12 FEATURE 13
ten miles from the border. This was at the time
when there were lots of cars queuing up - you
would see it on TV. It was just absolutely manic,
and everyone was trying to get out.
“My grandmother still had to walk to the
border. She’s fit - in her youth she was quite
athletic - but she was still an 80 year-old
woman on her own. It was late February with
snow and rain. My mother had made sure that
she got the bus driver’s phone number, just to
make sure that she was on her way. We also
made sure that my grandmother had everyone’s
phone numbers so that she could give those to
anyone to get in touch with us at any point.
There was a period of about fifteen hours
between getting off the bus and crossing the
border when we didn’t hear from her.
“My mother then said: “You need to go and
get her because we just don’t know what is
going on.” So my mother was then sending her
own daughter into a war zone - where her
mother was already kind of lost.”
At this stage Odessa had not yet been heavily
hit, and with many phone calls and texts
Juliette met up with her grandmother in
Moldova. She had been picked up by a church
group who took her to a refugee centre.
Juliette said: “I stayed with her there and was
waiting for the UK visa to open up. The issue
was that the authorities had considered a
12 13
I
In a war zone cultural works can be
among the first to become lost. Two
Ukrainian women living in
Edinburgh have become determined
to set up an online museum to keep
the heritage of their country alive.
They are concerned that there is
“news fatigue” about Ukraine and its struggle
to repel the latest Russian invasion. They hope
that the new Museum of Ukrainian Craft and
Culture Scotland (MUCCS) will be one way to
keep Ukraine in the frame.
Ukrainians Juliette Lichman (top left) and
Zhenya Dove (bottom left) have collaborated
on setting up the online museum where
Ukrainian culture can be celebrated. They are
both members of The Scottish Parliamentary
Cross Party Group for promoting Ukrainian
Culture in Scotland.
After caring for her grandmother in Scotland
for a year, Juliette felt a “great absence” in her
life, which is when the idea of a museum
emerged.
She said: “I work as a cultural heritage
photographer so there is an element of being
around collections and museum objects and
telling their story. There’s a lot of cultural
heritage destruction in Ukraine, and there are
attacks on Ukrainian identity. So it is not just
that all the paintings have been ruined or
looted, but more that it is being erased and
destroyed for the sake of it. I thought there
WHEN RUSSIA LAUNCHED its invasion of
Ukraine on 24 February 2022, Juliette’s 80
year-old maternal grandmother was living in
Odessa on her own. Juliette’s parents had
moved to Australia some time before, when she
was about six years old, leaving Ukraine to
emigrate to Oz. She has been living in
Edinburgh for about ten years now.
Juliette said: “Basically my grandmother didn’t
really have much support. We eventually
managed through Instagram and Telegram to
find a way to get her out. She got a bus from
Odessa towards Moldova. But it let her off about
must be a way of supporting it and bringing it
to a UK audience. I noticed that a lot of people
in Ukraine were desperately selling off so many
things which I knew would then go into private
collections and never be seen again. I worried
that they might be cut up and made into
cushions or whatever rather than being
Two women in Edinburgh are working to ensure that heritage is not lost despite the
brutal Russian invasion and destruction of their homeland 2,000 miles away
Putting Ukrainian art
and culture in the frame
Grandmother flees to safety
Above and below -
Juliette’s granny enjoyed
living in Edinburgh.
Below - Maria
Prymachenko’s art
features on the new online
museum
family scheme to mean children and parents
but not grandparents. Thankfully, that was
changed and my father told me to get to the
visa centre as soon as they opened. Already at
that time of the morning there were tons of
people queuing up with everyone wanting a
v i s a .”
This was the beginning of a six week wait for
a visa, caught between an old paper-based
system and a newer online process. Juliette
then took her grandmother on a 12-hour bus
journey to wait in a Romanian airport hotel for
the visa to be emailed. Nothing happened for
about two weeks, but thankfully a friend came
up with a flat in Bucharest for them to live in
for a while. Finally the visa arrived in Moldova
but still had to be sent on to Romania for them.
Juliette had left Edinburgh in early March
and it took several weeks before she was able to
return with her grandmother to the capital
where the pair lived together for a year. The
photographer continued to work full-time and
also care for her grandmother during that year,
but finally they travelled to Australia together
where Juliette left her grandmother in her
mother’s care in Sydney.
(We do not name Juliette’s grandmother as
requested to maintain her privacy.)
The museum is now online http://www.muccs.org
preserved. I began identifying items and
cross-referencing them with objects in
Ukrainian museums. While I am not an expert
I can see the value in these things.”
Juliette and Zhenya have run a Crowdfunder
and although the initial fundraising target has
been met, more donations would be welcomed
for their ongoing work. Zhenya said: “It is such
an honour to be part of this project, when
sharing our culture feels more important than
e v e r .”
The new website shows artwork by famous
Ukrainian artist Maria Prymachenko who was
born on 12 January 1909 into a peasant family
in the Kyiv region. As a child, the outstanding
artist contracted polio and remained disabled
for the rest of her life. Despite this, she amazed
art and beauty connoisseurs with her ingenious
originality in creating new and new images.
The museum is now online http://www.muccs.org