logo
‘She's all of us': mural illustrates ties between city, grateful Ukrainian newcomers

‘She's all of us': mural illustrates ties between city, grateful Ukrainian newcomers

Blue and yellow ribbons wrapping around the city's skyline show the deep connection between Ukraine and Manitoba in a new mural.
Take Pride Winnipeg, a downtown non-profit that seeks to clean up and inspire civic pride, unveiled its newest mural, titled 'Pray for Ukraine' in the Exchange District on Monday.
It pictures a Ukrainian woman in traditional clothing stoically gazing into the distance as butterflies and a dove — which symbolize hope, peace and rebirth — flutter around the Esplanade Riel and Canadian Museum for Human Rights.
The installation at Exchange District BIZ at 492 Main St. was painted by Jennifer Mosienko, who's worked on more than 40 murals across the city.
Mila Shykota, a 46-year-old Ukrainian newcomer and the brainchild behind the project, wanted to repay the generosity Winnipeggers have showed her and others with an art piece that intertwined the two cultures with the colours of Ukraine and Canada.
'I wanted to convey the longing for the motherland, that feeling when you're physically here but still worry about your home country,' said Shykota. 'This mural reflects the difficulties and hopes of all immigrants, and at the same, thanks Canada for the feeling of support.'
More than 20,000 Ukrainians have made Manitoba home since the war began in 2022, federal numbers show.
Shykota was living in Kyiv, Ukraine's capital city, and moved with her husband and daughter to Winnipeg after Russian forces invaded. She had visited Winnipeg multiple times in 2015, when her husband was studying at the University of Manitoba.
She sees herself in the woman portrayed in the mural and believes it represents all Ukrainians who fled the war.
'She's all of us,' said Shykota. 'We all the feel the same way. We had to start our news lives from scratch.'
Wednesdays
Sent weekly from the heart of Turtle Island, an exploration of Indigenous voices, perspectives and experiences.
Shykota, who has lived in Winnipeg for three years, began fundraising for the 20 x 30 mural after deciding it was the best way to show appreciation to her new city. The campaign raised $25,000 and she brought the idea to Take Pride Winnipeg, who connected her with Mosienko.
The two worked together on the project for a year, refining the idea before Mosienko began the brush strokes. Painting it took nearly three months.
The artist said it was an emotional experience for her because her husband and relatives are Ukrainian, and she grew up eating Ukrainian dishes and celebrating Ukrainian traditions.
'I hope it will mean a lot to the Ukrainian people that live here and the ones that are newcomers as well, that they can look at it and say 'we have a place here, too,'' Mosienko said.
matthew.frank@freepress.mb.ca
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

FACT FOCUS: No, Oprah Winfrey didn't block access to a private road amid tsunami warning evacuations
FACT FOCUS: No, Oprah Winfrey didn't block access to a private road amid tsunami warning evacuations

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 days ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

FACT FOCUS: No, Oprah Winfrey didn't block access to a private road amid tsunami warning evacuations

