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It is often accompanied by the response "To the heroes — glory!" (Ukrainian: Героям слава!, romanized: Heroiam slava!, IPA: [ɦeˈrɔjɐm ˈslɑwɐ]). The phrase first appeared at the beginning of the 20th century in different variations, when it became popular among Ukrainians during the Ukrainian War of Independence from 1917 to ...
"Slava Ukraini!" (Ukrainian: Слава Україні!, "Glory to Ukraine") is a 2022 song composed by the Norwegian composer Marcus Paus.[1] [2] It is based on the worldwide use of the expression "Glory to Ukraine" (Ukrainian: Слава Україні, romanized: Slava Ukraini) as a symbol of resistance and solidarity during the 2022 Russian invasion, [1] [2] [3] and is loosely inspired by ...
Minister: Glory to Ukraine! Troops: Glory to the heroes, sir! Minister: To the service personnel of the (states unit/formation), I greet you on the occasion of the anniversary of the independence of Ukraine! A threefold Glory! (Ukrainian: Slava!) is the response of the battalions following the greeting as the music resumes.
It is sung to the melody of "Rozpryahayte, khloptsi, koni", a Ukrainian folk song. [2] [dubious – discuss] [verification needed] The song has many versions in other languages, including Serbo-Croatian, Greek, German, French, Hungarian, Hebrew, Kurdish, and as well as in many languages of the Soviet Union.
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Glory to the Heroes is a documentary on the war in Ukraine directed by Bernard-Henri Lévy and Marc Roussel. [ 1 ] Shot over the summer of 2023, the film picks up where Lévy's two earlier documentaries in the country left off.
The March of Ukrainian Nationalists is a Ukrainian patriotic song that was originally the official anthem of the Organisation of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army. [1] The song is also known by its first line " We were born in a great hour " ( Ukrainian : Зродились ми з великої години ).
One of the first recordings of this anthem (then spelled "Szcze ne wmerła Ukrajiny ni sława, ni wola") in Ukrainian was released on a gramophone record by Columbia Phonograph Company during World War I in 1916. [25] As a folk song, it was performed by a Ukrainian emigrant from Lviv and New York resident Mykhailo Zazuliak in 1915. [26]