Russians in Ukraine (Russian: Русские в Украине, romanizedRusskiye v Ukraine, Ukrainian: Росіяни в Україні, romanizedRosiiany v Ukraini) constitute the country's largest ethnic minority. This community forms the largest single Russian community outside of Russia in the world. In the 2001 Ukrainian census, 8,334,100 identified themselves as ethnic Russians (17.3% of the population of Ukraine); this is the combined figure for persons originating from outside of Ukraine and the Ukrainian-born population declaring Russian ethnicity.[1]

Russians in Ukraine
Total population
In the 2001 Ukrainian census, 8,334,100 identified themselves as ethnic Russians
(17.3% of the population of Ukraine).[1]
Regions with significant populations
Donetsk Oblast1,844,399 (2001)
Crimea (excluding Sevastopol)1,180,441 (2001)
Luhansk Oblast991,825 (2001)
Kharkiv Oblast742,025 (2001)
Dnipropetrovsk Oblast627,531 (2001)
Odesa Oblast508,537 (2001)
Zaporizhzhia Oblast476,748 (2001)
Kyiv337,323 (2001)
Sevastopol269,953 (2001)
Ukraine other regions of Ukraine1,355,359 (2001)
Languages
Russian (95.9%, 2001) • Ukrainian (54.8%, 2001)
Related ethnic groups
Slavic people (East Slavs, West Slavs, South Slavs)

Geography

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Largest ethnicities in Ukraine's cities and raions, according to the 2001 census. Russians are in blue

Ethnic Russians live throughout Ukraine. They form a notable fraction of the overall population in the east and south, a significant minority in the center, and a smaller minority in the west.[1]

The west and the center of the country feature a higher percentage of Russians in cities and industrial centers and much smaller percentage in the overwhelmingly Ukrainophone rural areas.[1] Due to the concentration of the Russians in the cities, as well as for historic reasons, most of the largest cities in the center and the south-east of the country (including Kyiv where Russians amount to 13.1% of the population)[1] remained largely Russophone as of 2003.[2] Russians constitute the majority in Crimea (71.7% in Sevastopol and 58.5% in the Autonomous republic of Crimea).[1]

Outside of Crimea, Russians are the largest ethnic group in Donetsk (48.2%) and Makiivka (50.8%) in Donetsk Oblast, Ternivka (52.9%) in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, Krasnodon (63.3%) and Sverdlovsk (Dovzhansk) (58.7%) and Krasnodon Raion (51.7%) and Stanytsia-Luhanska Raion (61.1%) in Luhansk Oblast, Izmail (43.7%) in Odesa Oblast, Putyvl Raion (51.6%) in Sumy Oblast.[3][4]

There are two notable sub-ethnic groups of Russians in Ukraine: the Goryuns around Putyvl, and the Lipovans (a group of Old Believers) around Vylkove.

History

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Early history

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One of the most prominent Russians in Medieval Ukraine (at that time the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth) was Ivan Fyodorov, who published the Ostrog Bible and called himself a Muscovite.

In 1599, Tsar Boris Godunov ordered the construction of Tsareborisov on the banks of Oskol River, the first city and the first fortress in Eastern Ukraine. To defend the territory from Tatar raids the Russians built the Belgorod defensive line (1635–1658), and Ukrainians started fleeing to be under its defense.

 
Sloboda Ukraine
 
The regional concentration of the ethnic Russian population of Ukraine in 1897

More Russian speakers appeared in northern, central and eastern Ukrainian territories during the late 17th century, following the Cossack Rebellion led by Bohdan Khmelnytsky. The uprising led to a massive movement of Ukrainian settlers to the Sloboda Ukraine region, which converted it from a sparsely inhabited frontier area to one of the major populated regions of the Tsardom of Russia. Following the Treaty of Pereyaslav, Ukrainian Cossacks lands, including the modern northern and eastern parts of Ukraine, became a protectorate of the Tsardom of Russia. This brought the first significant, but still small, wave of Russian settlers into central Ukraine (primarily several thousand soldiers stationed in garrisons,[5] out of a population of approximately 1.2 million non-Russians).[6]

 
A map of what was known as Novorossiya (New Russia) during the Russian Empire (in yellow). Includes territories of modern Ukraine, Russia and Moldova

At the end of the 18th century, the Russian Empire captured large uninhabited steppe territories from the former Crimean Khanate. The systematic colonization of lands in what became known as Novorossiya (mainly Crimea, Taurida and around Odesa) began. Migrants from many ethnic groups (predominantly Ukrainians and Russians from Russia proper) came to the area.[7] At the same time, the discovery of coal in the Donets Basin also marked the commencement of a large-scale industrialization and an influx of workers from other parts of the Russian Empire.

Nearly all of the major cities of southern and eastern Ukraine were established or developed in this period: Aleksandrovsk (now Zaporizhzhia; 1770), Yekaterinoslav (now Dnipro; 1776), Kherson and Mariupol (1778), Sevastopol (1783), Simferopol and Novoaleksandrovka (Melitopol) (1784), Nikolayev (Mykolaiv; 1789), Odessa (Odesa; 1794), Lugansk (Luhansk; foundation of Luhansk plant in 1795).