Even as the threat of a tsunami swamping Hawaii had passed on Wednesday, social media posts were still circulating claims that Oprah Winfrey had refused immediate access to a private road that would allow residents a shorter evacuation route. The warnings followed one of the century's most powerful earthquakes, an 8.8 magnitude quake that struck off a Russian peninsula and generated tsunami warnings and advisories for a wide swath of the Pacific. Posts on X and TikTok contended Winfrey refused to open her private road, or was slow to do so during the evacuation. But the roadway does not actually belong to Winfrey, and efforts to open the road to the public started soon after the tsunami warning was issued. Here's a closer look at the facts. CLAIM: Winfrey owns the private road and refused to allow public access for residents trying to reach higher ground, only relenting following public pressure. FACT: This is false. Despite being commonly known as 'Oprah's road,' the portion of Kealakapu Road is privately owned — but not by Winfrey. It belongs to Haleakala Ranch, which also owns the land surrounding the road, its president Scott Meidell told The Associated Press. Winfrey has an easement agreement with the ranch, which allows her to use and make certain improvements to the road, her representative told the AP in a statement. Winfrey has paved the road as part of the agreement, Meidell said. The decision to open the road to the public is principally up to the landowner, Winfrey's representative noted. Meidell said Haleakala Ranch 'had conversations with Ms. Winfrey's land management staff during this process. So, they're consulted to be sure.' Haleakala Ranch contacted the local fire department and the Maui Emergency Management Agency just after 3 p.m. local time, shortly after the tsunami warning went into effect, Meidell said. The road was made accessible shortly after 5 p.m., he said, and ranch personnel assisted in the evacuation of around 150 to 200 vehicles until the final group of cars were escorted up the road at 7 p.m. Maui County officials said in a press release shortly after 7 p.m. Tuesday that 'Oprah's road' was accessible to the public, an advisory repeated in a 9:30 p.m. update. But Meidell said further evacuations weren't necessary after 7 p.m. because police had confirmed 'at that point the highway was completely empty of traffic.' Maui police and the Maui Emergency Management Agency did not immediately return the AP's requests for comment. 'As soon as we heard the tsunami warnings, we contacted local law enforcement and FEMA to ensure the road was opened. Any reports otherwise are false,' a representative for Winfrey wrote in a statement first disseminated to news outlets Tuesday night. The decision to open the road was made quickly 'when the warning was issued to evacuate, working with local officials and Oprah's Ranch,' the representative added in a statement Wednesday. Cars were escorted in separate caravans that each 'had a lead vehicle and a sweep vehicle to make sure that there weren't any incidents on the mountain road,' Meidell said. Haleakala Ranch encompasses nearly 30,000 acres of open space from the southern shoreline to Upcountry Maui, according to its website, and has been family-owned and operated since the late 1800s. The private road connects a public roadway with a highway on the island's oceanside. Some Hawaii residents have long expressed frustration with the large swaths of land that wealthy public figures like Winfrey own on Maui and have advocated against short-term rentals that dot the region and worsen the already low housing supply. The islands have faced a chronic housing shortage only exacerbated in 2023 when a deadly wildfire destroyed most of Lahaina, a town on Maui and the historic former capital of the Hawaiian kingdom. The wildfire was the deadliest in U.S. history in a century that left more than 100 people dead. Users claimed with no evidence then that Winfrey had hired private firefighters to protect her land before the fires started, and hired security to keep others of her land during the evacuations. Some X users also spread false claims linking Winfrey to the cause of the blaze. Winfrey teamed up with Dwayne Johnson to launch the People's Fund for Maui and committed $10 million to help residents who lost their homes in the wildfires. The fund raised almost $60 million as of April 2024. In 2019, Winfrey confirmed on X, then Twitter, that county officials were given permission to use the private road immediately after a brush fire started on Maui's southern area. The road ultimately was not used, Maui County spokesperson Chris Sugidono told the AP at the time. ___ Associated Press National Writer Hillel Italie contributed reporting. ___ Find AP Fact Checks here:

Ill-equipped and tired: a night with a Ukrainian air defence unit
Ill-equipped and tired: a night with a Ukrainian air defence unit

