October 3-7, 2016 Khmelnytska NPP Netishyn, Ukraine the Conference

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

October 3-7, 2016 Khmelnytska NPP Netishyn, Ukraine the Conference October 3-7, 2016 Khmelnytska NPP Netishyn, Ukraine The Conference Organizers: George Kuzmycz Training Center for Physical Protection, Control and Accounting of Nuclear Material SS “Khmelnytska NPP” The Conference Sponsors: Swedish Radiation Safety Authority Norwegian Radiation Protection Authority NNEGC “Energoatom” 2 The Conference Organizing Committee Head of the Committee: Viktor Kushka – Ministry of Energy and Coal Industry of Ukraine Members of the Committee: Zlatan Delalic - Swedish Radiation Safety Authority Charles Streeper - Norwegian Radiation Protection Authority Oleg Makarenko – NNEGC “Energoatom” Oleg Redzynets –Khmelnytska NPP Sergiy Lopatin – State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate of Ukraine Anatoliy Boyko – Khmelnytska NPP Kostyantyn Shcherbinin – Khmelnytska NPP Olena Levina – George Kuzmycz Training Center Anna Havryliuk-Burakova – George Kuzmycz Training Center (Secretary of the Committee) 3 NETISHYN is a town of regional subordination in Khmelnytsky region, Ukraine. The town is located on the Horyn river on the borders of Khmelnytsky and Rivne regions, 6 km from Kryvyn railway station of Shepetivka-Zdolbuniv line. The town is known from 1542. The status of town is from 1984, was a part of Slavuta region. The town of regional status is from 1993. Population is 37000. Town area is 2466,93 hectares. Netishyn is the site of the Khmelnytska Nuclear Power Plant. Khmelnytska NPP had to have 4 units according to design project. Two VVER-1000 reactors are operational, each generating 1000 MW of electricity. In January 1981, as a symbolic start of construction of NPP, the first soil bucket was removed during excavation for the foundation of the first unit, and then, in October, the first cubic meter of concrete base of reactor slab was laid. The first unit was put in operation in late 1987. Construction of the second reactor was started in 1983 with plans to finish it in 1991. In 1990, however, construction was stopped as part of a moratorium on new plant construction. Construction was completed only in August 2004 after the moratorium was lifted. Khmelnytska NPP annually produces about 14-15 billion kW•h of electricity. 4 List of participants of the XIII Ukrainian Conference on Physical Protection, Control and Accounting of Nuclear Material № Name Organization Contacts 1 Burlakov SE “NNEGC “Energoatom” +38-044-277-78-68 Volodymyr Director of department of special vburlakov@direkcy. security – chief of division of atom.gov.ua technical and cryptographic protection of information 2 Arsenina SE “NNEGC “Energoatom” +38-044-277-78-08 Olena Leading engineer of division of e.arsenina@direkcy. fuel handling, department of fuel atom.gov.ua using and safety analysis, directory on nuclear and radiation safety of scientific and technical support 3 Kunytsky SE “NNEGC “Energoatom” +38-044-277-78-79 Igor Chief of division of counteraction i.kunitskiy@direkcy. to nuclear terrorism, special atom.gov.ua control and guard of critical infrastructure, department of physical protection of nuclear facilities ad nuclear materials, directory of physical protection and special security 4 Kushka Ministry of Energy and Coal +38-044-206-38-58 Industry of Ukraine Viktor viktor.kushka@mev. Deputy head of department – gov.ua chief of division of construction and operation of nuclear energy objects, department of nuclear energy and atomic-industrial complex 5 Klos Ministry of Energy and Coal +38-044-206-38-71 Industry of Ukraine Nataliya [email protected] Main specialist of division of physical protection, anti- terroristic activity and dispatching service, Administration of protection of labor, physical and civic protection 5 6 Pashchenko State Nuclear Regulatory +38-044-254-35-17 Viktor Inspectorate of Ukraine [email protected]. Deputy chief of administration on gov.ua nuclear security and safeguards – chief of division of physical protection of nuclear facilities – state inspector 7 Chernysh State Nuclear Regulatory +38-044-254-35-13 Inspectorate of Ukraine Olena [email protected]. Main specialist – state inspector ua of the guarantees sector, administration on nuclear security and guarantees 8 Vagin SSTC NRS, +38-044-422-49-56 Gennadiy Researcher of nuclear and [email protected] information security 9 Stavnichuk SSTC NRS, +38-067-385-33-01 Katheryna Assistant Director of Public [email protected]. Relations gov.ua 10 Konoplov SS “ZNPP” +38-06139-55-624 