Ukrainian Roots Podcast / Подкаст «Українське коріння»

Ukrainian Roots Podcast / Подкаст «Українське коріння»

The Ukrainian Roots Podcast / Подкаст «Українське коріння» is dedicated to building a bridge between all Ukrainians – diaspora, displaced, and in Ukraine – and sharing our culture with the world. The Ukrainian Roots Podcast / Подкаст «Українське коріння» is a celebration and exploration of what it means to be Ukrainian, specifically during this tumultuous time in our history. The podcast is hosted by Ukrainian Canadian activist, community organiser, and award-winning journalist Sabrina Rani Furminger (YVR Screen Scene Podcast). “Our Ukrainianness is what separates us from those who seek to erase us,” says Sabrina. “Our Ukrainianness propels us forward.” The Ukrainian Roots Podcast / Подкаст «Українське коріння» is produced by YVR Screen Scene, a division of Fish Flight Entertainment in Vancouver, Canada.

Episodes

  1. Episode Seven: Ukrainians of Colour

    Jan 29

    Episode Seven: Ukrainians of Colour

    It might surprise some listeners to know that Ukraine has a significant Afro-Ukrainian population. Many of them are descendants of the African students who studied in Ukraine during Soviet times. Some have gone on to great fame, like Olympian and MP Zhan Beleniuk, who has a Rwandan father and Ukrainian mother, or Gaita-Lurdes Klaverivna Essami, AKA Gaitana, who was the first Afro-Ukrainian to represent Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest. Outside of Ukraine, there are Ukrainians of colour like our host Sabrina, whose mother is Ukrainian and whose father is from India. All this is to say that Ukrainians of colour exist, both in Ukraine and in the diaspora. But identity is complicated, and for Ukrainians of colour, it can be hard to feel like you belong to a community when you stand out in a crowd, and your own people want to know why you’re there. And when you feel separate and apart from your own people, you can start to feel separate and apart from yourself, too. Today’s episode examines how Ukrainians of colour navigate identity when they’ve been conditioned to see themselves as Ukrainian with an asterisk. Sabrina is joined in the studio by Oleksiy Grynishyn, founder and artistic director of KOLO Choir in Vancouver. Oleksiy – who is Ukrainian and Nigerian and grew up in Vinnytsia – speaks with poignancy and vulnerability about his journey to reconcile his two sides, how he deals with discrimination and micro-aggressions, and the impact that his identity has had on his artistry.

    55 min
  2. Episode Five: Am I Ukrainian?

    11/07/2025

    Episode Five: Am I Ukrainian?

    As long as there have been Ukrainians, there have been forces – russian, Muscovite – who have sought to erase us: through famine, forced assimilation, annexation, and all manner of colonial and imperial violence. They view our Ukrainianness as a threat – as well they should, because our Ukrainianness is a source of immense strength and sustenance. Alas, for many diaspora Ukrainians who’ve lost their connection to their roots for a myriad of reasons, it can be difficult and even uncomfortable to identify as Ukrainian. But every Ukrainian is needed right now in this existential fight, including diaspora Ukrainians – and Ukrainianness, once activated, is an incredibly powerful tool of resistance. As poet Katya Komlach wrote in her 2023 poem “To the diaspora”: “You are a child of the most / Fertile soil on Earth / Carry on your cause / The rear of the rear.” (Listen for a full reading of Katya’s remarkable poem at the end of this episode, at timecode 45:54).  In this special episode of Ukrainian Roots Podcast / Подкаст «Українське коріння», Sabrina is joined by her молодший брат Adrian Petriw – actor, voice actor, activist, and co-founder of the Ukrainian Canadian Advocacy Group – to discuss what it means to be a Ukrainian in the diaspora during a time of war, who gets to call themselves Ukrainian, and why it even matters. Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or the Ukrainian Roots Podcast / Подкаст «Українське коріння» site.