Both Russians and Ukrainians made up the bulk of the migrants – 31.8% and 42.0% respectively.[citation needed] The population of Novorossiya eventually became intermixed, and with Russification being the state policy, the Russian identity dominated in mixed families and communities. The Russian Empire officially regarded Ukrainians, Russians and Belarusians as Little, Great and White Russians, which, according to the theory officially accepted in the Imperial Russia, belonged to a single Russian nation, the descendants of the people of Kievan Rus.[citation needed]

In the beginning of the 20th century, Russians were the largest ethnic group in the following cities: Kiev (54.2%), Kharkov (63.1%), Odessa (49.09%), Nikolayev (66.33%), Mariupol (63.22%), Lugansk (68.16%), Berdyansk (66.05%), Kherson (47.21%), Melitopol (42.8%), Yekaterinoslav (41.78%), Yelizavetgrad (34.64%), Pavlograd (34.36%), Simferopol (45.64%), Feodosiya (46.84%), Yalta (66.17%), Kerch (57.8%), Sevastopol (63.46%), Chuguev (86%).[4]

Russian Civil War in Ukraine

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The first Russian Empire Census, conducted in 1897, showed extensive usage (and in some cases dominance) of the Little Russian, a contemporary term for the Ukrainian language,[8] in the nine south-western Governorates and Kuban. Thus, when the Central Rada officials were outlining the future borders of the new Ukrainian state they took the results of the census in regards to the language and religion as determining factors. The ethnographic borders of Ukraine thus turned out to be almost twice as large as the original Bohdan Khmelnytsky State incorporated into the Russian Empire during the 17-18th centuries.[9]

During World War I, a strong national movement managed to obtain some autonomous rights from the Russian government in Saint Petersburg. However, the October Revolution brought big changes for the new Russian Republic. Ukraine became a battleground between the two main Russian war factions during the Russian Civil War (1918–1922), the Communist Reds (Red Army) and the Anti-Bolshevik Whites (Volunteer Army).

The October Revolution also found its echo amongst the extensive working class, and several Soviet Republics were formed by the Bolsheviks in Ukraine: the Ukrainian People's Republic of Soviets, Soviet Socialist Republic of Taurida, Odessa Soviet Republic and the Donetsk-Krivoy Rog Republic.

The Russian SFSR government supported military intervention against the Ukrainian People's Republic, which at different periods controlled most of the territory of present-day Ukraine with the exception of Crimea and Western Ukraine.[6] Although there were differences between Ukrainian Bolsheviks initially,[10] which resulted in the proclamation of several Soviet Republics in 1917, later, due in large part to pressure from Vladimir Lenin and other Bolshevik leaders, one Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic was proclaimed.

The Ukrainian SSR was de jure a separate state until the formation of the USSR in 1922 and survived until the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991. Lenin insisted that ignoring the national question in Ukraine would endanger the support of the Revolution among the Ukrainian population and thus new borders of Soviet Ukraine were established to the extent that the Ukrainian People's Republic was claiming in 1918.[6] The new borders completely included Novorossiya (including the short-lived Donetsk-Krivoy Rog Soviet Republic) and other neighboring provinces, which contained a substantial number of ethnic Russians.

Ukrainization in Early Soviet times

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In his 1923 speech devoted to the national and ethnic issues in the party and state affairs, Joseph Stalin identified several obstacles in implementing the national program of the party. Those were the "dominant-nation chauvinism", "economic and cultural inequality" of the nationalities and the "survivals of nationalism among a number of nations which have borne the heavy yoke of national oppression".[11]

In Ukraine's case, both threats came, respectively, from the south and the east: Novorossiya with its historically strong Russian cultural influence, and the traditional Ukrainian center and west. These considerations brought about a policy of Ukrainization, to simultaneously break the remains of the Great Russian attitude and to gain popularity among the Ukrainian population, thus recognizing their dominance of the republic.[12] The Ukrainian language was mandatory for most jobs, and its teaching became compulsory in all schools.

By the early 1930s attitudes towards the policy of Ukrainization had changed within the Soviet leadership. In 1933 Stalin declared that local nationalism was the main threat to Soviet unity.[6] Consequently, many changes introduced during the Ukrainization period were reversed: Russian language schools, libraries and newspapers were restored and even increased in number. Changes were brought territorially as well, forcing the Ukrainian SSR to cede some territories to the RSFSR. Thousands of ethnic Ukrainians were deported to the far east of the Soviet Union, numerous villages with Ukrainian majority were eliminated with Holodomor, while remaining Ukrainians were subjected to discrimination.[13][14] During this period parents in the Ukrainian SSR could choose to send their children whose native language was not Ukrainian to schools with Russian as the primary language of instruction.

Later Soviet times

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The territory of Ukraine was one of the main battlefields during World War II, and its population, including Russians, significantly decreased. The infrastructure was heavily damaged and it required human and capital resources to be rebuilt. This compounded with depopulation caused by two famines of 1931–1932 and a third in 1947 to leave the territory with a greatly reduced population. A large portion of the wave of new migrants to industrialize, integrate and Sovietize the recently acquired western Ukrainian territories were ethnic Russians who mostly settled around industrial centers and military garrisons.[15] This increased the proportion of the Russian speaking population.

