Bukovina, a Ukrainian Land (1939) documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 22 дек 2016
  • Documentary film about the Bukovina region. A Soviet propaganda film, shot right after the annexation of Northern Bukovyna to the USSR, covers an uneasy life of the villagers and town dwellers. A significant part of time is devoted to the main city of the region - Chernivtsi.
    Bukovina, a Ukrainian Land (1939) documentary
    Genre: Documentary
    Directors: Aleksandr Dovzhenko, Yuliya Solntseva
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Комментарии • 84

  • @sorinv.obreja7862
    @sorinv.obreja7862 4 года назад +28

    Very propagandistic but interesting as well! The traditional wedding presented here has strong Romanian characteristics. The costumes, the pair dance man-women, the men circle dance with the kinetic technique of spur steps (pasi cu pinteni) executed by men, the music of the dance, all are so Romanian. Kind of different from ukrainian characteristics. We can see ukrainian traditional costumes and songs after the wedding moments where we can notice the difference.
    Thanks for posting!!!

  • @mrwoldridge
    @mrwoldridge 3 года назад +11

    Just looked at Bucovina Romania on google street view and wow, beautiful, and looks just like the mountainous areas in North Carolina.

  • @romania1918
    @romania1918 5 лет назад +47

    Bucovina is Romania,not russia

    • @yannikon8469
      @yannikon8469 3 года назад +3

      Nobody in the film says that. If it's Romania, take it.

  • @coyotedust
    @coyotedust 8 дней назад

    Today, Bukovina's northern half is the Chernivtsi Oblast of Ukraine, while the southern part is Suceava County of Romania. Bukovina is sometimes known as the 'Switzerland of the East', given its diverse ethnic mosaic and deep forested mountainous landscapes.

  • @DelightfulTravellers
    @DelightfulTravellers 6 лет назад +2

    Cool channel. Well done! We truly loved it.

  • @laraanderson9753
    @laraanderson9753 Год назад +1

    My great great grandmother came from here

  • @coyotedust
    @coyotedust 8 дней назад

    This poor region suffered 500 years of turmoil and conquest and look at the year it was filmed 1939, a few years before Operation Barbarossa!

  • @dacianforce4435
    @dacianforce4435 Год назад +2

    Before being a galician land, it was dacian land, our ancestors! So no, it is not an Ukrainian land. If you look in history, it belonged us for more than 1500 years.

  • @harlzberg6068
    @harlzberg6068 Год назад +1

    Hi, I'm having trouble finding my heritage if it is Romanian, Moldovan or Ukrainian. My great grand father was Samuel Zaporzan, but census shows nothing previous of him marrying my great Baba. I have tried every alternate surname search; Zaporozan, Zaporojan, Zaporozhan, Saporozhan, Zyprozan, Zyporozan, Zaprozan, nothing. This great grand father is a mystery, marks down Galicia, Austria Ukrainica, not sure if this Samuel Zapor(o)zan has parents??If someone can help, it would be much appreciated to start in a direction. My baba has her parents mrked down as from Shesheva and Zveneche which don't come up on a map, possibly in Austro-Hungarian Empire days, all very mysterious.

  • @Kaikuo8874
    @Kaikuo8874 5 лет назад +30

    Bukovina is Romania /Moldova.

  • @Citizenmecanic
    @Citizenmecanic Год назад +5

    Bucovina e Romania Cernăuți e Romania....ukraina ne vrem pământul înapoi

  • @moldaviannationalist3735
    @moldaviannationalist3735 4 года назад +14

    The present-day Ukrainians living today in the North Bucovina region are not the same as the old Ruthenians who settled in the medieval Principality of Moldavia, but mere migrants from Austro-Hungarian Galicia, who came to this territory by mid 19th century, and would not become a majority until the end of the century. They (the old Ruthenians) went through a process of voluntary assimilation by which they adopted local speech, with no one pressuring them to do so. Therefore if we want to talk about natives, we cannot include the Ukrainians, since as I have well explained these are newcomers here. Nor do the Bucharestians have any right to come and declare themselves unconditional owners of everything around them on the pretext of "carrying out the will of the Romanian people."

    • @CRP17
      @CRP17 2 года назад +2

      I mostly agree with you but the Bucharest part has no reason. Fact is that ALL ROMANIANS wanted to be united under one flag but the Imperial States around us destroyed it...

    • @moldaviannationalist3735
      @moldaviannationalist3735 2 года назад

      @@CRP17 No referendum was ever held on the union. Until there's no evidence of such you cannot assure without doubt that Romanians were wiling to unite under a single regime. It's just what you want to believe but not a fact. Also language isn't a reason to unite, a lot of countries share languages but still remain independent. Take as example Serbia and Croatia, the United Kingdom and the USA.

    • @generalofthearmieseduard9662
      @generalofthearmieseduard9662 Год назад +3

      @@moldaviannationalist3735 what do you mean? In WW1 Bassarabia and Northern Bukovina both voted to united with Romania despite the Ukraineans trying to make them not to. Nowadays the Romanians there can't do anything since they were russified

    • @moldaviannationalist3735
      @moldaviannationalist3735 Год назад

      @@generalofthearmieseduard9662 do you know who exactly voted?

    • @generalofthearmieseduard9662
      @generalofthearmieseduard9662 Год назад

      @@moldaviannationalist3735 the rulers at that time? What do you mean? The people being Romania wanted to be part of Romania obviously

  • @sryskyhosh7169
    @sryskyhosh7169 Год назад +3

    bukovina was a romanian region until ukraine stole it

  • @ionbrad6753
    @ionbrad6753 8 месяцев назад

    The aurochs-head coat of arms shows the real lineage of Bucovina.

  • @POLMAZURKA
    @POLMAZURKA 3 года назад +2

    DANCES ARE MORE ROMANIA-HUNGERIAN...