Edmonton Journal

time4 days ago

  • Edmonton Journal

Ill-equipped and tired: a night with a Ukrainian air defence unit

Roman PILIPEY/AFP Photo by Roman PILIPEY / AFP A menacing buzz reverberates through the night sky in eastern Ukraine. Explosions ring out, flashes illuminate sunflower fields below and the smell of gunpowder poisons the air. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Exclusive articles by David Staples, Keith Gerein and others, Oilers news from Cult of Hockey, Ask EJ Anything features, the Noon News Roundup and Under the Dome newsletters. Unlimited online access to Edmonton Journal and 15 news sites with one account. Edmonton Journal ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on. Daily puzzles, including the New York Times Crossword. Support local journalism. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Exclusive articles by David Staples, Keith Gerein and others, Oilers news from Cult of Hockey, Ask EJ Anything features, the Noon News Roundup and Under the Dome newsletters. Unlimited online access to Edmonton Journal and 15 news sites with one account. Edmonton Journal ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on. Daily puzzles, including the New York Times Crossword. Support local journalism. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors 'There! Three kilometres away!' shouted one Ukrainian serviceman in the air defence unit equipped with Soviet-era weapons and tasked with intercepting Russian drones, before they home in on Ukrainian towns and cities. The long-range unmanned aerial vehicles originally designed by Iran but improved and launched by Moscow have been devastating Ukraine since the early chapters of the Kremlin's invasion launched in early 2022. Get the latest headlines, breaking news and columns. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again Moscow has trumpeted its industrial-scale production of the cheap weapons, with state-television broadcasting what it called the world's largest drone factory. The rare footage showed the assembly of hundreds of jet-black triangle-shaped Gerans — geraniums in Russian. On the night in July that AFP embedded with an air defence unit in Ukraine's eastern Dnipropetrovsk region, Russia launched 344 drones, but its largest-ever barrage comprised of more than 700. 'It's rotten tonight, just like the day before,' said one serviceman in the air defence unit, leaning over a radar. Increasingly sophisticated Gerans are flying at higher altitudes and able to alter course en route, but Vasyl's unit is equipped with old, short-range weapons. 'They fly chaotically and unpredictably. It has become harder to destroy them,' the 49-year-old told AFP. 'We're effective, but I can't promise that it will be like this every week,' he adde'Nothing we can do' Oleksandr, a fellow serviceman defending airspace near Pavlograd city, was scrutinising a radar where hundreds of red dots were appearing. 'There's nothing we can do. It's not our area,' he said of the incoming drones. His 20-year-old daughter, who lives in Pavlograd, was not answering her phone, he told AFP while lighting a cigarette. 'But I warned her,' added Oleksandr, who like others in this story identified himself with his first name or army nickname in line with military protocol. An explosion boomed, the horizon glowed crimson and dark smoke appeared in the sky moments later. President Volodymyr Zelensky has secured several Patriot batteries from allies since the invasion began and is appealing for funding for 10 more systems.

Difficult situations, moving experiences
Difficult situations, moving experiences

Winnipeg Free Press

time5 days ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Difficult situations, moving experiences