Near the end of the War, the entire population of Crimean Tatars (numbering up to a quarter of a million) was expelled from their homeland in Crimea to Central Asia, under accusations of collaborations with Germans.[16][17] The Crimea was repopulated by the new wave of Russian and Ukrainian settlers and the Russian proportion of the population of Crimea went up significantly (from 47.7% in 1937 to 61.6% in 1993) and the Ukrainian proportion doubled (12.8% in 1937 and 23.6% in 1993).[18]

The Ukrainian language remained a mandatory subject of study in all Russian schools, but in many government offices preference was given to the Russian language that gave an additional impetus to the advancement of Russification. The 1979 census showed that only one third of ethnic Russians spoke the Ukrainian language fluently.[6]

In 1954, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR issued the decree on the transfer of the Crimean Oblast from the Russian SFSR to the Ukrainian SSR. This action increased the ethnic Russian population of Ukraine by almost a million people. Many Russian politicians considered the transfer to be controversial.[19] Controversies and legality of the transfer remained a sore point in relations between Ukraine and Russia for a few years, and in particular in the internal politics in Crimea. However, in a 1997 treaty between the Russian Federation and Ukraine, Russia recognized Ukraine's borders and accepted Ukraine's sovereignty over Crimea.[6]

Ukraine after the dissolution of the Soviet Union

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The Russian Cultural Center in Lviv has been attacked and vandalized on several occasions. On January 22, 1992, it was raided by UNA-UNSO led by a member of the Lviv Oblast Council.[20]
 
According to the 2001 Ukrainian Census the percentage of Russian population tends to be higher in the east and south in the country.[1]

Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Ukraine became an independent state. This independence was supported by the referendum in all regions of Ukrainian SSR, including those with large Russian populations.[21] A study of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine found that in 1991, 75% of ethnic Russians in Ukraine no longer identified themselves with the Russian nation.[22] In the December 1991 Ukrainian independence referendum 55% of the ethnic Russians in Ukraine voted for independence.[23]

The return of Crimean Tatars has resulted in several high-profile clashes over land ownership and employment rights.[24]

In 1994 a referendum took place in the Donetsk Oblast and the Luhansk Oblast, with around 90% supporting the Russian language gaining status of an official language alongside Ukrainian, and for the Russian language to be an official language on a regional level; however, the referendum was annulled by the Kyiv government.[25][26]

Much controversy has surrounded the reduction of schools with Russian as their main language of instruction. In 1989, there were 4,633 schools with Russian as the main instruction language, and by 2001 this number fell to 2,001 schools or 11.8% of the total in the country.[27] A significant number of these Russian schools were converted into schools in with both Russian and Ukrainian language classes. By 2007, 20% of pupils in public schools studied in Russian classes.[28]

Some regions such as Rivne Oblast have no schools with Russian only instruction left, but only Russian classes provided in the mixed Russian-Ukrainian schools.[29] As of May 2007, only seven schools with Russian as the main language of instruction are left in Kyiv, with 17 more mixed language schools totaling 8,000 pupils,[30] with the rest of the pupils attending the schools with Ukrainian being the only language of instruction. Among the latter pupils, 45,700 (or 18% of the total) study the Russian language as a separate subject[30] in the largely Russophone Ukrainian capital,[2][31] although an estimated 70 percent of Ukraine's population nationwide consider that Russian should be taught at secondary schools along with Ukrainian.[32]

The Russian Cultural Center in Lviv has been attacked and vandalized on several occasions. On January 22, 1992, it was raided by UNA-UNSO led by the member of Lviv Oblast Council.[20] UNA-UNSO members searched the building, partially destroyed archives and pushed people out from the building.[20] Their attackers declared that everything in Ukraine belonged to the Ukrainians, so the Russians and the Jews were not allowed to reside or have property there.[20] The building was vandalized during the Papal Visit to Lviv in 2001,[33] then in 2003 (5 times),[34][35] 2004 (during the Orange Revolution[36]), 2005,[37][38] 2006.[39]

 
Pro-Russian protesters remove a Ukrainian flag and replace it with a Russian flag in front of the Donetsk Oblast Regional State Administration building during the 2014 pro-Russian conflict in Ukraine.

After the Euromaidan events,[40] regions with a large ethnic Russian populations became the scene of Anti-Maidan protests and Russian-backed separatist activity. After being seized by Russian unmarked troops, the Supreme Council of Crimea announced the 2014 Crimean referendum, and sent a request to Russia to send military forces into the Crimea to "protect" the local population from Euromaidan protesters, which marked the beginning of the Russian annexation of Crimea. Major Anti-Maidan protests took place in other Russian speaking major cities like Donetsk, Odesa, and Kharkiv. After the elected regional parliament of the Donetsk Oblast refused to comply with the demands of the pro-Russian protesters, the secessionists decided to create their own council consisting of unelected separatist individuals, which in its first session voted to conduct a referendum on deciding the future of the region.[41]

On 3 March, a number of people, including Russian nationals with "clear Russian accents", who referred to themselves as "tourists", started storming the regional administration building in Donetsk, waving Russian flags and shouting ″Russia!″ and ″Berkut are heroes!″. The police was not able to offer much resistance, and was quickly overrun by the crowd.[42][43][44] The regional council in Luhansk, in which the party of ousted pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovich held an absolute majority, voted to demand granting the Russian language the status as second official language, stopping ″the persecution of Berkut fighters″, disarming Maidan self-defense units and banning a number far-right political organizations like Svoboda and UNA-UNSO. If the authorities failed to comply with the demands, the Oblast council reserved itself the ″right to ask for help from the brotherly people of the Russian Federation.″[45]

The pro-Russian protests in Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts of the 2014 pro-Russian conflict in Ukraine escalated into an armed separatist insurgency, which was backed by Russian special and regular forces.[46][47][48][49][50] This led the Ukrainian government to launch a military counter-offensive against the insurgents in April 2014. During this war, major cities like Luhansk and Donetsk[51] have seen heavy shelling.[52][53] According to the United Nations, 730,000 refugees from the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts have fled to Russia since the beginning of 2014.[54] Approximately 14,200 people, including 3,404 civilians, have died from 2014-2022 because of the war.

