Centre of the first great Slav civilisation in the tenth century, then divided
between warring neighbours for a millennium, Ukraine finally won independence
with the collapse of the Soviet Union. Tiring of their own corrupt governments,
Ukrainians have since mounted two popular revolutions, taking to the streets to
demand fair elections and closer ties to Europe. In the spring of 2014, Russia
responded by invading Crimea and sponsoring a civil war in the Russian-speaking
Donbass. Threatened by Moscow, misunderstood in the West, Ukraine hangs once more in the
balance. Speaking to pro-democracy activists and pro-Russia militiamen, peasants
and miners, survivors of Hitler's Holocaust and Stalin's famine, Anna Reid
combines history and travel-writing to unpick the past and present of this
bloody and complex borderland.