As a volunteer recruiter, Tyler Omichinski has found that Winnipeggers are eager to pitch in. Omichinski is the operations manager for the local chapter of Shelter Movers, a national charitable organization that provides moving and storage services at no cost to individuals and families fleeing abuse. More than 70 Winnipeggers have signed up to volunteer with the chapter since it was established last summer. That response is impressive, Omichinski says. 'I've been kind of blown away (by) how much that delightful stereotype of us in Winnipeg being people who volunteer (and) people who give to charity holds true,' he says. 'We've had a relatively easy time finding folks to help out, which has been fantastic.' Shelley Madden is one of those people. The Charleswood resident has a long history of giving her time to organizations that serve marginalized people. She discovered Shelter Movers late last summer, shortly after giving a list of resources to a woman who was fleeing an abusive situation. ''This is stellar, this is absolutely amazing. This is the kind of resource that was missing when I gave those referrals to that woman,'' Madden recalls thinking after she learned about the organization on Volunteer Manitoba's website. The 56-year-old educational assistant was looking for somewhere to volunteer and so she applied immediately. Since then, she's served as an online orientation facilitator, training volunteers on the organization's protocols and how they can take a trauma-informed approach to their work. More recently, she's volunteered as a mover. Shelter Movers collaborates with local businesses and community services who refer clients — primarily women and their children — who have decided to leave an abuser and have a safer place to go. Movers and drivers are the backbone of the organization. Working in groups of two to seven people, and guided by a detailed itinerary, volunteers load the clients' belongings into a vehicle and transport them and their items to a predetermined location. The following is a list of volunteer opportunities for Winnipeg and surrounding areas. For more information about these listings, contact the organization directly. Volunteer Manitoba does not place volunteers with organizations but can help people find opportunities. To learn more about its programs and services, go to or call 204-477-5180. The following is a list of volunteer opportunities for Winnipeg and surrounding areas. For more information about these listings, contact the organization directly. Volunteer Manitoba does not place volunteers with organizations but can help people find opportunities. To learn more about its programs and services, go to or call 204-477-5180. The Ecuadorian Association of Manitoba needs volunteers who speak Spanish or are passionate about the culture to help with events. The position is an opportunity to gain experience in event management. People are welcome to apply at any time, but to participate in events this summer and fall, they should apply at volunteer@ or in July and August. SuperWalk is Parkinson Canada's largest annual fundraiser, helping the organization provide support and advocacy, and funding research for people living with and impacted by the disease. Event-day volunteers are needed. Roles include event setup and takedown, registration, greeting, food services, entertainment support, checkpoint stations and cheering on walkers. Events are taking place across Canada — including in Winnipeg — on Sept. 6 and Sept. 7. The time commitment varies. Volunteers will be contacted before the event to confirm their shift time, role and event details. Apply online at by Sept. 5. Canada's largest volunteer-led event for breast cancer — the CIBC Run for the Cure, in support of the Canadian Cancer Society — returns Oct. 5. Volunteers are needed to help plan and lead events across the country. To explore available positions, go to The application deadline is the day of the event. Victoria Lifeline needs home service volunteers to travel to clients' homes and work directly with subscribers and caregivers to install, support and explain Lifeline. Volunteers should have demonstrated interpersonal and communication skills. English is required; additional languages are an asset. A driver's licence and vehicle are required. Must be able to work independently. Shifts are available between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. weekdays. A minimum of one four-hour shift weekly is required. Apply at by Dec. 30. Com-Span needs someone with experience in basic repairs and general handiwork to help with odd jobs around the building. The work includes minor repairs, installing shelves, repairing and replacing damaged items and minor paint touch-ups. Shifts will work around the person's availability. A criminal record check is required, with the costs reimbursed. Email admin@ by Dec. 31. The College of Registered Nurses of Manitoba needs a public representative to fill a vacancy on the finance committee for a term starting in October. The committee is responsible for making recommendations on financial policies, financial conditions and the annual audit to the council. More information is available at Send a resumé and cover letter to appointments@ by Aug. 8. Mount Carmel Clinic needs volunteers for community programming support. Roles include setting up and cleaning programming spaces, organizing the refreshments area, greeting community members and providing event information. Volunteers help staff members with group activities and distribution of materials. Volunteers should be 16 or older and open to working from a place of non-judgment, open-mindedness and respect for people of all backgrounds and identities. The time commitment is two shifts monthly, and there is an orientation of approximately three hours. Shifts are 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. weekdays. Background checks are required, with costs reimbursed. Email volunteer@ by Aug. 31. The Canadian Red Cross Society needs volunteers in Manitoba for programs such as Smart Start and Disaster Risk Reduction. These roles involve leading sessions on climate change and emergency preparedness, and require effective communication skills and cultural sensitivity. Volunteers might also join the emergency responder and personal disaster assistance teams to help during disasters. Training and background checks are mandatory. This opportunity offers experience in public speaking and crisis management. Send a resumé to SmartStart@ by Dec. 31. Villa Cabrini needs someone with creative skills to make posters for various events. The necessary information for the projects will be provided each month. The role does not include printing responsibilities; completed files can be emailed. Volunteers must have computer and design skills and be 16 or older. The role involves flexible hours and can be done remotely. Apply at vcabrini@ by Jan. 1. Police or security personnel and language interpreters may also be present for the move to ensure the process is as safe and efficient as possible. 'You're helping someone get out of a very difficult situation,' Madden says, adding that it's rewarding work. 'The amount of gratitude and graciousness that comes from the women (is) just humbling.' Paul Diouf agrees. Diouf arrived in Winnipeg from Dakar, Senegal, last August to study business administration at Saint-Boniface University. He started volunteering as a mover last December so that he could get to know the city. He has since been trained as a driver. Diouf recalls one particular shift when a woman gathered her children after the move so that they could all thank the volunteers. 'It was kind of awesome — it gave me chills,' says Diouf, 27. 'To me it (indicated that I) did something really important… I'll never forget that.' While Omichinski is pleased with the number of people who volunteer with Shelter Movers, he says the organization could always use more help. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. The duration of each move varies, with an average length of about four hours. Volunteers receive training and can sign up for moves according to their availability. To get involved, apply online at or email volunteer@ 'We've (done) 35 moves already and we're really getting our feet under us locally (so) that number's going to keep growing drastically,' Omichinski says. Shelter Movers operates in 10 centres across Canada and relies on more than 1,000 volunteers, per its website. Since 2016, the organization has completed more than 8,500 moves. If you know a special volunteer, email Aaron EppReporter Aaron Epp reports on business for the Free Press. After freelancing for the paper for a decade, he joined the staff full-time in 2024. He was previously the associate editor at Canadian Mennonite. Read more about Aaron. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store