Ruslan Stefanchuk, the Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada, said that there is no "Russian ethnic minority" in Ukraine and that "if these people show aggression rather than respect towards Ukraine, then their rights should be correspondingly suppressed."[55]

Discrimination

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In total, according to a 2007 country-wide survey by the Institute of Sociology, only 0.5% of the respondents describe as belonging to a group that faces discrimination by language.[56]: 133–135  Furthermore, in a poll held October 2008, 42.8% of the Ukrainian respondents said they regard Russia as “very good” while 44.9% said their attitude was “good" (87% positive).[57]

 
Pro-Russian activists in Odesa, March 2014

According to the Institute of Sociology surveys conducted yearly between 1995 and 2005, the percentage of respondents who have encountered cases of ethnic-based discrimination against Russians during the preceding year has consistently been low (mostly in single digits), with no noticeable difference when compared with the number of incidents directed against any other nation, including the Ukrainians and the Jews.[58] According to the 2007 Comparative Survey of Ukraine and Europe only 0.1% of Ukrainian residents consider themselves belonging to a group which is discriminated by nationality.[56]: 156  However, by April 2017 in a public opinion survey conducted by Rating Group Ukraine, 57 percent of Ukrainians polled expressed a very cold or cold attitude toward Russia, as opposed to only 17 percent who expressed a very warm or warm attitude.[59]

Some surveys indicate that Russians are not socially distanced in Ukraine. The indicator of the willingness of Ukraine's residents to participate in social contacts of varying degrees of closeness with different ethnic groups (the Bogardus Social Distance Scale) calculated based on the yearly sociological surveys has been consistently showing that Russians are, on the average, least socially distanced within Ukraine except the Ukrainians themselves.[60] The same survey has shown that, in fact, that Ukrainian people are slightly more comfortable accepting Russians into their families than they are accepting Ukrainians living abroad.[60] Such social attitude correlates with the political one as the surveys taken yearly between 1997 and 2005 consistently indicated that the attitude to the idea of Ukraine joining the union of Russia and Belarus is more positive (slightly over 50%) than negative (slightly under 30%).[61]

Russian political refugees in Ukraine

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Since Dignity Revolution the Russian government dramatically increased the anti-opposition campaign which resulted in politically motivated cases against Russian liberal opposition. As a result, many notable Russians moved to Ukraine to avoid political prosecution in Russia.[citation needed]

Notable examples are Ilya Ponomaryov (the only member of parliament who voted against the annexation of Crimea), journalists Matvey Ganapolsky, Arkadiy Babchenko, Evgeny Kiselyov, Alexander Nevzorov and others.

According to the statistics presented by the United Nation's Office of the High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), in 2014 approximately 140 Russians applied for political asylum in Ukraine. In the first six months of 2015 this number grew by fifty people more.[62]

In the same time Ukrainian migration policies are complicated and limit the number of Russians who can successfully apply for a refugee status.[citation needed]

Russophobia

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The ultra-nationalist political party "Svoboda"[63] has invoked radical Russophobic rhetoric[64] and has electoral support enough to garner majority support in local councils,[65] as seen in the Ternopil regional council in Western Ukraine.[66] In 2004 Oleh Tyahnybok, the leader of the "Svoboda" party, urged his party to fight "the Moscow-Jewish mafia" ruling Ukraine.[67] "Svoboda" members held senior positions in Ukraine's government in 2014.[68] But the party lost 30 seats of the 37 seats (its first seats in the Ukrainian Parliament[69] it had won in the 2012 parliamentary election) in the late October 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election[69] and did not return to Ukraine's government.[70]

Russian language

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According to 2006 survey by Research & Branding Group (Donetsk) 39% of Ukrainian citizens think that the rights of the Russophones are violated because the Russian language is not official in the country, whereas 38% of the citizens have the opposite position.[71][72] According to annual surveys by the Institute of Sociology of the National Academy of Sciences 43.9% to 52.0% of the total population of Ukraine supports the idea of granting the status of state language to Russian.[32] At the same time, this is not viewed as an important issue by most of Ukraine's citizens. On a cross-national survey involving ranking the 30 important political issues, the legal status of the Russian language was ranked 26th, with only 8% of respondents (concentrated primarily in Crimea and Donetsk) feeling that this was an important issue.[73]

Russian continues to dominate in several regions and in Ukrainian businesses, in leading Ukrainian magazines, and other printed media.[74] Russian language in Ukraine still dominates the everyday life in some areas of the country.

