My wife got an invitation to a wedding in Ukraine. Her colleague was about to tie the knot in Kiev – or Kyiv (Київ) in Ukrainian – and she kindly invited also her co-workers. I've travelled very little in Eastern Europe, and I had absolutely no idea how an Ukrainian wedding would be, so I wanted to seize the opportunity and tag along (I hadn't even met the bridal couple before). I did feel a bit like an intruder though, and it didn't help that I probably took more photos than the average guest. The wedding couple was young and beautiful and the venue was idyllic. The problem is that I may have ruined some actual wedding photos with my "plumber's crack". Sorry! A lesson learned.
I knew in advance where Kyiv is on the map (the first time I looked it up was probably in 1986), and I do have a fair idea about the past and present of Ukraine. Regardless, Kyiv was quite different from what I expected. The city was much bigger and the contrast between the very rich and the very poor much starker than I had imagined. You could see German luxury cars in similar abundance as on the "Goldcoast" of Switzerland. To my delight, there were still some original Soviet classics on the streets as well, put in good use by the local proletariat.
Ukraine was targeted by a cyberattack a couple of days before our travel. The ransomware plaguing the nation was dubbed as "NotPetya" and it brought down many services, including banks and ATMs. We were fortunate that the attack started before we got there, so we were able to prepare enough cash (many places were unable to accept cards). Fortunately the costs of eating and getting around in Kyiv are fairly low, so we didn't need a huge pile of hryvnia. I was particularly impressed about the cost of pre-paid SIM-cards, for ≈5 euros you get 10GB of data in a 4G network. Sweet! I understand that transmitting electromagnetic radiation through the pristine Alpine air of Switzerland must be extremely expensive compared to lowly common air they breath elsewhere, but still, how can it cost ten times as much in here? Seriously?
We usually take the local mass transit when we travel somewhere, but in Kyiv we used Uber. It was my first experience with them and I was positively surprised. Language barrier doesn't matter with Uber because the driver knows immediately where you are going, and you won't get ripped off because the payment is decided by the app. Very convenient for a tourist. The cars and drivers were all in decent condition, and one guy in particular was very talkative. We had a long insightful discussion, he was speaking Ukrainian (or Russian) and I was talking English (maybe I should've tried Finnish) and neither one of us understood a word. All the drivers knew one phrase in English though: a heavily accented "Have a nice day!", which they used regardless of the actual time of the day (or night).
As a worrywart I was concerned about the ongoing armed conflict in Eastern Ukraine. Despite the ceasefire there are still casualties on both sides practically on daily basis. The war in Donbass isn't particularly visible in Kyiv; you see posters around the city and men wearing the uniform but that's it. While we enjoyed a beautiful hot summer day walking around the city, a church that we passed by was hosting a funeral. A soldier had fallen earlier that week in an exchange of fire – a man much younger than I am – and his family and friends were giving him their final farewells. The older I become the more tired I get with all this insanity, and the funeral acted as a good reminder. That young man will never get to grow old and enjoy his mid-life crisis like I am.
We are able to measure gravitational waves emitted by distant black holes, and detect something as elusive as the Higgs boson, yet we still resolve disputes using a method that is literally thousands of years old. A different nationality, religion or political view is a carte blanche for doing unimaginable things to your fellow man. Grow up, humankind! Sad!