Kharkiv on country’s eastern border has long had Russian-speaking majority but things are changing fast

In a gallery in the Kharviv Literary Museum, its usual contents now packed and evacuated for safety, a group of women sat in a row, smart and eager. Behind them, leaning back in his chair, arms folded, was a tall, gaunt figure in a military jacket and high-laced boots.

It was the first meeting – modest in scale but enthusiastic in tone – of a new bi-monthly Ukrainian language club for Kharkiv’s Russian speakers.

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