On February 23, 2014, the Ukrainian parliament adopted a bill to repeal the 2012 law on minority languages, which—if signed by the Ukrainian president—would have established Ukrainian as the sole official state language of all Ukraine, including Crimea which is populated by a Russian-speaking majority.[75] Repeal of the law was met with great disdain in Southern and Eastern Ukraine.[76] The Christian Science Monitor reported: "The [adoption of this bill] only served to infuriate Russian-speaking regions, [who] saw the move as more evidence that the antigovernment protests in Kiev that toppled Yanukovich's government were intent on pressing for a nationalistic agenda."[77] A proposal to repeal the law was vetoed on 28 February 2014 by acting president Oleksandr Turchynov.[78] On 28 February 2018 the Constitutional Court of Ukraine ruled the 2012 law on minority languages unconstitutional.[79]

On September 25, 2017, a new law on education was signed by President Petro Poroshenko (draft approved by Rada on September 5, 2017) which says that Ukrainian language is the language of education at all levels except for one or more subjects that are allowed to be taught in two or more languages, namely English or one of the other official languages of the European Union.[80] The law faced criticism from officials in Russia and Hungary.[81] According to the New Europe:

The latest row between Kiev and Budapest comes on the heels of a bitter dispute over a decision by Ukraine’s parliament – the Verkhovna Rada – to pass a legislative package on education that bars primary education to all students in any language but Ukrainian. The move has been widely condemned by the international community as needlessly provocative as it forces the historically bilingual population of 45 million people who use Russian and Ukrainian interchangeably as mother tongues to become monolingual.[82]

The Unian reported that "A ban on the use of cultural products, namely movies, books, songs, etc., in the Russian language in the public has been introduced" in the Lviv Oblast in September 2018.[83]

Authors

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Some authors born in Ukraine who write in the Russian language, notably Marina and Sergey Dyachenko and Vera Kamsha, were born in Ukraine, but moved to Russia at some point. Marina and Sergey Dyachenko moved to California.

Russo-Ukrainian War

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In March 2022, during the Siege of Mariupol, Mariupol's deputy mayor Serhiy Orlov said that "Half of those killed by Russian bombing are Russian-origin Ukrainians."[84]

Demographics

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Census year Total population
of Ukraine
Russians %
1926 29,018,187 2,677,166 9.2%
1939 30,946,218 4,175,299 13.4%
1959 41,869,046 7,090,813 16.9%
1970 47,126,517 9,126,331 19.3%
1979 49,609,333 10,471,602 21.1%
1989 51,452,034 11,355,582 22.1%
2001 48,457,000 8,334,100 17.2%

In general the population of ethnic Russians in Ukraine increased due to assimilation and in-migration between 1897 and 1939 despite the famine, war and Revolution. Since 1991 it has decreased drastically in all regions, both quantitatively and proportionally. Ukraine in general lost 3 million Russians, or a little over one-quarter of all Russians living there in the 10-year period between 1991 and 2001, dropping from over 22% of the population of Ukraine to just over 17%. In the past 22 years since 2001, a further drop of Russian numbers has continued.

Several factors have affected this – most Russians lived in urban centres in Soviet times and thus were hit the hardest by the economic hardships of the 1990s. Some chose to emigrate from Ukraine to (mostly) Russia or to the West. Finally some of those who were counted as Russians in Soviet times declared themselves Ukrainian during the last census.[85]

The Russian population is also hit by the factors that affected all the population of Ukraine, such as low birth rate and high death rate.[86]

Numbers

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2001 census showed that 95.9% of Russians in Ukraine consider the Russian language to be native for them, 3.9% named Ukrainian to be their native language.[87] The majority, 59.6%[88] of Ukrainian Russians were born in Ukraine. They constitute 22.4% of all urban population and 6.9% of rural population in the country.[88]

Women make up 55.1% of Russians, men are 44.9%.[88] The average age of Russians in Ukraine is 41.9 years.[88] The imbalance in sexual and age structure intensifies in western and central regions.[88] In these regions the Russians are concentrated in the industrial centers, particularly the oblast centres.[88]

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Number of Russians by region (Oblast) per the last systematic census in 2001

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Oblast Number in 2001[89] Percent in 2001
Donetsk Oblast 1,844,400 38.2
Dnipropetrovsk Oblast 627,500 17.6
Kyiv 337,300 13.1
Kharkiv Oblast 742,000 25.6
Lviv Oblast 92,600 3.6
Odesa Oblast 508,500 20.7
Luhansk Oblast 991,800 39.0
Autonomous Republic of Crimea 1,180,400 58.3
Zaporizhzhia Oblast 476,800 24.7
Kyiv Oblast 109,300 6.0
Vinnytsia Oblast 67,500 3.8
Poltava Oblast 117,100 7.2
Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast 24,900 1.8
Khmelnytskyi Oblast 50,700 3.6
Cherkasy Oblast 75,600 5.4
Zhytomyr Oblast 68,900 5.0
Zakarpattia Oblast 31,000 2.5
Mykolaiv Oblast 177,500 14.1
Rivne Oblast 30,100 2.6
Sumy Oblast 121,700 9.4
Chernihiv Oblast 62,200 5.0
Kherson Oblast 165,200 14.1
Ternopil Oblast 14,200 1.2
Volyn Oblast 25,100 2.4
Kirovohrad Oblast 83,900 7.5
Chernivtsi Oblast 37,900 4.1
Sevastopol 270,000 71.6

