the march in downtown montreal was organized by the ukrainian canadian congress (ucc) in response to ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy’s call for people around the world to “support ukraine, to support freedom, to support life.”
alana mota, a second-generation canadian who speaks ukrainian and has visited the country of her grandparents’ birth, said she joined the march because “we’re heartbroken and we’re with our brothers and sisters in ukraine who are suffering right now.”
born in 1993, shortly after ukraine voted for independence following the dissolution of the soviet union, mota said: “i’ve only ever known a free ukraine. so this is new and unimaginable. i shouldn’t have to be here, but here i am.”
she attended the march with her aunt, chris mota, whose parents left western ukraine after the second world war.
“it’s unfathomable what is going on,” she said. “we never thought we ever be living through this horror. there aren’t words for it.”
“ukraine has suffered for so many years that even here, those of us who were born here, it’s been entrenched in us,” she said.
as she spoke, the marchers chanted “slava ukraini,” meaning “glory to ukraine,” followed by the response: “heroyam slava,” which means “glory to her heroes.”