Sergiy Chief of division of operating +38-06139-55-533 control of engineering and [email protected]. technical means of physical ua protection system, physical protection service 11 Skrypka SS “ZNPP” +38-06139-55-248 Yuliya Leading engineer – technologist +38-06139-55-533 of group of nuclear materials, [email protected] division of nuclear safety 12 Sventy SS “RNPP” +38-03636-62-892 Vitaliy 1st category engineer- +38-03636-62-496 programmer, physical protection [email protected]. service ua 13 Omelyanov SS “RNPP” +38-03636-610-86 Igor Leading engineer – leader of +38-03636-223-14 safeguards group, laboratory of [email protected]. nuclear fuel, division of nuclear ua safety 14 Kozin SS “KhNPP” +38-032842-636-65 Maksym Engineer-programmer, physical [email protected] protection service 6 15 Solonenko SS “KhNPP” +38-03842-636-36 Yuliya Engineer-radiophysicist of fuel nikulin.sergiy@khnpp. laboratory, division of nuclear atom.ua safety 16 Minchuk SS “KhNPP” +38-03842-627-66 Andriy Director general assistant on Minchuk.andriy@khnpp. international cooperation atom.ua 17 Tomilin SS “SUNPP” +38-05136-426-98 Oleksandr Engineer on physical protection [email protected]. gov.ua 18 Dmytrash SS “SUNPP” +38-05136-419-36 Volodymyr Leading engineer on control and v_dmitrash@sunpp. accounting of nuclear materials, atom.gov.ua division of nuclear safety 19 Martynenko SSE “ChNPP” +38-04593-432-89 Valentyn Leading engineer, division of vimartynenko@chnpp. physical protection regime gov.ua 20 Solovyov SSE “ChNPP” +38-04593-431-13 Vladyslav Chief of laboratory for nuclear +38-04579-263-04 materials and safeguards, [email protected] division of nuclear safety 21 Kryvenko National Guard of Ukraine +38-044-249-40-67 Oleksandr First deputy commander of the [email protected] National Guard of Ukraine – chief of staff 22 Ugolkov National Guard of Ukraine +38-044-249-28-54 Igor Chief of division of physical [email protected] protection of nuclear facilities of department for vital state objects guarding, headquarters of main department 23 Valdman National Guard of Ukraine +38-067-685-20-63 Ivan First deputy commander of [email protected] Military Unit 3045 24 Vergeles National Guard of Ukraine +38-067-586-86-05 Sergiy Deputy commander of Military vv3043- Unit 3043 [email protected] 25 Ivchenko National Guard of Ukraine +38-066-882-09-68 Viktor First deputy commander of [email protected] Military Unit 3042 7 26 Soldatenko National Guard of Ukraine +38-067-518-85-34 Roman Deputy commander of Military [email protected] Unit 3044 27 Syvka National Guard of Ukraine +38-097-132-44-16 Vyacheslav First deputy commander of [email protected] Military Unit 3041 28 Ovcharenko SSE “Kyiv SISC” +38-044-259-41-12 Oleg Assistant of the head of 067-404-45-87 enterprise 29 Skrypnik SSE “Kharkiv SISC» +38-097-861-76-78 Mykola Chief of physical protection [email protected] service 30 Volochiy SSE “Lviv SISC” +38-097-501-70-77 Yaroslav Chief of physical protection [email protected] service 31 Ivanov SSE “Odesa SISC” +38-063-397-82-29 Ruslan Chief of physical protection [email protected] service 32 Ignatova SSE “Dnipropetrovsk SISC” +38-067-565-00-49 Olena Chief of division of physical ignatova.dspddmsk@ protection and man-caused- gmail.com ecological safety 33 Yurchyshena Khmelnytsky regional +38-097-45-62-841 Svitlana oncology center [email protected] Doctor-radiologist 34 Moroz North-West State inspection on +38-0362-23-61-85 Olga nuclear and radiation safety +38-096-250-88-50 SNRIU +38-050-375-39-36 Chief of division of SIRs safety [email protected] 35 Bibik National Technical University +38-067-302-27-95 Tymofiy of Ukraine “KPI” [email protected] Assistant 36 Klevtsov National Technical University +38-067-409-90-88 Sergiy of Ukraine “KPI” [email protected] Assistant 37 Maslov Odesa National Polytechnic +38-048-709-12-15 Oleg University +38-048-705-85-22 Head of department +38-067-527-65-12 8 38 Kutniy NSC Kharkiv Institute of +38-050-628-06-31 Dmytro Physics and Technology d_kutniy@kipt. Leader of research service of kharkov.ua control and accounting of nuclear materials and export control - senior staff scientist 39 Savchenko NSC Kharkiv Institute of +38-068-609-70-88 Andriy Physics and Technology savchenko@kipt. Chief of division of engineering kharkov.ua and technical means of physical protection and telecommunication 40 Ludanova Institute for Nuclear Research, +38-044-525-39-22 Tetyana NAS of Ukraine +38-096-023-01-45 Chief of service of control and +38-099-460-28-00 accounting of nuclear materials and radioactive materials [email protected] 41 Fedotov Institute for Nuclear Research, +38-044-525-44-55 