Event

Ivan Svit and Ukrainian - Japanese collaboration in Manchuria,1922-1945

Date
9 Feb 2023
Time
14:00 UK time
Speakers
Dr Olga Khomenko
Where
Pavilion Room, 4th Floor, Gateway Building, St. Antony's College
Audience
Public
Booking
Not required
This talk tells the story of the unknown 100 000 people Ukrainian diaspora in Manchuria and its leader, Ivan Svit (1897–1989), a forgotten Ukrainian journalist, editor, historian, and social activist, and their active communication and collaboration with Japanese authorities under the occupation (1932-1945). During this time, Ukrainians tried to negotiate about creating a Ukrainian national state in the Far East and broader North-East Asia.

Co-convenors Juliana Buriticá Alzate, Jenny Guest, Hugh Whittaker

Besides working as a journalist, a stamp dealer, and an editor running a couple of Ukrainian printed media publications, including the "Manchurian Herald" (1932-1937) and "The Call of the Ukraine"(1941-1942) as well as radio programs, Svit helped to print a Map of Green Ukraine (1937) and to publish the first Ukrainian Japanese dictionary (1944).

This talk explores the processes of self-identification of Ukrainians through printed media and the cooperative nature of Ukrainian-Japanese relations in Manchuria (1922-1945).