Ukraine’s Right to be
Itself. Sovereign, Indivisible, Independent
Address by President
of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the occasion of Constitution Day, the 30th
anniversary of the Constitution of Ukraine, delivered on June 28, 2026.
The wounded churches of Ukraine. Attacked by evil. Riddled
with Russian bullets. Shattered by guided aerial bombs and missiles. Famous
cathedrals in cities of millions and small churches in our villages. Churches,
mosques, synagogues. Seven hundred and forty religious sites in Ukraine that
Putin has struck. This is who we are fighting. This is what our enemy is.
On the night of June 15, he added the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra
and the Dormition Cathedral to the list of evidence of his madness. Yet another
strike, yet another manifestation of their true nature, and at the same time
yet another proof that the unity of Ukrainians is our greatest strength. That
night, our Lavra stood firm thanks to our people.
Distinguished guests, dear warriors, our firefighters and
first responders, statesmen, dear presidents, representatives of the clergy and
the diplomatic corps, dear Ukrainian people,
Today is a special day. Emotionally and spiritually very
powerful. Sunday. Constitution Day of Ukraine. Exactly thirty years ago, an
important pillar of our state’s independence was established. It was when
Ukrainians stopped living under the old law, and most importantly, someone
else’s law, and fully began to build a new life, their own life, based on new
foundations and principles, the foremost of which is Ukraine’s right to be
itself. Sovereign, indivisible, independent. These are the fundamental things
of our Fundamental Law, the Constitution of Ukraine. But any articles of the
Constitution would remain only letters on paper without the millions of
Ukrainians who are ready to defend our independence, their land, their rights
and freedoms – and to do so in unity. And only in this way.
We have seen this unity hundreds of times. We saw it on the
night of June 15, right here, in this symbolic place of our strength, in our
Lavra, near our Dormition Cathedral. The cathedral that stood firm, that people
prayed for together, and that was saved together by employees of the State
Emergency Service – thank you – our priests, the staff of the national
preserve, and everyone who cared. They saved unique exhibits and relics, fought
fire and wind, and did so selflessly, proactively, and in a coordinated way,
despite the risk of another enemy strike and without any additional, special
instructions. No one needed to be told why this mattered, or just how much.
This is symbolic. It is a manifestation of our maturity and,
in particular, of our understanding of the Constitution of Ukraine, which gives
Ukrainians our bearings. But from there, it is our people who fill it with
meaning, who fill it with life – every day – and prove that the strength of
Ukraine’s Fundamental Law lies not in the legal beauty of its articles, but in
the true unity of Ukraine.
It is this unity of ours – on the night of June 15, on the
morning of February 24, and throughout the entire war – that is one of the
reasons why we are standing together and standing here today, on our own land,
under our own flags, battle standards, and crosses, celebrating our own
holidays and paying tribute to our state, our people, and our Constitution. To
everything that unites us when we know firmly: the Lavra stands, St. Sophia
stands, and therefore Kyiv stands, Ukraine stands. It stands and will stand
firm.
Because people fight for it and pray for it in every corner
of our country. And today’s joint prayer here will be a reflection of this. A
unique, absolutely unique prayer, held in this format for the first time,
bringing together priests from different regions of Ukraine. Those whose churches
have been damaged and destroyed by Russian strikes: Ukraine’s wounded churches
in the Kharkiv region, the Sumy region, Dnipro, Chernihiv, and Irpin. Together
with them, priests from Berdiansk, the Odesa region, and the Ternopil region,
who went through the hell of Russian captivity, will pray for Ukraine.
Father Vasyl Fedorenko, who combined service to God and
military service – defending Mariupol and baptizing fighters at Azovstal.
Chaplain Mykola Luchynskyi, who opened an exhibition about this war in a church
in Khmelnytskyi, bringing its exhibits himself after his regular trips to the
front.
A parish minister in the Ivano-Frankivsk region, Ivan
Teremko, who once underwent an amputation and today visits our severely wounded
fighters and strengthens their spirit. The head of the Polish church in our
Mykolaiv region, Paweł Staniaszek, who was born in Poland but has lived in
Ukraine since 2014, having chosen helping our people and our warriors at the
front as his mission. And Valentyn Horokhovskyi from Kherson, who did not
surrender his church to the occupiers, evacuated many children from the
captured city, and returned to his church after Kherson was liberated – because
truth always prevails.
