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In the 100th episode of Wandering the Edge, Christina Paschyn, director and producer of Etched in Memory discusses the complicated history of the Crimean Tatars within overall Ukrainian history, but also the difficulty of expressing the plight of the indigenous people of Ukraine among a global audience. Her documentary film follows Crimean Tatar activists as they try to survive during the Russian occupation and all the painstaking work they do to support those who refuse to leave their ancestral homeland, which is once again being occupied by Russia.
For more information on the film: https://etchedinmemoryfilm.com/
Facebook & Instagram: Wanderedgeukraine
For more episodes, sources and extras, please visit: wanderingtheedge.net
By Larysa Zariczniak5
22 ratings
In the 100th episode of Wandering the Edge, Christina Paschyn, director and producer of Etched in Memory discusses the complicated history of the Crimean Tatars within overall Ukrainian history, but also the difficulty of expressing the plight of the indigenous people of Ukraine among a global audience. Her documentary film follows Crimean Tatar activists as they try to survive during the Russian occupation and all the painstaking work they do to support those who refuse to leave their ancestral homeland, which is once again being occupied by Russia.
For more information on the film: https://etchedinmemoryfilm.com/
Facebook & Instagram: Wanderedgeukraine
For more episodes, sources and extras, please visit: wanderingtheedge.net

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