PITTSBURGH — Bohdan Czmola kicked off the Ukrainian Film Festival on Saturday night with a topical opener: “Has anybody been watching the news this week?”
Maddeningly to many with Ukrainian heritage, pundits on TV even occasionally say “the Ukraine,” as if it were still just another region of the Russian empire. “This president is wonderful,” said Hanna Dziamko, 48, a pharmacist who immigrated to the United States in 1997. “Everything he does is just unbelievable, everything he touches is successful.”
“What he’s doing, it might look bad for Ukraine today, but it’s going to look great for Ukraine in a year,” said George Honchar, a semiretired agronomist whose front porch doormat has a picture of Putin’s face on it, along with an invitation in Ukrainian to wipe your feet. Western Pennsylvania has drawn waves of Ukrainian immigrants, starting in the late 19th century when they came in to power the steel mills, coal mines and railroad crews. The golden domes of Ukrainian Catholic and Orthodox churches tower throughout the region. But the congregations are old and shrinking, often reliant on homemade pierogi sales to pay for basic repairs.
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