'Ukraine doesn't forget its cultural landmarks': the team risking their lives to rescue statues from the frontline
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jul/31/ukraine-cultural-landmarks-team-risk-lives-rescue-statues-from-frontline
Ukraine doesnt forget its cultural landmarks: the team risking their lives to rescue statues from the frontline
Operation has retrieved 11 babas from southern Ukraine, where Turkic nomadic people flourished in medieval times
Luke Harding in Dnipro. Photos by Alessio Mamo
Thu 31 Jul 2025 09.29 EDT
A bearded expert and a group of Ukrainian soldiers arrived in the village of Slovianka on a special mission. Their goal did not involve shooting at invading Russian forces. Instead, they had come to rescue a unique piece of history before it could be swallowed up by war and a frontline creeping closer.
The soldiers placed a giant object a wooden pallet. It was a carved stone figure created about 800 years ago. The sculpture of a woman holding a ceremonial pot, wearing a necklace and with tiny legs was lifted gently on to a flatbed truck. We didnt think we would have to evacuate it. But we do. Its sad, Yurii Fanyhin, who coordinated the operation, explained.
Today Slovianka is a small farmland community, not far from the administrative border between Dnipropetrovsk and Donetsk oblasts. In the 11th and 13th centuries, however, it was at the centre of a vast steppe route. A Turkic nomadic people known as the Cumans or Polovtsy flourished here, north of the Black Sea. They were formidable and skilled warriors.
Their world survives in the form of elaborate funerary statues known as babas, which once littered the landscape of southern Ukraine. Each represents a dead individual. There are fighters depicted with weapons, helmets and belts. And unusually for the early medieval period there are many women. Some wear jewellery; one is pregnant; all have hair hidden under a hat.
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