Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #PeaceForUkraine

Most recents (3)

1/ @YvesRocherFR, dont la plainte a envoyé @navalny au Goulag, après une quasi-fatale tentative d'empoisonnement, continue tranquillement son business en #Russie 🇷🇺, pays commettant des dizaines de milliers de crimes de guerre en #Ukraine...
@UkrinformFra
lemonde.fr/economie/artic…
2/ ...voire en commettant des crimes contre l'humanité en #Ukraine 🇺🇦.
Selon @benjaminkeltz journaliste à @lemondefr, le député @Paul_Molac & le Président de la @regionbretagne, Loïg Chesnais-Girard, @LoigCG, n'y trouvent rien à redire.
@uacrisis Paul Molac, UkraineLoïg Chesnais-Girard, Ukraine
3/ MM @BrisRocher, #JacquesRocher,les élus, vous semblez ne pas penser que la complicité d'une entreprise dans le martyr de @navalny et dans l' étouffement de toute opposition en #Russie 🇷🇺, devrait contraindre celle-ci à adopter une attitude exemplaire.
franceinter.fr/emissions/l-in…
Read 7 tweets
Out today!

‘Piece for Illia’
By Ryuichi Sakamoto and Illia Bondarenko
headphonecommute.bandcamp.com/album/for-ukra…

For Ukraine (Vol 2) out on friday 4/29, is a compilation curated by composer Hollie Kenniff and distributed by @H_C .

#standwithukraine #peaceforukraine #nowar #nowarwithukraine
Featuring ambient and modern classical composers from around the world coming together to raise funds For Ukraine, Vol 2. features a stirring new song composed by Ryuichi Sakamoto and Ukrainian violinist Illia Bondarenko called "Piece for Illia" which is out today.
Illia has been playing and uniting musicians from a bomb shelter in Ukraine, including a powerful violin flashmob where Ukrainian violinists were joined in harmony by top violinists across the world featuring 94 violinists from 29 countries:
Read 5 tweets
My grandmother Luisa was born in January 1922.
Some years before, Italy 🇮🇹 got out of the Great War, which ended with the Versaille Treaty that made the world a worse place. Italy was among the "winners" but came out distressed. Fascism was born in that context.
My grandmother was a witness to the Second World War. She went to high school when several professors were at the front. Two girls from a bigger city were displaced in her house and became family (I called them aunties when I was a child).
Food rationing was one of her memories.
I was fortunate enough to grow in a peaceful Europe that tried to build bridges (see Euro's banknotes) and peace. But I didn't forget my grandmother's memories, and I believed I would have found it difficult to explain to my son what war in Europe could look like.
Read 6 tweets

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