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Reçu aujourd’hui — 23 août 2025
  • ✇Euromaidan Press
  • Sumy State University lost 60,000 books due to Russian attacks in seven months
    Sumy State University has lost a total of 60,000 books following two separate Russian strikes on its facilities, with the most recent attack on 18 August destroying 15,000 volumes in the library of the burned-down “N” building, Suspilne Sumy reported. The latest casualties were “the newest books purchased over the last 5-6 years,” according to the director of the library in the destroyed “N” building, as quoted by the regional broadcaster. During the night of 17-18 August, Russian forc
     

Sumy State University lost 60,000 books due to Russian attacks in seven months

23 août 2025 à 11:47

Sumy State University has lost a total of 60,000 books following two separate Russian strikes on its facilities, with the most recent attack on 18 August destroying 15,000 volumes in the library of the burned-down “N” building, Suspilne Sumy reported.

The latest casualties were “the newest books purchased over the last 5-6 years,” according to the director of the library in the destroyed “N” building, as quoted by the regional broadcaster.

During the night of 17-18 August, Russian forces targeted Sumy State University with missiles and drones. The strikes damaged the main building and completely burned down the newer facility.

“It (the new building or ‘N’ building) stood neglected for a long time, and seven years ago we restored the auditoriums, lecture halls and created a center for collective equipment use. Now we will have to relocate to another location. The most valuable equipment? The most expensive is a diffractometer worth five million hryvnias. All equipment here is worth about twenty million,” said first-category engineer Olena Tkachenko in comments to Suspilne.

The destroyed “N” building housed one of the university’s libraries, where 15,000 book copies were lost to fire.

This follows an earlier Russian strike on April 13 that hit Sumy’s historic center, killing 35 people. That attack damaged one of the university’s buildings and the Congress Center, where another 45,000 books were destroyed.

The combined losses from both attacks total 60,000 book volumes, according to Suspilne Sumy.

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  • ✇NYT > U.S. News
  • Here’s what to know.
    The report drew a large police response to the university’s campus northwest of Philadelphia, and students were told to shelter in place.
     

Here’s what to know.

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  • ✇Euromaidan Press
  • Russian attack on Sumy university burnt 15,000 books — third strike since 2022
    Flames consumed 15,000 books at Sumy State University overnight after the Russian missile and drone attack on the city. Russian forces have repeatedly targeted the same university. Russian forces previously hit a university academic building on 3 September 2024. The most deadly attack occurred on 13 April,  when two Russian ballistic missiles struck Sumy, killing 35 people and damaging both university buildings and the congress center. The 18 August overnight attack targeted multiple unive
     

Russian attack on Sumy university burnt 15,000 books — third strike since 2022

21 août 2025 à 10:48

Russian missiles turned 15,000 books into ash at Sumy State University in a single night. The 18 August attack destroyed the library's newest collection—every book purchased over the past six years.

Flames consumed 15,000 books at Sumy State University overnight after the Russian missile and drone attack on the city.

Russian forces have repeatedly targeted the same university. Russian forces previously hit a university academic building on 3 September 2024. The most deadly attack occurred on 13 April,  when two Russian ballistic missiles struck Sumy, killing 35 people and damaging both university buildings and the congress center.

The 18 August overnight attack targeted multiple university buildings, with the library in the “N” building suffering significant fire damage, according to Suspilne. 

The destroyed books represented the library’s most recent acquisitions, purchased within the last five to six years.

The latest losses add to devastation from previous strikes. In April, shelling of the university’s congress center resulted in the destruction of 45,000 books, library officials reported. 

Now, the total number of volumes lost to Russian strikes at this university is 60,000.

Scientific equipment damaged

University staff also worked to evacuate valuable scientific equipment from the fire-damaged building, which was flooded during firefighting efforts.

Vice-Rector Anatolia Chornous explained what they were trying to save: scanning electron microscopes, microanalyzers, and other equipment purchased through research grants since 2018.

“We had several grants, and with those funds we bought quite expensive equipment,” Chornous said.

The Center for Collective Use of Scientific Equipment represented years of building research capacity for analytical and materials science work, eliminated in a few moments.

Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine has caused heavy damage to nearly 1,000 libraries and destroyed over 200 million Ukrainian books, according to the date from Ukrainian officials.

In May 2024, a Russian missile hit a printing house in Kharkiv, killing seven workers and burning 50,000 mostly children’s books, making the need for new books even more urgent.

In the Russian-occupied territories, the authorities remove Ukrainian books from local libraries, calling them “extremist” and replacing them with Russian books. 

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  • ✇The Kyiv Independent
  • Leading Ukrainian historian Plokhii steps down from top Harvard post after 12 years
    Serhii Plokhii, a renowned scholar of Ukrainian history, is stepping down as director of the Ukrainian Research Institute at Harvard University (HURI) after 12 years of leadership, the institute announced on June 30."It has been a privilege and an honor to lead the Institute over the past 12 years,"  Plokhii said in a farewell message. Plokhii is one of the leading experts on the history of Eastern Europe. Born to a Ukrainian family in Russia, he has lived in Ukraine for 35 years and has written
     

Leading Ukrainian historian Plokhii steps down from top Harvard post after 12 years

1 juillet 2025 à 09:03
Leading Ukrainian historian Plokhii steps down from top Harvard post after 12 years

Serhii Plokhii, a renowned scholar of Ukrainian history, is stepping down as director of the Ukrainian Research Institute at Harvard University (HURI) after 12 years of leadership, the institute announced on June 30.

"It has been a privilege and an honor to lead the Institute over the past 12 years,"  Plokhii said in a farewell message.

Plokhii is one of the leading experts on the history of Eastern Europe. Born to a Ukrainian family in Russia, he has lived in Ukraine for 35 years and has written several best-selling books on the subject, including "The Gates of Europe: A History of Ukraine" and "The Last Empire: The Final Days of the Soviet Union."

Plokhii expressed gratitude to colleagues, staff, and supporters and offered best wishes to historian Terry Martin, who will assume the role of director in the upcoming academic year.

"Years marked by the anxiety and challenges of war, but also by the opportunities that institutions like HURI offer to advance what Harvard’s motto calls 'good knowledge' about Ukraine and the region."

The Ukrainian Research Institute, founded in 1973 through the support of the Ukrainian-American community, is the leading academic institution in the United States focused on Ukrainian studies.

Based at Harvard, HURI promotes research and scholarship on Ukraine's history, culture, and politics through fellowships, conferences, digital initiatives, and its flagship journal, Harvard Ukrainian Studies.

Under Plokhii's leadership, the Institute expanded its programming significantly, including the establishment of the Temerty Contemporary Ukraine Program in 2019, an initiative that became central to HURI's academic response following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

The incoming director, Martin, is a scholar of Soviet history and professor of Russian studies.

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The Kyiv Independent’s Francis Farrell explains a new modification of the standard first-person view (FPV) drone that already once transformed the way war is fought. Fiber optic cable now used to connect drone operators to FPVs ensures a perfect image and control experience all the way to the target — and cannot be spotted by enemy drone detectors.
Leading Ukrainian historian Plokhii steps down from top Harvard post after 12 yearsThe Kyiv IndependentFrancis Farrell
Leading Ukrainian historian Plokhii steps down from top Harvard post after 12 years
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