From the BBC:
“Borsch
soup in Ukraine added to Unesco endangered heritage list”
The UN's
cultural agency has added the cooking of borsch - a soup usually made with
beetroot and potatoes - in Ukraine to its list of endangered intangible
cultural heritage. Unesco said the war in Ukraine had "threatened"
the cooking of borsch. "Victory in the war for borsch is ours!"
Ukraine's Culture Minister Oleksandr Tkachenko said. Russia's foreign ministry
ridiculed the move stating that Russia's version of the dish has no need of
safeguarding.
Borsch is a
hearty soup, usually coloured red from beetroot - though green and white
varieties also exist. While Ukraine considers borsch to be its national dish,
it is also widely consumed in Russia, other ex-Soviet countries and Poland. As
a result, its origins are contentious. There are many competing claims as to
where the dish originates from, how the dish's name should be spelled, whether
it includes meat or not, and even whether sour cream should be included on top
of the soup or not. In recent years, its status as a Ukrainian or Russian dish
has been debated ferociously on social media, leading to an intensification of
what some have labelled the "borsch wars". In 2020, Ukraine applied
to have the culture of cooking the dish added to Unesco's list of endangered
cultural heritage and the decision of adding it to the list was due to be made
in 2023. But the decision-making process was fast-tracked due to Russia's
invasion of Ukraine and the "negative impact" on the tradition of the
dish, Unesco said in a press release.
"The
armed conflict has threatened the viability of the element... as people are
unable not only to cook or grow local vegetables" for the dish, "but
also to come together to practice the element, which undermines the social and
cultural well-being of communities". "Victory in the war for borsch
is ours!," said Ukrainian minister Mr Tkachenko in reaction to the news.
"We will win both in the war of borsch and in this war," referring to
Russia's invasion of Ukraine. "We will happily share borsch and its
recipes with all civilised countries. And with uncivilised ones too, so that
they have at least something good, tasty and Ukrainian," he added.
Russian foreign
ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova ridiculed the move. "Our borsch has
no need of safeguarding but should be subject to immediate and complete
destruction on the plate," she wrote on Telegram. "Humus and plov
(pilau) have been declared the national dishes of several nations. But as I
understand it everything is subject to Ukrainisation. What's next? Will pork
now be declared a Ukrainian national food?"
^ I know
Russians and while outwardly they act as though they don’t care about this or
most things happening I’m sure inside their homes – away from their Children
who are being brainwashed to denounce Family and Friends at School – they are
crying over losing Russian Borsch to the Ukrainians. ^
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