratedprincess
    perfectlycuratedprincess liked this · 1 year ago
  • thegirlwhohid
    thegirlwhohid liked this · 1 year ago
  • neboskhyl
    neboskhyl reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • neboskhyl
    neboskhyl liked this · 1 year ago
  • lookindownoncreation
    lookindownoncreation liked this · 1 year ago
  • lohinen
    lohinen liked this · 1 year ago
  • narukorankofan
    narukorankofan reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • narukorankofan
    narukorankofan liked this · 1 year ago
  • vithimar
    vithimar liked this · 1 year ago
  • minosbull
    minosbull liked this · 1 year ago
  • airedelalmena
    airedelalmena liked this · 1 year ago
  • truthinquotations
    truthinquotations reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • truthinquotations
    truthinquotations liked this · 1 year ago
  • cipscanta
    cipscanta reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • cipscanta
    cipscanta liked this · 1 year ago
  • bizaraespero
    bizaraespero reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • psychiccollectionkoala
    psychiccollectionkoala liked this · 1 year ago
  • hercreationtimemachine
    hercreationtimemachine liked this · 1 year ago
  • ooppen
    ooppen reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • ooppen
    ooppen liked this · 1 year ago
  • princess-lyubova
    princess-lyubova liked this · 1 year ago
  • verbacherni
    verbacherni liked this · 1 year ago
  • jiliansky-blog
    jiliansky-blog liked this · 1 year ago
  • mooncorebunny
    mooncorebunny liked this · 1 year ago
  • eyeball-freak
    eyeball-freak liked this · 1 year ago
  • is-this-working
    is-this-working liked this · 1 year ago
  • rametarin
    rametarin reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • rametarin
    rametarin liked this · 1 year ago
  • wigilda
    wigilda liked this · 1 year ago
  • tseivo
    tseivo liked this · 1 year ago
  • sawmillsouttake
    sawmillsouttake reblogged this · 1 year ago
neboskhyl - Neboskhyl
Neboskhyl

🇵🇸🍉 Небосхил | 🇺🇦 | artist | укр/eng/pol | https://linktr.ee/neboskhyl

297 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags