Church and monastery buildings of the Pechersk Lavra |
The second day
in Kiev, we visited the Cave Monastery (Pechersk Lavra), a site where about a dozen
early Christian monks settled in the 11th century with the intention
of spreading Christianity throughout Kievan Rus. After viewing several of the
monastery buildings, we descended through a long, narrow tunnel carrying
candles. We passed by several caskets, presumably containing the mummified bodies of
those thousand-year-old monks. The caskets had glass lids, and the bodies were
wrapped in robes in such a way so that no part of the actual body was visible,
so the “natural mummification” that occurred in the caves had to be taken on
faith. We emerged (were disgorged) from the cave/tunnel into a shopping area
where I purchased an egg painted with an icon (virgin & child).
Guide describing the Chernobyl atomic plant melt-down |
During the
afternoon, we visited a museum dedicated to the Chernobyl disaster, which
occurred some 30 – 60 miles north-east of Kiev, at a site near the borders of
Ukraine, Russia and Belarus. I hadn't realized that it was so close to what
is now Russia. A person involved in the early clean-up and remediation of the area spoke to the group through our guide, Evgeny.
That
afternoon, we also visited Baba Yar, a pit where 100,000 Jews were “disposed
of” by the Nazis early in WWII. The fact that the victims had been Jews was
covered up after the war, and the area was memorialized by the Soviets as the
site of the massacre of 100,000 Russian citizens. Later, we also visited a
synagogue – not on the itinerary, but a couple on the bus asked if we could
stop there. It was in our Guide to Kiev.
Grass covers the earth over those massacred at Babi Yar |
The following
day, I didn't go on the tour of the folk museum, but rather stayed in the room
and wrote postcards and read until early afternoon. Afterwards, I went to the
post office and mailed the cards (and a couple of other cards to Lis’ family)
which was something of an adventure, for which I used my spotty Russian. Then I walked on my own through a part of the city we
had seen on the bus tour the day before – past the Great Gate, past Saint Sophia, across the square
towards St. Michael’s, looking for the Ukrainian National Museum.
I finally
found it--buying a T-shirt and a Ukranian blouse for Ella Diane along the way--but there was only about an hour left to visit the rooms before it closed. It was clearly
a remnant of a Soviet-era museum, with the main entrance room, up a staircase,
exhibiting a red flag with hammer and sickle and shining works depicted on
either side of it. There were also a couple of paintings on either side
depicting awful winter mud and chaos – perhaps illustrating the great patriotic
war, which is what the Russians call WWII.
Soviet-era Ukrainian National Museum near Kiev's main square |
The rest
of the rooms exhibited pretty straight-forward, historical museum-type displays, with
artifacts of the period ranging from pre-historic to recent times: paintings of
nobility and Metropolitans (Eastern Orthodox bishops), swords, chairs, crockery, an ox-cart, etc. I hadn't
realized how significant early (Aegean) civilization was in the area, but there
were many early (5 – 3 centuries BC) Greek vessels and plates and amphorae.
When the museum closed, I took a quick trip to a small, wooden, rather make-shift building nearby that housed numerous gold-rimmed icons in the Eastern Orthodox style. Could they have been stored in the basement of the museum and brought out for exhibit after Ukrainian independence? No one could tell me the history of that small, wooden chapel-like structure near the museum, a huge church looming behind it on the main square of Kiev.
Small building full of icons next to the museum. |
I walked
so much that day that I developed a charley-horse in my left leg (calf), and it
has been giving me trouble ever since. And the right leg (hip and knee)
have been bothering me since the beginning of the trip (back in Berlin), so
walking is becoming something of a problem, quite apart from the problems
I've had breathing, especially after catching the cold in London. It seems to be
improving now, though.
Thanks for pointing out this blog, Joanne. (And happy to see you are highlighting women traveling solo.) Walking so many miles can be a challenge. When my daughter and I visited Rome several years ago we walked over ten miles. Could hardly move the next day! This is a lovely travel post.
ReplyDeleteKathy, thank you so much! Hope you continue to enjoy the blog.
DeleteWe've visited Moscow and St. Petersburg. Hope we also get the chance to see Kiev, not under Putin's thumb.
ReplyDeleteYes indeed. So far, Kiev is not under Putin's thumb. But I think that main square of Kiev may have been damaged during the riots. I certainly hope things settle down in Ukraine. They've had more than their fair share of turmoil.
DeleteKiev sounds very interesting (and a bit depressing). I look forward to reading more :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Sharon. Ukraine is one of those geographical areas that has been at the interface of cultures for roughly two millennia. It has served repeatedly as a battlefield in conflicts between East and West (e.g., Rome and Byzantium; Europe and Russia), as well as between North and South (e.g., Norse and Slavs; Russians and Turks). It has vast, fertile farmlands, as well as Black Sea ports, both coveted by less well-endowed neighbors. Being fortunate can become a misfortune if it excites the desire or envy of others.
ReplyDelete