Gennadiy NAS of Ukraine [email protected] Chief of physical protection service 42 Havryliuk- George Kuzmycz Training +38-044-525-36-21 Burakova Center for Physical Protection, [email protected] Anna Control and Accounting of Nuclear Material Leading engineer 43 Drapey George Kuzmycz Training +38-044-525-36-21 Sergiy Center for Physical Protection, [email protected] Control and Accounting of Nuclear Material Leading engineer 44 Levina George Kuzmycz Training +38-044-525-25-16 Center for Physical Protection, Olena [email protected] Control and Accounting of Nuclear Material Leading engineer 45 Romanova George Kuzmycz Training +38-044-525-36-21 Olena Center for Physical Protection, +38-044-525-14-02 Control and Accounting of Nuclear Material [email protected] Deputy head 9 46 Samsonenko George Kuzmycz Training +38-044-525-25-16 Alona Center for Physical Protection, [email protected].
Recommended publications
  • Ukraine Media Assessment and Program Recommendations
    UKRAINE MEDIA ASSESSMENT AND PROGRAM RECOMMENDATIONS VOLUME I FINAL REPORT June 2001 USAID Contract: AEP –I-00-00-00-00018-00 Management Systems International (MSI) Programme in Comparative Media Law & Policy, Oxford University Consultants: Dennis M. Chandler Daniel De Luce Elizabeth Tucker MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS INTERNATIONAL 600 Water Street, S.W. 202/484-7170 Washington, D.C. 20024 Fax: 202/488-0754 USA TABLE OF CONTENTS VOLUME I Acronyms and Glossary.................................................................................................................iii I. Executive Summary............................................................................................................... 1 II. Approach and Methodology .................................................................................................. 6 III. Findings.................................................................................................................................. 7 A. Overall Media Environment............................................................................................7 B. Print Media....................................................................................................................11 C. Broadcast Media............................................................................................................17 D. Internet...........................................................................................................................25 E. Business Practices .........................................................................................................26
    [Show full text]
  • State Geological Map of Ukraine
    MINISTRY OF ENVIRONMENT PROTECTION OF UKRAINE STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY NORTHERN STATE REGIONAL GEOLOGICAL ENTERPRISE "PIVNICHGEOLOGIA" STATE GEOLOGICAL MAP OF UKRAINE Scale 1:200 000 CENTRAL-UKRAINIAN SERIES Map Sheet M-35-XXII (STAROKOSTYANTYNIV) EXPLANATORY NOTES Compiled by: V.V.Lukash (responsible executive), E.V.Gadyuchka, O.G.Lisnyak, G.G.Vynogradov, K.M.Perelygin, Z.P.Okhynko, N.K.Grytsenko, L.V.Bedrak, A.V.Fedorov Editors: A.S.Voynovskiy, S.S.Derkach Expert of Scientific-Editorial Council: P.F.Bratslavskiy (UkrSGRI) English Translation (2010): B.I.Malyuk Kyiv - 2007 (2010) UDC [560.81/.82 + 502.51/.53] (477.41-37) + (477.45/46-37) The State Geological Map of Ukraine in the scale 1:200 000, map sheet M-35-XXII (Starokostyantyniv). Explanatory Notes. Kyiv: State Geological Survey, Northern State Regional Geological Enterprise "Pivnichgeologia", 2007. – English translation. – Kyiv: UkrSGRI, 2010. – 171 p. Authors: V.V.Lukash (responsible executive), E.V.Gadyuchka, O.G.Lisnyak, G.G.Vynogradov, K.M.Perelygin, Z.P.Okhynko, N.K.Grytsenko, L.V.Bedrak, A.V.Fedorov Editors: A.S.Voynovskiy, Candidate of Geological-Mineralogical Sciences, S.S.Derkach Expert of Scientific-Editorial Council P.F.Bratslavskiy, Ordinary Scientist, UkrSGRI English translation (2010) B.I.Malyuk, Doctor Hab. of Geological-Mineralogical Sciences, UkrSGRI In the explanatory notes geological data are summarized obtained after previously published edition of the medium-scale maps, updated and systematized in the course of extended geological study in the scale 1:200 000 in the map sheet M-35-XXII (Starokostyantyniv). Description is given for geological map and map of mineral resources of pre-Quaternary units, geological map and map of mineral resources of Quaternary sediments, geological map and map of mineral resources of crystalline basement, geological map of pre- Mesozoic units.
    [Show full text]
  • Perception of Local Geographical Specificity by the Population of Podolia
    88 ЕКОНОМІЧНА ТА СОЦІАЛЬНА ГЕОГРАФІЯ PERCEPTION OF LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL SPECIFICITY BY THE POPULATION OF PODOLIA Oleksiy GNATIUK Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine [email protected] Abstract: The article reveals the perception of local geographical specificity by the population of Podolia. Attention is focused on five elements of the local geographical specificity: natural, historical and cultural monuments; prominent personalities; trademarks and producers of goods and services; the origin settlement names; figurative poetic names of settlements. The tasks were the following: to determine basic qualitative and quantitative parameters of regional image-geographical systems, to find the main regularities of their spatial organization, and, finally, to classify administrative-territorial units of the region according to the basic properties of image-geographic systems using specially worked out method. Analysis made it clear that the population of Podolia is characterized by a high level of reflection of the local geographic specificity. Local image-geographical systems from different parts of the region have different structure and level of development. In particular, image-geographical systems in Vinnytsia and Ternopil oblasts are well developed, stable and hierarchized, in Khmelnitskyi oblast it is just developing, dynamic and so quite unstable. To further disclosure the regularities and patterns of local geographical specificity perception, it is advisable to carry out case studies of image-geographic systems at the level of individual settlements. Key words: territorial identity, local geographical specificity, geographic image UDC: 911.3 СПРИЙНЯТТЯ МІСЦЕВОЇ ГЕОГРАФІЧНОЇ СПЕЦИФІКИ НАСЕЛЕННЯМ ПОДІЛЛЯ Олексій ГНАТЮК Київський національний університет імені Тараса Шевченка, Україна [email protected] Анотація: У статті розглянуто сприйняття місцевої географічної специфіки населенням Подільського регіону.
    [Show full text]
  • Liudmyla Hrynevych the Price of Stalin's “Revolution from Above
    Liudmyla Hrynevych The Price of Stalin’s “Revolution from Above”: Anticipation of War among the Ukrainian Peasantry On the whole, the Soviet industrialization program, as defined by the ideological postulate on the inevitability of armed conflict between capitalism and socialism and implemented at the cost of the merciless plundering of the countryside, produced the results anticipated by the Stalinist leadership: the Soviet Union made a great industrial leap forward, marked first and foremost by the successful buildup of its military-industrial complex and the modernization of its armed forces.1 However, the Bolshevik state’s rapid development of its “steel muscle” led directly to the deaths of millions of people—the Soviet state’s most valuable human resources—and the manifestation of an unprecedented level of disloyalty to the Bolshevik government on the part of a significant proportion of the Soviet population, particularly in Ukraine, not seen since the civil wars fought between 1917 and the early 1920s. The main purpose of this article is to establish a close correlation between the Stalinist “revolution from above,” the Holodomor tragedy, and the growth of anti-Soviet moods in Ukrainian society in the context of its attitude to a potential war. The questions determining the intention of this article may be formulated more concretely as follows: How did the population of the Ukrainian SSR imagine a possible war? What was the degree of psychological preparedness for war? And, finally, the main question: To what extent did political attitudes in Ukrainian society prevalent during the unfolding of the Stalinist “revolution from above” correspond to the strategic requirement of maintaining the masses’ loyalty to the Soviet government on an adequate level as a prerequisite for the battle-readiness of the armed forces and the solidity of the home front? Soviet foreign-policy strategy during the first decade after the end of the First World War resembled the two-faced Roman god Janus.