Religion

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The majority of the Russians are Christians of the Eastern Orthodox Faith and predominantly belong to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church,[citation needed] a former Ukrainian exarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church, which received an ecclesiastical Autonomy from the latter on October 27, 1990.[90]

There are small minorities of Old Believers, notably Lipovans, as well as Protestants, indigenous Spiritual Christians, and Catholics among Russians. In addition, there is a sizable portion of those who consider themselves atheists.[citation needed]

Politics

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Elections

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Results of the 2007 parliamentary election showed that the Party of Regions maintained a stronghold in the southern and eastern regions.
Results of the 2014 parliamentary election show that the Party of Regions successor Opposition Bloc was overrun by the non-pro-Russian Petro Poroshenko Bloc in southern regions.[91]

Political parties whose electoral platforms are crafted specifically to cater to the Russian voters' sentiments fared exceptionally well. Until the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election several of Ukraine's elections,[92] political parties that call for closer ties with Russia received a higher percentage of votes in the areas where Russian-speaking population predominate.

Parties like the Party of Regions, Communist Party of Ukraine and the Progressive Socialist Party were particularly popular in Crimea, Southern and Southeastern regions of Ukraine. In the 2002 parliamentary election, the mainstream Party of Regions, with a stronghold based on Eastern and Southern Ukraine came first with 32.14%, ahead of its two nationally conscious main rivals, the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc (22.29%) and Our Ukraine Bloc (13.95%), while also Russophile Communist Party of Ukraine collected 3.66% and the radically pro-Russian Nataliya Vitrenko Bloc 2.93% coming closest of the small parties to overcoming the 3% barrier.[93][94]

In the 2007 parliamentary election, the Party of Regions came first with 34.37% (losing 130,000 votes), the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc second with 31.71% (winning 1.5 million votes), the Our Ukraine–People's Self-Defense Bloc third with 14.15% (losing 238,000 votes), the Communist Party of Ukraine fourth with 5.39% (winning 327,000 votes) while the Nataliya Vitrenko Bloc dropped to 1.32%.[93][94] Although the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc attracted most of its voters from Western Ukrainian, Ukrainian-speaking provinces (Oblasts), it had in recent years recruited several politicians from Russian-speaking provinces like Crimea (Lyudmyla Denisova[95]) and Luhansk Oblast (Natalia Korolevska[96]). In the 2012 parliamentary election Party of Regions again won 30% and the largest number of seats while Fatherland (successor to Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc) came second with 25.54%.[97][98] The Communist Party of Ukraine raised its percentage of the votes in this election to 13.18%.[98]

In the 2014 parliamentary election the Party of Regions successor Opposition Bloc was overrun by the non-pro-Russian Petro Poroshenko Bloc in southern regions.[91] In the election Opposition Bloc scored 9.43%, finishing fourth.[99] Opposition Bloc gained most votes East Ukraine, but scored second best in former Party of Regions stronghold South Ukraine (trailing behind Petro Poroshenko Bloc).[100] The Communist Party of Ukraine was eliminated from representation in the election because it failed to overcome the 5% election threshold with its 3.87% of the votes.[101][102] Because of the war in Donbas and the unilateral annexation of Crimea by Russia elections were not held in Crimea and also not in large parts of Donbas, both were before stronghold of the Party of Regions and the Communist Party of Ukraine.[103][104][105][106][107][108][109][97]

Pro-Russian movements in Ukraine

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In 2014, there were political parties and movements in Ukraine that advocated a pro-Russian policy, and pro-Russian political organizations.[110][111] Many of these were opposed to Ukrainian independence and openly advocated for the restoration of the Russian Empire.[112] Few in number, they generated media coverage and political commentary.[113][114]

The actions organized by these organizations are most visible in the Ukrainian part of historic Novorossiya (New Russia) in the south of Ukraine and in the Crimea, a region in which in some areas Russians are the largest ethnic group. As ethnic Russians constitute a significant part of the population in these largely Russophone parts of southern Ukraine (and a majority in the Crimea),[1] these territories maintain particularly strong historic ties with Russia on the human level. Thus, a stronger than elsewhere in the country pro-Russian political sentiment makes the area a more fertile ground for the radical pro-Russian movements that are not as common elsewhere in the country.

As of December 2009 clashes between Ukrainian nationalists and pro-Russian organisations do sometimes take place.[115]

Organizations

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Among such movements are the youth organizations, the Proryv (literally the Breakthrough) and the Eurasian Youth Movement (ESM).[116] Both movements' registration and legal status have been challenged in courts; and the leader of Proryv, a Russian citizen, was expelled from Ukraine, declared persona non grata and barred from entering the country again.[citation needed] Alexander Dugin, the Moscow-based leader of the ESM and his associate Pavel Zariffulin have also been barred from travelling to Ukraine because of their involvement in the activities of these organizations, although bans have been later lifted and reinstated again.[117]

These movements openly state their mission as the disintegration of Ukraine and restoration of Russia within the borders of the former Russian Empire[112] and, reportedly, have received regular encouragement and monetary support from Russia's politically connected businessmen.[118] These organizations have been known not only for their pro-Russian activities, but have been also accused of organising massive acts of protest.[119]

 
The pro-Russian organization Proryv was involved in the 2006 anti-NATO protests in Crimea.[120] This photo taken on June 11, 2006, in Feodosiya features typical for this organization protesters' banners with pro-Russian and anti-Western rhetoric. Banners claim the solidarity of Bakhchisaray, Kerch, Odesa, Kharkiv with Feodosian protesters. Others say: "The future of Ukraine is in the union with Russia", "Crimea and Russia: the strength lies in unity", "Russia – friend, NATO – enemy", "Shame to traitors."

