All rooms are equipped with an overhead projector
Rooms C, D, E, F, G and H (H only on Saturday): slide projector (framed slides, carrousel. There are extra carrousels available to set up your presentation in advance)
Rooms C, D, M, N, O, U and Committee Room 2: beamer to connect your laptop. You have to bring you own laptop. (If you want to use your Apple notebook, please contact us, as it may be incompatible.)
Rooms C, T and U: VCR
Programme
|
|
Western Ukrainian Elite Confronting the Soviet Totalitarian Regime
| In Western Ukraine Greek Catholic clergy (which could be married) for a long time (from the end of the 18th c. up to the 20th c.) was a main intellectual, cultural and national potency of the Ukrainian elite of the region. However, after the end of the Second World War this region was incorporated into the Soviet Union and thus came under the rule of the Soviet totalitarian regime with proclaimed dictatorship of working and rural class. Thus national elites, including priests and their families, were obliged to submit to new laws and rules. Persecutions and mass deportations were used to destroy national and spiritual elites and to foster “sovietisation” in the late 1940th. In my paper I would like to discuss what forms of resistance were used by clergy and members of their families to the soviet totalitarian regime, how could they contain their dignity and stay for their values confronting choice between life and death in labour camps and special settlements at North and Far East of the USSR.
|
|
|