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Lesya Ukrainka had three younger sisters, Olha, Oksana, and Isydora, and a younger brother, Mykola. [5] Ukrainka was very close to her uncle Drahomanov, her spiritual mentor and teacher, as well as her elder brother Mykhailo, known under the pseudonym Mykhailo Obachny, whom she called "Mysholosie" after their parents' joint nickname for both of ...
The Lesya Ukrainka Museum in Yalta is a local history museum dedicated to one of Ukrainian literature's foremost writers, Lesya Ukrainka, who lived on the property for two years in her late twenties. In 1977, more than seventy years after her death, it became a museum dedicated to her memory, as well as a hub for Ukrainian culture and arts.
The reason to create this museum space was that in the late 19th – early 20th centuries at this area lived the families of such Ukrainian Culture celebrities as Lesia Ukrainka, Mykola Lysenko, Panas Saksagansky and Mykhailo Starytsky. [3] [2] The memorial buildings have been preserved till now; they are natural borders of the museum's territory.
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On the 150th anniversary of Lesia Ukrainka's birthday on 25 February 2021 Zhyzhchenko began a poetical project "Khrestomatiya", in which she reads her favorite poems in various locations based on them. [9] On 11 July 2023 Zhyzhchenko was invited by Spotify to become the Ukrainian ambassador of Spotify Equal. [10] [10]
Mavka suffers, and the Mermaid soothes her but warns against love, which can ruin a free soul. Lisovyk warns Mavka. He asks her to remember her freedom, the beauty of nature, and to free herself from the shackles of human love. Mavka is going to become a forest princess again. She dresses in a crimson, silver haze. Perelesnyk begins to court her.
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Kosach-Borysova wrote memoirs. She and her sister, journalist Olha Kosach-Kryvyniuk, worked with Ukrainian Academy of Arts and Sciences (UVAN) to publish their sister's works on the occasion of Lesya Ukrainka's centenary. [2] [5] She was an honorary member of the Union of Ukrainian Women of America.