Some observers point out the Russian government and the Russian Orthodox Church's support of these movements and parties in Ukraine, especially in Crimea.[121] The publications and protest actions of these organizations feature strongly pro-Russian and radically anti-NATO messages, invoking the rhetoric of "Ukrainian-Russian historic unity", "NATO criminality", and other similar claims.

Some observers link the resurgence of radical Russian organizations in Ukraine with Kremlin's fear that the Orange Revolution in Ukraine could be exported to Russia, and addressing that possibility has been at the forefront of these movements' activities.[122]

"Russian marches"

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As a branch of a similar Russian organization the Eurasian Youth Union (ESM) has been organizing annual Russian Marches. The November 2006 "Russian march" in Kyiv, the capital, gathered 40 participants, but after the participants attacked the riot police, it was forced to interfere and several participants from were arrested.[123] In Odesa and Crimean cities the November 2006 "Russian marches" drew more participants, with 150–200 participants in Odesa,[123] and 500 in Simferopol[123] and went more peacefully. The marchers were calling for the Ukrainian and Russian Orthodox Church unity as well as the national unity between Russia and Ukraine. In Odesa the march of about 200 people carried anti-Western, pro-Russian slogans and religious symbols.[124][125]

Public opinion

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In March 2022, shortly after the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, a poll found that 82% of ethnic Russians living in Ukraine said they did not believe that any part of Ukraine was rightfully part of Russia. The poll did not involve respondents from Crimea or the separatist-controlled part of Donbas.[126] 65% of Ukrainians—including 88% of those of Russian ethnicity—agreed that "despite our differences there is more that unites ethnic Russians living in Ukraine and Ukrainians than divides us".[126]

Notable Ukrainians of full or partial Russian ancestry

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Actors

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Architects

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Artists and sculptors

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Businesspeople

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Engineers

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Literature

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Military

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Colonel general Oleksandr Syrskyi commanded the defence of Kyiv in 2022

Music

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Politicians

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Member of the Kyiv City Council (1998–2014)

  • Nina Karpachova - Verkhovna Rada Commissioner for Human Rights from 1998 until 2012
  • Borys Kolesnikov - leader of the political party Ukraine is Our Home
  • Vitaliy Kononov - environmental activist who served as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from the Party of Greens of Ukraine from 1998 to 2002, heading the party's electoral list
  • Vyacheslav Boguslayev - engineer, businessman, and politician, former member of the Party of Regions, Boguslayev served as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from 2006 to 2019
  • Pavlo Burlakov - Member of the

Liberal Party of Ukraine (1995-2005)

  • Ivan Gerasimov - Former deputy in the Ukrainian parliament (Verkhovna Rada), was a member of the Communist Party of Ukraine
  • Yurii Karmazin - politician and judge, served four terms as a People's Deputy of Ukraine
  • Leonid Klimov - member of the Party of Regions in Verkhovna Rada (from November 2007) and a member of the Committee on National Security and Defense (from December 2007)
  • Serhiy Larin - member of the Ukrainian parliament since the 1998 Ukrainian parliamentary election for the People's Democratic Party, For United Ukraine! (2002 election), Party of Regions (2006 and 2007 election) and in the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election for the Opposition Bloc and in the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election for Opposition Platform — For Life
  • Mykhailo Pozhyvanov - politician who served as the Deputy Minister of Economy from 2008 to 2010
  • Andriy Portnov - Member of Parliament (25 May 2006 – 16 April 2010)
  • Viktor Topolov -

6th Minister of Coal Industry of Ukraine (18 August 2005 – 4 August 2006)

  • Yuriy Chertkov - people's deputy of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine V (2006-2007), VI (2007-2012), and VII (2012-2014) convocations, Member of the Committee on Foreign Affairs (since 12.2007)
  • Oleksandr Tretiakov - People's Deputy of Ukraine of the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 8th convocations
  • Maksym Polyakov - politician, economist and public figure, served on Uman City Council as Deputy Mayor for Economic Activities from 2011 to 2012
  • Artur Herasymov - the leader of the then-Petro Poroshenko Bloc parliamentary faction from 2017 to 2019
  • Olga Bielkova - former Member of the Ukrainian Parliament (Verkhovna Rada) from 2012 until June 2020
  • Olha Chervakova - People's Deputy of Ukraine in the eighth convocation
  • Yehor Soboliev - politician, elected to the Verkhovna Rada in the October 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election, appearing 13th on the party list of Self Reliance
  • Tetiana Ostrikova - member of parliament of Ukraine of the 8th convocation, Member of the parliamentary faction Samopomich Union
  • Anna Romanova - former Member of the Ukrainian Parliament, member of the parliamentary faction Samopomich Union, former deputy mayor of Chernihiv
  • Oleksiy Ryabchyn -

