New York on Ukraine's frontline: parliament backs town's name change
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[July 02, 2021]
By Sergiy Karazy and Margaryta Chornokondratenko
NEW YORK, Ukraine (Reuters) - Ukraine has
regained its own New York after parliament this week voted to give the
name back to a small town in the east, close to the front line in the
country's conflict with pro-Russian separatists.
A huge banner reading "New York" hangs over the town hall entrance and a
bakery with the same name sells coffee and croissants.
But instead of a dramatic Manhattan skyline, this town is dominated by
an old phenol factory and Communist-era apartment blocks, and scarred by
defensive trenches dug through deserted streets.
Originally called New York, the town was renamed Novhorodske in 1951
during the Cold War because New York was seen as a symbol of capitalism.
Now it has to deal with Ukraine's war with Russian-backed separatists.
"The town's territory is not protected," said local council head Mykola
Lenko, adding that five residents had been killed since the start of the
conflict.
Restoring its historic name would hopefully mean "some economic success
and that the town will develop," he said.
"We hope that we will establish contacts with Jork in Germany and New
York in the United States."
The precise origin of the town's name is unclear. German immigrants,
followers of the Mennonite Church, settled in what is now Ukraine around
the turn of 19th century at the invitation of Russian Empress Catherine
the Great.
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A view shows a petrol station, which bears the name of New York, in
the town of Novhorodske in Donetsk Region, Ukraine March 3, 2021.
Picture taken March 3, 2021. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich
Their descendants were deported following Nazi
Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941. Some of their
families used to visit Novhorodske but this stopped when fighting
broke out in 2014.
Once an industrial town, it fell into decline after the First World
War.
Now soldiers manning checkpoints just one kilometre (half a mile)
from separatist lines patrol the trenches on its outskirts, where
more than 100 houses have been damaged by shelling.
Some residents, however, think the town council should concentrate
more on generating employment and helping those in need.
"Everyone leaves, there are no jobs here. I would like to leave
too," said Svitlana, a fishmonger.
(Editing by Giles Elgood)
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