    [Show full text]
  • The Jews of Ukraine and Moldova
    CHAPTER ONE THE JEWS OF UKRAINE AND MOLDOVA by Professor Zvi Gitelman HISTORICAL BACKGROUND A hundred years ago, the Russian Empire contained the largest Jewish community in the world, numbering about 5 million people. More than 40 percent—2 million of them—lived in Ukraine SHIFTING SOVEREIGNTIES and Bessarabia (the latter territory was subsequently divided Nearly a thousand years ago, Moldova was populated by a between the present-day Ukraine and Moldova; here, for ease Romanian-speaking people, descended from Romans, who of discussion, we use the terms “Bessarabia” and “Moldova” intermarried with the indigenous Dacians. A principality was interchangeably). Some 1.8 million lived in Ukraine (west of established in the territory in the fourteenth century, but it the Dniepr River) and in Bessarabia, and 387,000 made their did not last long. Moldova then became a tributary state of homes in Ukraine (east of the Dniepr), including Crimea. the Ottoman Empire, which lost parts of it to the Russian Thousands of others lived in what was called Eastern Galicia— Empire in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. now Western Ukraine. After the 1917 Russian Revolution, part of Moldova lay Today the Jewish population of those areas is much reduced, within the borders of Romania. Eventually part of it became due to the cumulative and devastating impacts of World War I, the Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (SSR) of Moldavia, the 1917 Russian Revolution, World War II and the Holocaust, a unit within the larger Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. massive emigration since the 1970s, and a natural decrease In August 1940, as Eastern Europe was being carved up resulting from a very low birth rate and a high mortality rate.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter #7
    NEWSLETTER #7 18.12.2017 Innovations in decentralisation: the very first in Ukraine Mobile Administrative Service Centre was launched with support from U-LEAD with Europe Programme A Mobile ASC is a specially equipped vehicle with workstations for two administrators and room for three visitors. The Mobile ASC can provide 80 types of services for citizens of remote areas. Slavuta community in Khmelnytskyi oblast is U-LEAD’s pilot region for implementation of the “mobile” format of administrative service delivery. The Mobile ASC will visit the residents of remote towns and villages on a regular basis and run 5 routes covering 20 settlements during the course of a week. It will provide access to high quality services for more than 8,000 residents of the remote areas in Slavuta community, including pensioners and people with disabilities. The mobile ASC is equipped with the terminal for cashless payments and the revenues from the administrative services will be credited to the community budget. In case of pilot’s success in Slavuta, it will be replicated in other Ukrainian communities. The “U-LEAD with Europe” Programme’s team jointly with the Vice-Prime-Minister, Minister of Regional Development, Hennadii Zubko, presented the mobile ASC in Kyiv on December 4th at the 2nd All-Ukrainian Forum for amalgamated communities. The event was attended by the President, the Head of the Parliament, Prime-Minister and heads of the amalgamated communities. At the ceremony of the ASC opening in Slavuta (which took place on November 30th), the Ambassador of Sweden to Ukraine, Martin Hagström, and the Adviser on Decentralization of the EU Delegation to Ukraine, Benedikt Herrmann, highly praised the partnership between the community and Swedish and Ukrainian experts and its role in development of accessible, high quality administrative services and good governance in Ukraine.