People's Deputy of Ukraine (27 November 2014 – 24 July 2019), Deputy Minister for Energy and Environmental Protection of Ukraine (12 October 2019 – 27 May 2020)

  • Ihor Zhdanov - politician who served as the Minister of Youth and Sports in both the Yatsenyuk Government and in the Groysman Government
  • Tetiana Rychkova - politician who served as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from Ukraine's 27th electoral district from 2016 to 2019
  • Oleh Kryshyn- People's Deputy of Ukraine of the 8th convocation
  • Maxim Efimov - former People's Deputy of Ukraine from Ukraine's 48th electoral district from 2014 to December 2023
  • Volodymyr Areshonkov - People's Deputy of Ukraine and Honored Worker of Education of Ukraine (2017)
  • Anastasiya Radina - politician who is a who is currently a member of the Verkhovna Rada since 29 August 2019 from the Servant of the People party
  • Yehor Cherniev - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from the Servant of the People party in the Verkhovna Rada, number 26 on the party's list
  • Maryna Bardina - People's Deputy of Ukraine of the 9th convocation
  • Yulia Ovchynnykova - politician who is serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from the "Servant of the People" party
  • Denys Maslov - judge, lawyer, politician and Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada Committee on Legal Policy (since July 2022)
  • Oleh Voloshyn - political pundit on 112 Ukraine, politician, and former government official under Ukrainian prime ministers Mykola Azarov and Viktor Yanukovych
  • Tetiana Plachkova - politician who was a People's Deputy, elected to the Verkhovna Rada in 2019
  • Kostyantyn Bondaryev - People's Deputy of Verkhovna Rada.
  • Oleksandra Ustinova - public activist serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from the proportional list of the Holos party since 2019
  • Serhiy Rakhmanin - journalist and politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine on the proportional list of the Holos party since 2019
  • Andriy Sharaskin - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from the proportional list of the Holos party since 2020
  • Iryna Borzova - People's Deputy of Ukraine of the IX convocation
  • Viacheslav Rublyov - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from Ukraine's 20th electoral district since 29 August 2019 as a member of Servant of the People
  • Andriy Aksyonov - member of the Verkhovna Rada, the national parliament of Ukraine
  • Oleksandr Kovalov - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from Ukraine's 51st electoral district since 29 August 2019
  • Serhiy Kuzminykh - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from Ukraine's 67th electoral district since 29 August 2019
  • Maryna Nikitina - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine representing Ukraine's 82nd electoral district as a member of Servant of the People since 2019
  • Oleksiy Kuznyetsov - politician and businessman, who is currently a member of the Verkhovna Rada of the 9th convocation
  • Oleksandr Lukashev - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from Ukraine's 113th electoral district since 29 August 2019
  • Ihor Kopytin - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine representing Ukraine's 129th electoral district as a member of Servant of the People since 2019
  • Artem Chornomorov - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine representing Ukraine's 131st electoral district as a member of Servant of the People since 2019
  • Maksym Dyrdin - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine representing Ukraine's 132nd electoral district, as a member of Servant of the People since 2019
  • Oleh Koliev - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine representing Ukraine's 134th electoral district from Servant of the People since 2019
  • Oleksiy Leonov - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine representing Ukraine's 162nd electoral district from Servant of the People since 29 August 2019
  • Serhiy Koleboshyn - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine, representing Ukraine's 140th electoral district as a member of Servant of the People since 29 August 2019
  • Dmytro Nalotov - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine representing Ukraine's 144th electoral district from Servant of the People since 2019
  • Maksym Berezin - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from Ukraine's 151st electoral district in northern Poltava Oblast since 2019
  • Roman Ivanisov - politician and convicted child rapist currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from Ukraine's 153rd electoral district since 29 August 2019, at first as a member of Servant of the People and currently as an independent since 2019
  • Ihor Serhiyovych Vasylyev - politician, In 2019 elected for the Servant of the People in the 9th Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada
  • Maria Mezentseva - politician, was elected to Verkhovna Rada, the Ukrainian parliament, in 2019
  • Oleksandr Bakumov - Ukrainian soldier, professor, and politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from Ukraine's 173rd electoral district since 29 August 2019
  • Yevhen Pyvovarov - professor and politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from Ukraine's 175th electoral district since 29 August 2019
  • Oleksiy Krasov - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from Ukraine's 180th electoral district since 29 August 2019
  • Volodymyr Ivanov (politician, born 1982) - politician currently serving as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from Ukraine's 185th electoral district since 29 August 2019
  • Mykhailo Fedorov - politician, and businessman, served as a Deputy Prime Minister and Minister Digital Transformation from 2019 to March 2023
  • Ihor Kolykhaiev - former People's Deputy of Ukraine, elected in the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election
  • Andriy Kostin People's Deputy of Ukraine elected in 2019

Scientists

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Sportspeople

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Other

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See also

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References

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    "What language is spoken in Ukraine?". Welcome to Ukraine. February 2003..
  3. ^ "Why Eastern Ukraine is an integral part of Ukraine". The Washington Post.
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    "Kyiv: the city, its residents, problems of today, wishes for tomorrow.", Zerkalo Nedeli, April 29 – May 12, 2006. in Russian Archived 2007-02-17 at the Wayback Machine, in Ukrainian Archived 2007-02-17 at the Wayback Machine
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