  • @joaquinjuradokokoyaczuk7344
    @joaquinjuradokokoyaczuk7344 2 года назад +4

    May someone tell me a little bit about Volodymyr Kokoyachuk's life? My name is Joaquín Jurado Kokoyaczuk, and he was probably an ancestry of me. Greetings!

    • @nathanhiggers4606
      @nathanhiggers4606 2 года назад +1

      KOKOYACHUK Volodymyr Oleksiiovych (February 11, 1921, Mamaivtsi village, now Kitsman district, Chernivtsi region - March 1, 1996, Lviv) - painter, monumentalist. He graduated from Chernivtsi Financial College (1947), Uzhgorod School of Applied Arts (1950), Lviv Institute of Applied and Decorative Arts (1955). He created oil landscapes ("Over the Prut", "Novosilka", "Carpathians"), portraits, genre paintings, mosaics (panels on the pediment of the administrative building in the village of Mamayivka).
      I think he is not an ancestry of yours cause he most probably had lived the whole life in his country

    • @nathanhiggers4606
      @nathanhiggers4606 2 года назад

      Pretty wierd second name by the way :)
      (Kokoyachuk)

    • @redtobertshateshandles
      @redtobertshateshandles 2 года назад +1

      We are all related brother. You probably are related to the guy. What does Kokoyaczuk mean????

    • @joaquinjuradokokoyaczuk7344
      @joaquinjuradokokoyaczuk7344 2 года назад

      @@nathanhiggers4606 Thanks for the little biography. I did knew some of this data but some other didn't. I think that we may be related beacause, for what I've researched, there are just a few people with this surname in Ukraine. Maybe neither he or his descents came to my country but yes a relative of him did. What I know is that my great grandfather came to Argentina when he was 6-7 years old. My grandfather didn't exactly know from where his father was. He used to say he was polish, but I think he wasn't. In adition, I have a newspaper from 1931 in where appears an article about my grandther's grandfather. Acording to that, he was from Bukovina, Romania (Bukovina is a region that belongs one half to Ukraine and the other one to Romania).
      Mamayivtsi, the place from where Volodymyr was is placed in Bukovina.
      So if nowadays there are just a few people with the surname and if my greatgrandfather's dad was from the same region than Volodymyr, I think we may be related.
      Greetings!

    • @joaquinjuradokokoyaczuk7344
      @joaquinjuradokokoyaczuk7344 2 года назад

      I wish I knew the meaning bro, but I don't. I should get in contact with someone from Ukraine and try to figure it out.

  • @IoanAdrianBaciu
    @IoanAdrianBaciu 2 года назад +2

    During that period, when Bukowina was in Romania, more than 3.000.000 people died of hunger in Stalin's Ukraine, and more than 10.000.000 had nothing to eat !

  • @mihaijakson9799
    @mihaijakson9799 4 года назад +1

    1939

  • @user-of3pd6rh8j
    @user-of3pd6rh8j 7 месяцев назад

    С О Ю З Ф И Г Ь Л Ь М
    ШМАМОМАО
    ЯАПАС

  • @emanuelantal5229
    @emanuelantal5229 4 года назад +19

    Ethnic Romanian land it will always be. Liberate the Slavified Romanians.

    • @andreidiaconu8530
      @andreidiaconu8530 3 года назад

      @Panter Panta How in the hell are people from Bukovina serbs? Do you know how far is Serbia from that land? Between them is Romania(Wallachia, Transilvania, Moldova). WTF? :))

    • @gioq4702
      @gioq4702 3 года назад +2

      my mother in law is from Bukovina... actually her accent is closer to Romanian than Russian.

    • @mihanich
      @mihanich 3 года назад +2

      And romanians are romanized slavs

    • @nathanhiggers4606
      @nathanhiggers4606 2 года назад +2

      @@andreidiaconu8530 Borders of Serbia never end :)

  • @TheKorcik
    @TheKorcik 4 года назад +17

    That's Romanian/Moldovan land and you know it, you just stole it and made it Ukrainian land, just like you made up the existence of the 'Moldovan Language'.

    • @andreidiaconu8530
      @andreidiaconu8530 3 года назад +3

      You are right, but unfortunately the Romanian ethnics are now a minority in those regions, and also in Bugeac region. So they are forever lost lands. That's life, I guess!

    • @mihanich
      @mihanich 3 года назад +1

      In 1895 in Chernovtsy lived 27k Germans, 17k Jews, 10k Ukrainians and 8k Romanians.

    • @iliehaptokar9244
      @iliehaptokar9244 2 года назад +3

      @@mihanich The Austrian census is really reliable. :)))

    • @rciobanu
      @rciobanu 2 года назад

      This kind of nationalist rhetoric has brought nothing but war and ethnic cleansing.

  • @af8365
    @af8365 4 года назад

    Ці просто дуже погані Чернівці

  • @sorinroman4460
    @sorinroman4460 2 года назад +2

    I don't know what's going to be next, for the moment is in Ukraine, before this Romania,Austria, Moldova, Dacia.The people there are soft,mostly Ukrainian speakers with 30-40% Romanian and lots of infusions of different nationalities russian speakers. THANKS GOD Romania is not neighbor of Russian to lose even more territory.

  • @prody666
    @prody666 Год назад +4

    The number of Ukrainians in Northern Bucovina increased in the 19th century, under Austrian rule. Bucovina is not de jure a Ukrainian territory, even if Ukraine has treated horribly this minority and to this day is doing everything to assimilate this population and cut it of its language and cultural roots.

    • @YaroslavOsmak
      @YaroslavOsmak 4 месяца назад

      I am from Bukovyna and I am Ukrainian. Long live Bukovyna, ukrainian land, long live Ukraine!