A satirical and humorous story written by Pavlo Krat under the nom de plume of Father Prokolupiĭ, about Father Pivtoratsky and his wife, set before the peasant uprising in Poltava in 1902.
A short story written by Pavlo Krat, prefaced with a portion of Taras Shevchenko's poem 'To My Fellow Countrymen...', about a fictionalized account of the revolution in the Poltava region in 1906.
A poem inspired by the poetry collection called “The Black Unicorn” by Audre Lorde. The collection is an exploration of Lorde's identity as a Black woman and a lesbian, and the ways in which these intersecting identities shape her experiences and…
In the 1920s and 1930s, the People’s Commissariat of Posts and Telegraphs of the USSR (NKPT) produced vast quantities of propaganda postcards, printing two million copies of this one alone. The postcard’s anti-lynching caption and illustration…
This hyperlink leads to a Pew Research Center demographic study on the role of religion in Canadian life. Notwithstanding the historic place of the Protestant and Catholic churches in Canada, this 2013 reports that "more Canadians belong to minority…
This photo depicts a rally for missing and murdered Aboriginal women taking place on Parliament Hill in 2013, by the Native Women’s Association Canada.