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Ukraine Marks Holodomor Remembrance With Candles and a 4 p.m. Silence

The annual observance follows a 2006 law recognizing the 1932–1933 famine as genocide.

Overview

  • The day of remembrance falls on the fourth Saturday of November under presidential decrees issued in 1998 and 2007.
  • Ukrainians plan to light memorial candles at home and observe a nationwide moment of silence at 16:00, with commemorations held across the country.
  • The famine is described as a man-made tragedy driven by Stalinist policies including forced collectivization, confiscations, trade bans, and restrictions on leaving affected areas.
  • Official data cited in the coverage attributes roughly four million deaths to the 22-month famine of 1932–1933.
  • A 2010 Kyiv Court of Appeal ruling named senior Soviet officials as organizers, and the Ukrainian Institute of National Remembrance reports 29 countries and several international bodies have recognized the Holodomor as genocide.