Just checked how Wikipedia is doing with its summary of the phrase:
From the 1930s it was used by different Ukrainian groups, as well as Ukrainian diaspora groups and refugee communities in the West during the Cold War.
In the Soviet Union, the slogan “Slava Ukraini!” was forbidden and discredited via a decades-long propaganda campaign alongside the diaspora Ukrainian nationalists who used it.[9][6] They were dubbed “Ukrainian bourgeois nationalists”, “Banderites”, and “Nazi henchmen” by Soviet authorities.[9]
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the slogan began to be heard at rallies and demonstrations.[6] After Ukraine declared independence in 1991, the phrase “Glory to Ukraine” became a common patriotic slogan.[citation needed] In 1995, President of the United States Bill Clinton used the phrase in a speech in Kyiv[10] (together with “God bless America”).[11]
Source for one of the first ones in literally the Atlantic council lol
Dated before February 2022. Automatically disregarded. Must be dezinformatsia. History started in February 2022.
Just checked how Wikipedia is doing with its summary of the phrase:
That’s… certainly a sentence.
Oh my god:
Source for one of the first ones in literally the Atlantic council lol
Gee I wonder who the Ukrainian diaspora was in the 1930s