"I come today with an appeal to all citizens of Russia," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a televised address, just hours before Russian forces launched a full-scale assault on his nation's major cities. He said he wished to talk to the Russian people not as the leader of a nation but as a citizen of Ukraine.
He wanted to tell them, in their shared language, that Russian President Vladimir Putin's excuses for invading his country were mere fantasies. He wanted to remind the Russian people of all that they share with their Ukrainian neighbors, and to underscore that it was up to them to speak out to stop war.
"You are being told that we are Nazis," Zelenskyy said. But 8 million Ukrainians died fighting with the Soviet army in World War II. Zelenskyy's grandfather served in the Soviet infantry. My grandfather, born and raised outside Kyiv, spent the war running radio cables between the front line and Moscow.
"You are told that we hate Russian culture," Zelenskyy said. "But how can you hate culture? Any culture? Neighbors always enrich each other's cultures, but that does not make them one entity," he said. "We are different, but that does not make us enemies. We want to build our own history, peaceful, calm and fair."
Zelenskyy's address was both an appeal and a prayer, a clearheaded response to Russian justifications for war. His voice was calm and forceful, but you could hear the anger behind his words. He underscored that though Russians and Ukrainians may share kin and culture, that does not mean their relationship can forever be that of colonizer and colonized. He addressed his remarks to the Russian people, but he was also speaking to their president, who had claimed only a few days earlier that "Ukraine is not just a neighboring country for us. It is an inalienable part of our own history, culture and spiritual space."
Putin prefers to think of Ukraine as a southern province of Russia, a territory that was mistakenly "gifted" lands by his predecessors. It is these supposed mistakes that this invasion aims to correct.
It is no accident that one of the most authoritative responses to the Kremlin's rhetoric has come not from the United States or European powers, but from Martin Kimani, the Kenyan ambassador to the United Nations, who explicitly linked the colonial history of his own country to that of Ukraine in a speech to the Security Council on Monday. Kimani's countrymen, he said, "share deep historical, cultural and linguistic bonds" with people across their borders — borders that they had no role in drawing. The same is true of Ukrainians.
Many families, including my own, have been split across the Russia-Ukraine border. These separations are largely accidents of history, one of the lasting effects of the collapse the Soviet Union. But this sense of kinship, Kimani said, cannot justify invasion: "We must complete our recovery from the embers of dead empires in a way that does not plunge us back into new forms of domination and oppression."