In Defense of the Ukrainian Cause
Table of Contents
Click on the appropriate file number
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File No. |
Title |
Page |
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Frontispice pages |
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| Foreword | 5 |
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| Preface | 7 |
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| Table of Contents | 9 |
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Part I. Insurgency in the Ukraine |
13 |
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| Chapter 1 - Ukraine's Struggle for Freedom | 15 |
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| Chapter 2 - The Inclined Plane | 20 |
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| Chapter 3 - The Unknown Front | 26 |
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| Chapter 4 - Ukraine Advises How to Rock Kremlin | 31 |
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| Chapter 5 - The Roots of the Insurgency in the Ukraine | 36 |
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Part II. Ukrainian Nationalism and Soviet-West Relations |
53 |
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| Chapter 6 - The Kremlin Woos the Ukrainians | 55 |
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| Chapter 7 - Message on Prison Cloth: A Plea For Freedom | 59 |
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| Chapter 8 - Ukrainian Nationalism | 62 |
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| Chapter 9 - The Emergence of a Submerged Nation in the Soviet Union | 66 |
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| Chapter 10 - Comrade Enko - The Warhorse of Russia | 88 |
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Part III. Man, Society, and Religion in the USSR |
77 |
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| Chapter 11 - Why Russia Needs Time and Peace | 79 |
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| Chapter 12 - The Lonely Soviet Man | 83 |
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| Chapter 13 - Church-State Relations: Live Issue in the Kremlin | 90 |
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| Chapter 14 - The Revolution and the Bureaucrat | 95 |
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| Chapter 15 - The Great Witness | 99 |
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| Chapter 16 - The Jewish Fact in Russia | 104 |
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| Chapter 17 - Eight Nations Die | 109 |
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| Chapter 18 - Magadan and the Rising New Humanism | 113 |
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Part IV. Ukrainian Nationalism: |
119 |
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| Chapter 19 - Ukraine - the Specter of Nationalism | 121 |
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| Chapter 20 - Ukrainian Nationalism Fifty Years After the Bolshevik Revolution | 125 |
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Part V. Intellectual Dissent in the Ukraine |
131 |
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| Chapter 21 - "Exchanges Along the 50th Parallel" | 133 |
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| Chapter 22 - The Chornovil Papers and Intellectual Liberty | 136 |
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| Chapter 23 - Ukrainian Writer Dzyuba Criticizes Russification | 139 |
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| Chapter 24 - Clandestine Soviet Paper Tells All | 142 |
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| Chapter 25 - Wives of Soviet Dissidents Lead a Difficult Life | 147 |
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| Chapter 26 - Moroz Rocks the Empire of Soviet Cogs | 152 |
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| Chapter 27 - Stalinism Reappears in the Ukraine Colony | 159 |
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| Chapter 28 - Suppression in the Ukraine | 168 |
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| Chapter 29 - Spirit Under Oppression | 171 |
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| Chapter 30 - Ukrainians View Canada as the Last Haven | 175 |
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| Chapter 31 - The Tale of Two Archipelagos | 179 |
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Part VI. International Communism and Ukrainian Nationalism |
183 |
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| Chapter 32 - Ukrainian Dissenters Being Heard | 185 |
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| Chapter 33 - Peking's Involvement With the Ukrainian Problem | 190 |
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| Chapter 34 - Canadian Reds Have Hardest Time Explaining Policies | 193 |
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| Chapter 35 - Kremlin Strategists Worried About Ethnic Variety | 198 |
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| Chapter 36 - The Elevators of Madness | 205 |
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| Chapter 37 - The Second Circle of Terror | 210 |
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Part VII. Ukrainians in Diaspora |
215 |
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| Chapter 38 - The Saga of the Youngest Brother | 217 |
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| Chapter 39 - The Prague Group of Ukrainian Nationalist Writers and Their Ideological Origins | 238 |
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| Chapter 40 - Canadians With a Difference | 250 |
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| Chapter 41 - A Life of Distinction | 256 |
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| Chapter 42 - The Canadian Option for 1975 and Beyond: Unity Through Diversity | 261 |
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| Chapter 43 - The Invisible Ethnic | 281 |
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| Chapter 44 - To Ukrainians, He Is a Man For All Seasons | 288 |
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| Index | 293 |
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| About the Author |
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