Who, when and how did the war in Ukraine really start?

2 years ago
200

Copy and paste "москаляку на гиляку" into various search engines so see interesting imagery that may give you greater insight to the background mechanics of what has been happening in the Ukraine since 2014.

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I used Yandex Translator to translate this article into english about the origins of the expression discussed in this video. Enjoy the read if you can.

“The expression "moskalyaku na gilyaku" shows a very hostile attitude towards Russian people.Recently, it has become very popular in the territory that used to be the Ukrainian SSR, and now in fact is under full control of the United States.If you disassemble this phrase into the constituent words "moskalyaku" and "gilyaku", you can try to understand the meaning of this idiom.
The history of the expression "moskalyaku on gilyaku"

If we open the dictionary to find out what the word "gilaka" means, we will find several meanings.
The first meaning denotes the Gilaks, a semi-savage people living on Sakhalin and Amur, previously this tribe was called Nivkhi.
The second meaning, which in our opinion looks more appropriate, came from the Ukrainian word "Gilaka" in translation into Russian means "branch". This word sounds like "gilyaka".

Who is "Moskal"?

The word Moskal is apparently a pejorative nickname used by Belarusian, Ukrainian and Polish citizens in relation to residents of Russia.
Previously, "Moskal" was called only a resident of Moscow, much later this offensive nickname began to be used in a broader sense and denoted all people who live in Russia.

In 1794, the peoples of Belarus and Poland, conquered by the Russian Empire, led by Tadeusz Kosciuszko, rebelled.One of the rebels named Yakub Yasinsky even made a heartfelt speech to the Belarusian countrymen, where he read a fiery poem calling for the struggle for freedom:

"Let's go zhyva da Kassyushki,
Rubat budzem maskalyushki!"

From all of the above, we can conclude that the expression "maskalyaku on gilyaku" means that you need to catch any Russian and hang it on a branch.Some researchers claim that this phrase calls for hanging only residents of Moscow.

At the beginning of the formation of the USSR in the western regions of Ukraine, the idiom "komunyaku na gilyaku" was very popular.That is, citizens of western Ukraine were called upon to commit murder with aggravating circumstances to those who supported the Soviet government, including the Communists.”

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