    [Show full text]
  • Jewish Cemetries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine
    Syracuse University SURFACE Religion College of Arts and Sciences 2005 Jewish Cemetries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine Samuel D. Gruber United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad Follow this and additional works at: https://surface.syr.edu/rel Part of the Religion Commons Recommended Citation Gruber, Samuel D., "Jewish Cemeteries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine" (2005). Full list of publications from School of Architecture. Paper 94. http://surface.syr.edu/arc/94 This Report is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Arts and Sciences at SURFACE. It has been accepted for inclusion in Religion by an authorized administrator of SURFACE. For more information, please contact [email protected]. JEWISH CEMETERIES, SYNAGOGUES, AND MASS GRAVE SITES IN UKRAINE United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad 2005 UNITED STATES COMMISSION FOR THE PRESERVATION OF AMERICA’S HERITAGE ABROAD Warren L. Miller, Chairman McLean, VA Members: Ned Bandler August B. Pust Bridgewater, CT Euclid, OH Chaskel Besser Menno Ratzker New York, NY Monsey, NY Amy S. Epstein Harriet Rotter Pinellas Park, FL Bingham Farms, MI Edgar Gluck Lee Seeman Brooklyn, NY Great Neck, NY Phyllis Kaminsky Steven E. Some Potomac, MD Princeton, NJ Zvi Kestenbaum Irving Stolberg Brooklyn, NY New Haven, CT Daniel Lapin Ari Storch Mercer Island, WA Potomac, MD Gary J. Lavine Staff: Fayetteville, NY Jeffrey L. Farrow Michael B. Levy Executive Director Washington, DC Samuel Gruber Rachmiel
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Introduction
    State Service of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre State Scientific Production Enterprise “Kartographia” TOPONYMIC GUIDELINES For map and other editors For international use Ukraine Kyiv “Kartographia” 2011 TOPONYMIC GUIDELINES FOR MAP AND OTHER EDITORS, FOR INTERNATIONAL USE UKRAINE State Service of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre State Scientific Production Enterprise “Kartographia” ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Prepared by Nina Syvak, Valerii Ponomarenko, Olha Khodzinska, Iryna Lakeichuk Scientific Consultant Iryna Rudenko Reviewed by Nataliia Kizilowa Translated by Olha Khodzinska Editor Lesia Veklych ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ © Kartographia, 2011 ISBN 978-966-475-839-7 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 Introduction ................................................................ 5 2 The Ukrainian Language............................................ 5 2.1 General Remarks.............................................. 5 2.2 The Ukrainian Alphabet and Romanization of the Ukrainian Alphabet ............................... 6 2.3 Pronunciation of Ukrainian Geographical Names............................................................... 9 2.4 Stress .............................................................. 11 3 Spelling Rules for the Ukrainian Geographical Names....................................................................... 11 4 Spelling of Generic Terms ....................................... 13 5 Place Names in Minority Languages
    [Show full text]
  • Reform Strategy for Education in Ukraine
    Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine REFORM STRATEGY FOR EDUCATION IN UKRAINE EDUCATIONAL POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS With the support of United Nations Development Programme, International Renaissance Foundation, Open Society Institute (Budapest) Kyiv – 2003 УДК 37.014.5: 37.014.3: 37.013.74 ББК 74.04 Reform Strategy for Education in Ukraine: Educational Policy Rec ommendations. – Kyiv: K.I.S., 2003. – 280 pages. A research on educational policy in Ukraine is presented in the book. The proposed publication is based upon the world approaches to definition and elaboration of options to solve educational sector problems. The authors ana lyze the modern tendencies in the 21century education development, de scribe possible alternatives, evaluate their prospects in terms of the imple mentation, and give recommendations. The main attention is attached to the following key areas of the educational reform: equal access to quality education, content of education, education quality monitoring, governance and financing. The book is for education policy makers, school managers, researchers, pedagogues, students and consultants. ISBN 9668039181 No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means without prior permission of the MOES and UNDP/Ukraine. Cover photo by UN in Ukraine © Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine, 2003 © United Nations Development Programme, 2003 © "K.I.C.", design and layout, 2003 ISBN 9668039181 Contents Contents Foreword 5 Project Team and Partners 6 Introduction 9 COMPETENCIES AS A KEY TO EDUCATIONAL
    [Show full text]
  • Jewish Cemeteries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine
    JEWISH CEMETERIES, SYNAGOGUES, AND MASS GRAVE SITES IN UKRAINE United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad 2005 UNITED STATES COMMISSION FOR THE PRESERVATION OF AMERICA’S HERITAGE ABROAD Warren L. Miller, Chairman McLean, VA Members: Ned Bandler August B. Pust Bridgewater, CT Euclid, OH Chaskel Besser Menno Ratzker New York, NY Monsey, NY Amy S. Epstein Harriet Rotter Pinellas Park, FL Bingham Farms, MI Edgar Gluck Lee Seeman Brooklyn, NY Great Neck, NY Phyllis Kaminsky Steven E. Some Potomac, MD Princeton, NJ Zvi Kestenbaum Irving Stolberg Brooklyn, NY New Haven, CT Daniel Lapin Ari Storch Mercer Island, WA Potomac, MD Gary J. Lavine Staff: Fayetteville, NY Jeffrey L. Farrow Michael B. Levy Executive Director Washington, DC Samuel Gruber Rachmiel Liberman Research Director Brookline, MA Katrina A. Krzysztofiak Laura Raybin Miller Program Manager Pembroke Pines, FL Patricia Hoglund Vincent Obsitnik Administrative Officer McLean, VA 888 17th Street, N.W., Suite 1160 Washington, DC 20006 Ph: ( 202) 254-3824 Fax: ( 202) 254-3934 E-mail: [email protected] May 30, 2005 Message from the Chairman One of the principal missions that United States law assigns the Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad is to identify and report on cemeteries, monuments, and historic buildings in Central and Eastern Europe associated with the cultural heritage of U.S. citizens, especially endangered sites. The Congress and the President were prompted to establish the Commission because of the special problem faced by Jewish sites in the region: The communities that had once cared for the properties were annihilated during the Holocaust.
