Vladimir Vyatrovich - historian, writer, participant of Euromaidan, protest rallies, head of the Center for Studies of the Liberation Movement.
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Biography
Vladimir Mikhailovich Vyatrovich was born on July 7, 1977 in Lviv. In the same city, childhood, youth and students passed. The guy was far from creativity, he loved sports and history.
In 1994, Vyatrovich entered the historical faculty of Lviv University. Interest in politics arose even then. After graduating, Vladimir defended his thesis, receiving the degree of candidate of historical sciences in the direction of the revolution.
In 2002, a career went uphill. He headed the Center for Studies of the Liberation Movement in Lviv. He quickly got into the know. He reorganized the work of the organization based on personal historical convictions.
In 2004, Vladimir Mikhailovich declared himself during the Orange Revolution. He raised hundreds of people to rallies. He was the coordinator of the black "Pores."
A year later, he began teaching at the Catholic Institute of Ukraine. He published the country's first training course for the Liberation Movement. He made a great contribution to its development.
In the summer of 2005, Vyatrovich became a member of the Institute of Ukrainian Studies. With some representatives of the educational institution, he had a misunderstanding, due to a different approach to documentary facts.
After 2 years, Vladimir Mikhailovich already represented the Institute of National Remembrance.
In 2008, an opportunity arose to gain new experience. The historian began to consult specialists of an international project on the recognition of the 1932 Holodomor as genocide.
In January 2008, Vladimir was invited to the post of adviser on scientific work of the head of the Security Service of Ukraine. Confirming personal competence, after 6 months, he headed the branch service archive in Kiev.
Problems with law
In the fall of 2018, more than 300 Ukrainians who escalate the political situation and display aggression against citizens of the fraternal state fell under the sanctions imposed by Russia. Among them was Vyatrovich.
Exactly one year later, it became known about the initiation of a criminal case, where Vladimir Mikhailovich passed as a suspect. It was about his attempts to rehabilitate Nazism, refuting the facts indicated by the military tribunal. Vyatrovich also denied that Ukrainian nationalists who fought in 1941 massacred civilians and belonged to the SS troops.