    50 min
  3. Episode Four: Why We Laugh

    10/23/2025

    Episode Four: Why We Laugh

    Ukrainians love to laugh. We laugh when we’re grieving, when there’s danger, in the darkness, and in the face of war. Ukrainian humour is self-deprecating, very dry, and dark. This proclivity for dark humour is not new, but it’s been front and centre since the terrorist state next door invaded Ukraine in 2022. We are the people who told a russian warship to go f**k itself, and then immortalized that exchange on an official postage stamp. We are the people who hook up busted russian tanks to our tractors and haul they away for scraps. We are the people whose бабуся brought down a drone with a jar of pickled tomatoes. Our ability to laugh is a survival strategy. We laugh because we know it’s all so absurd, and that acknowledgment keeps us upright. We laugh because if the only option was crying, we’d never, ever stop. The connection between laughter and crying – between humour and grief – is front and centre in Maria Reva’s 2025 novel, Endling. Maria’s darkly comic novel tells the story of three angry Ukrainian women, a truckful of kidnapped bachelors, and Lefty, a last-of-his-kind snail. Oh, and it takes place before and during the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Endling exemplifies the Ukrainian propensity for dark humour, while also portraying the endless grief of this endless war. It’s a wildly entertaining and cathartic read, but don’t just take our word for it: it was recently nominated for the Booker Prize. In this contemplative and yes, funny, conversation, Maria Reva – who is proud to be on russia’s sanction list, and rightly so! – reflects on writing and sharing stories during this war, the connection between grief and humour, and why we as Ukrainians are the way that we are. Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or the Ukrainian Roots Podcast site.

    55 min
  4. Episode Two: Language Matters

    09/21/2025

    Episode Two: Language Matters

    We might be biased, but we stand firm in the belief that Ukrainian is the most beautiful, lyrical, clever, and nuanced language on Planet Earth. Unfortunately, it’s also one of the first things that diaspora Ukrainians lost when mass migration swept them far from Ukraine in the first half of the 20th century. This is especially evident in Canada, where there are more than 1.3 million Ukrainians but only around 10% speak the language. For Ukrainian Canadians like podcast host Sabrina Rani Furminger whose families lost the language along the way, it’s not uncommon for them to experience a sense of loss and yearning where Ukrainian is concerned. But many diaspora Ukrainians are finding the language again. They’re reclaiming it as a form of resistance, to heal intergenerational trauma, and to strengthen their connection to their Ukrainianness.  Recently, Sabrina invited Tetyana Denford to the podcast to speak with her about this most beautiful of languages. Tetyana is a brilliant Ukrainian American author and freelance writer who is equally skilled in both English and Ukrainian. She’s a translator for Frontline News, has written and edited articles for magazines in New York and the UK, and is featured in The Telegraph and The New York Times. Tetyana’s first novel, Motherland (which was relaunched by Bookouture and Hachette UK as The Child of Ukraine), was inspired in her бабуся’s storied life, love, and losses. Additionally, Tetyana worked as a translator on the Academy Award winning documentary 20 Days in Mariupol, and earlier this year, her latest translation work with Frontline PBS was released as 2000 Meters to Andriivka. In this very special episode, Tetyana reflects on her own relationship with the Ukrainian language, how she feels when she encounters russian in the wild, and what we lose when we lose our language.

    1h 9m
  5. Episode One: A Displacement Story

    09/20/2025

    Episode One: A Displacement Story

    Putin’s war in Ukraine has wreaked havoc on all aspects of life for Ukrainians, including the very notion of home. Since February 2022, an estimated 3.7 million Ukrainians have been displaced internally, while an additional 6.9 million have sought refuge outside of the country. Whether internally or externally displaced, to be displaced is to feel like you’ve been quite literally knocked out of place. Your default place is safe at home – maybe in your family home in Odesa or your new flat in Kyiv – but the terrorist state knocked the world off its axis and, you, out of place. So now, you’re where you need to be to be safe, but a part of you is where you were, where your friends and family and everything you’ve ever known is still under fire. And so you occupy this uncomfortable space between places. Although it’s a relatively safe existence, it’s not without its burdens. Khrystyna Syvolap lives in the space between places. The Ukrainian filmmaker (Viddana) arrived in Canada in spring 2022, determined to provide for her young daughter and build something resembling a normal life thousands of miles from home. In this contemplative and deeply personal conversation with Sabrina Rani Furminger, Khrystyna reflects on her journey to this new normal, the emotional distance she feels from friends back home, the heartache she experiences as her daughter learns Canadian history (but not Ukrainian history) in her new school, and her complicated feelings about her own future.

    1h 5m

Ratings & Reviews

About

The Ukrainian Roots Podcast / Подкаст «Українське коріння» is dedicated to building a bridge between all Ukrainians – diaspora, displaced, and in Ukraine – and sharing our culture with the world. The Ukrainian Roots Podcast / Подкаст «Українське коріння» is a celebration and exploration of what it means to be Ukrainian, specifically during this tumultuous time in our history. The podcast is hosted by Ukrainian Canadian activist, community organiser, and award-winning journalist Sabrina Rani Furminger (YVR Screen Scene Podcast). “Our Ukrainianness is what separates us from those who seek to erase us,” says Sabrina. “Our Ukrainianness propels us forward.” The Ukrainian Roots Podcast / Подкаст «Українське коріння» is produced by YVR Screen Scene, a division of Fish Flight Entertainment in Vancouver, Canada.