    [Show full text]
  • The Creation of a Documentary Collection on the History of Russian Jewry at the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People
    The Creation of a Documentary Collection on the History of Russian Jewry at the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People Benyamin Lukin SUMMARY. At the beginning of the 1990s the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People (Jerusalem) initiated a project to survey and microfilm sources in archives throughout the former Soviet Union. The proj- ect’s aim is to create at the Central Archives a collection of archival sources on the history of Russian Jewry. The article opens with a brief description of survey activities in German and Russian archives, which preceded and in- spired similar activities by the Central Archives in government archives throughout the world. It continues with a detailed description of the Central Archives’ activities in government archives throughout the Commonwealth of Independent States. The Central Archives have created a database of in- ventories from numerous archives in Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Moldova, and the Baltic States, as well as a massive collection of micro- Benyamin Lukin is Archivist, Central Archives for the History of the Jewish Peo- ple, P.O. Box 1149, Jerusalem 91010, Israel (E-mail: [email protected]). Transliterations of place names appearing in this article are based on their Russian spellings. This article was translated by Colleen Richey and Karen Rondestvedt. [Haworth co-indexing entry note]: “The Creation of a Documentary Collection on the History of Russian Jewry at the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People.” Lukin, Benyamin. Co-published simulta- neously in Slavic & East European Information Resources (The Haworth Information Press, an imprint of The Haworth Press, Inc.) Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • SGGEE Ukrainian Gazetteer 201908 Other.Xlsx
    SGGEE Ukrainian gazetteer other oblasts © 2019 Dr. Frank Stewner Page 1 of 37 27.08.2021 Menno Location according to the SGGEE guideline of October 2013 North East Russian name old Name today Abai-Kutschuk (SE in Slavne), Rozdolne, Crimea, Ukraine 454300 331430 Абаи-Кучук Славне Abakly (lost), Pervomaiske, Crimea, Ukraine 454703 340700 Абаклы - Ablesch/Deutsch Ablesch (Prudy), Sovjetskyi, Crimea, Ukraine 451420 344205 Аблеш Пруди Abuslar (Vodopiyne), Saky, Crimea, Ukraine 451837 334838 Абузлар Водопійне Adamsfeld/Dsheljal (Sjeverne), Rozdolne, Crimea, Ukraine 452742 333421 Джелял Сєверне m Adelsheim (Novopetrivka), Zaporizhzhia, Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine 480506 345814 Вольный Новопетрівка Adshiaska (Rybakivka), Mykolaiv, Mykolaiv, Ukraine 463737 312229 Аджияск Рибаківка Adshiketsch (Kharytonivka), Simferopol, Crimea, Ukraine 451226 340853 Аджикечь Харитонівка m Adshi-Mambet (lost), Krasnohvardiiske, Crimea, Ukraine 452227 341100 Аджи-мамбет - Adyk (lost), Leninske, Crimea, Ukraine 451200 354715 Адык - Afrikanowka/Schweigert (N of Afrykanivka), Lozivskyi, Kharkiv, Ukraine 485410 364729 Африкановка/Швейкерт Африканівка Agaj (Chekhove), Rozdolne, Crimea, Ukraine 453306 332446 Агай Чехове Agjar-Dsheren (Kotelnykove), Krasnohvardiiske, Crimea, Ukraine 452154 340202 Агьяр-Джерень Котелникове Aitugan-Deutsch (Polohy), Krasnohvardiiske, Crimea, Ukraine 451426 342338 Айтуган Немецкий Пологи Ajkaul (lost), Pervomaiske, Crimea, Ukraine 453444 334311 Айкаул - Akkerman (Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi), Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi, Odesa, Ukraine 461117 302039 Белгород-Днестровский
    [Show full text]