Revolution on Granite

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Revolution on Granite
Part of the
1990 Ukrainian parliamentary election[1]
Goals
  • Resignation of Vitaliy Masol as Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Ukrainian SSR
  • Prevention of the New Union Treaty's signing
  • Multi-party parliamentary elections
  • Nationalisation of Communist Party property
  • Prevention of Ukrainian conscripts in the Soviet Army from serving outside Ukraine
MethodsHunger strike, occupation, human chain
Resulted inProtester victory
Parties
Lead figures
Number
100,000

The Revolution on Granite (

Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Ukrainian SSR Vitaliy Masol.[4] On the last day of the protests, Masol was forced to resign and was replaced by Vitold Fokin.[8]

The Revolution on Granite is considered the first major political protest of Ukraine centred on Maidan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square), the others being the 2004 Orange Revolution and the 2013–14 Revolution of Dignity.[9][10]

History

The

Ukrainian SSR) and the Democratic Bloc 111 seats.[1] Student leader Oles Doniy [uk] declared that the Democratic Bloc ought to have won a majority.[1] The Student Union then began preparations for a large-scale protest, which was to become known as the Revolution on Granite.[4]

On 2 October 1990 the students announced a hunger strike and occupied Kyiv's October Revolution Square (now named Maidan Nezalezhnosti [Independence Square]).[4][5] They had decided against using the originally intended protest site Mariinskyi Park since that place was filled with Militsiya (the Soviet police force).[4][5] The day had started with a rally which was attended by 100,000 people and initiated by the People's Movement of Ukraine, the Ukrainian Republican Party, and other smaller patriotic organisations.[4] During the protest various other marches, whose participants numbered in the tens of thousands, were held in solidarity with the students.[10] Also workers' organisations rallied to the cause by calling for nationwide strikes.[10] During the protest, prominent cultural figures, opposition politicians and Soviet dissidents visited the students to show their support.[10] On one of the first days of protests, chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR Leonid Kravchuk visited the protestors.[11]

The protesters wanted to prevent the signing of the

Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Ukrainian SSR, Vitaliy Masol.[4] The demand to not sign the proposed New Union Treaty, which would transform the Soviet Union into the Union of Soviet Sovereign Republics, was part of the then resurgence of Ukrainian nationalism which eventually led to Ukraine's 1991 declaration of independence.[10]

On the first day of the protest, only a few dozen students from Kyiv, Lviv, Dneprodzerzhinsk (now Kamianske), Ivano-Frankivsk, and several other cities gathered at the square. In a few days, there were several hundreds of them, along with around tens of thousands of Ukrainians who supported them.[12] The students set up shelter-half tents on the square.[13] The protest acquired its name from the setup of the tents on the granite of the square.[13] Of all protesters, about 200 were on hunger strike (all of them survived their action).[11][10] Eventually another camp was set up in front of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR.[10] During the protest and because deputies had sided with the students,[10] student Oles Doniy from the T. H. Shevchenko Kyiv State University (now Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv) stated the students' demands in a speech to the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's parliament).[12][10]

On 17 October 1990, Masol was forced to resign and was replaced by Vitold Fokin.[8] The four other student demands were not initially met.[4] But soon military conscription was to be limited to the territory of Ukraine; the planned New Union Treaty was not to be taken into consideration and multi-party elections were set to be held in the 1994 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[14]

Legacy

Various Revolution on Granite organizers later became leading figures in organising the 2004 Orange Revolution.[13] Mykhaylo Svystovych and Vyacheslav Kyrylenko started their political career with taking part in the Revolution on Granite.[10]

The Revolution on Granite is viewed as the first major political protest centred on Maidan Nezalezhnosti, the others being the 2004 Orange Revolution, and the 2013–14 Euromaidan.[9][13][14][15] These protest largely mimicked the style of protest of the Revolution on Granite: occupation of a large square and building a stage there where artists would perform.[10]

References

  1. ^ a b c d КАЛІНІЧЕНКО В.В., РИБАЛКА І.К. ІСТОРІЯ УКРАЇНИ. ЧАСТИНА ІІІ: 1917-2003 рр. (in Ukrainian). Archived from the original on 2008-05-12.
  2. ^ "Discover Ukraine Through Film – Independence to Revolution". Hromadske. 2020-05-11. Retrieved 2022-11-10.
  3. ^ "The revolution on granite". National Memorial to the Heavenly Hundred Heroes and Revolution of Dignity Museum. Retrieved 2022-11-10.
  4. ^
    Den
    (4 October 2016)
  5. ^ a b c d (in Ukrainian) "Revolution on Granite". Photos of October 1990,
    Ukrayinska Pravda
    (accessdate: 11 November 2017)
  6. ^ "Revolution on Granite". Harvard University Digital Atlas on Ukraine. Retrieved 2022-11-10.
  7. (pages 563/564 & 722/723)
  8. ^ (page 850)
  9. ^ (Chapter 1 "Why Ukraine")
  10. ^
    Radio Free Europe
    (16 October 2020
  11. ^
    Istorychna Pravda
    (2 October 2020)
  12. ^
    Ukrayinska Pravda
    (accessdate: 10 December 2017)
  13. ^ (page 2)
  14. ^ a b Where does the key to political change lie in the post-Soviet space?, openDemocracy (23 August 2016)
  15. (page 154)

External links