Today we will hear them, hear their stories, united by one
central moral: everything that has been destroyed, we will rebuild, because the
light in the soul has endured. Ukraine is strong, and it is strong when the
state, the church, our military, the people of Ukraine, and the world – the
entire world that is helping us so much – become one whole. For the sake of
peace and for the sake of Ukraine. This may not be written directly in
Ukraine’s Constitution, but it certainly corresponds to the spirit of the law
by which we are building our life in this difficult time. And it certainly
corresponds to the bright ideas with which our fallen heroes, our heroic
warriors, every man and woman who gave their lives so that our state may live
defended Ukraine and independence. I now ask everyone to honor them with a
moment of silence.
Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen,
2026 is a special year for our state. Ukraine is marking
anniversaries: the adoption of the Constitution, the establishment of the Armed
Forces of Ukraine, the restoration of our state symbols and the hryvnia. And the
culmination of all this is August 24, 2026 – Independence Day of Ukraine. The
35th anniversary of the restoration of our independence. It is important that
in such a year, Ukraine is giving rise to new, landmark elements of its
state-building.
Today, I submitted to Parliament a law on the Ukrainian
National Pantheon. The names of all the heroes who, across different centuries
and eras, fought for Ukraine and inspired Ukraine will be brought together and
forever inscribed in our history – with a capital letter, with great respect
and attention from the state, our state – Ukraine, which respects itself,
values its people, and defends what is its own – its own, and this is very
important, its own right to be Ukrainian. When no one, ever, will dictate how
we should live, how we should speak, whom we should love, whom we should be
grateful to, or which heroes we should honor.
And it is precisely in this context, as a sign of exactly
this kind of gratitude, that today we are righting yet another historical
injustice. From now on, here in the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra, a bust of a great
Ukrainian and patron of the Lavra, Ivan Mazepa, will stand, as it rightfully
should.
For centuries, Russia has smeared his name, striving to make
Ukrainians view their own history through the eyes of others, convincing our
people that Mazepa was a traitor. This is a lie, and this lie has failed.
Forever.
And today, we honor our own outstanding statesman and
military leader, patron, and head of the Cossack State, Ivan Mazepa.
It is important that we are doing this precisely here, in
the Lavra, which truly flourished under his patronage – with its churches, bell
towers, and its unique Ukrainian Baroque face.
And without doubt, a figure of this scale deserves a
full-fledged monument in the capital of our state. I believe that there is an
ideal location for it. It has been there since December 2013 on Shevchenko
Boulevard, and I am certain that where Lenin fell, Mazepa will stand firm.
Dear friends, dear citizens,
Today, we are at the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra. This is truly our
pride. It is one of the oldest holy sites of the Christian world, which was a
bastion of Orthodoxy in Eastern Europe. And it has always been much more than
just a monastery. At a time when Moscow did not yet exist, the Lavra was a
cradle of development, where Ukrainian history, education, science, art, icon
painting, book printing, and medicine took shape. Here, the Ukrainian soul, our
memory, and our national identity were formed.
Already in August, on the Feast of the Dormition, the Kyiv
Pechersk Lavra will mark 975 years since its founding. This is a special
milestone. For in just one generation, Ukrainians on this land will be
celebrating the Lavra’s millennium. Our national holy site, alongside St.
Sophia, the Transfiguration Cathedral in Chernihiv, and many other witnesses to
the thousand-year existence of Kyivan Rus’ – all of this together definitively
affirms the fact that the roots of Ukrainians on this land are vast, strong,
and our own.
I am speaking now about an event that will take place 25
years from now for a reason. Ukraine will mark milestones such as the Lavra’s
millennium with dignity. And preparations will begin today. After all, this is
about a long and painstaking process: restoring and preserving dozens of
cultural monuments, museum collections, the Lavra’s buildings, our great
heritage – one of the world’s centers of Christianity. This requires a major,
collective effort, which we are beginning today. And we must mark the Lavra’s
millennium in the same unity that strengthens and protects our people and our
state. I am signing the relevant Decree here and now.
Dear people,
Thirty years ago, the Constitution of Ukraine was adopted.
The Constitution of a democratic state. A free state, capable of defending its
values. A state that, thanks to the Constitution, has a solid foundation for
building Ukraine – a European Ukraine.
Ukraine has already come a long way to the EU. Much has been
built on this foundation, negotiations on our membership, future EU membership,
have already begun, clusters are already being opened, and every such step
brings us closer together – Ukraine and the European Union, Ukrainians and, or
course, all of Europe. Behind every such success of the state stand our
citizens, our warriors, and all our people who protect the security and the
future of all of Europe. And who, through all their actions every day, bring
closer not merely accession, but our affirmation as an integral part of the
common European home. And behind every such step also stand our like-minded
people from other countries – true friends and allies, tested by time and
struggle, who have proven that Ukraine and Europe are one.
Ukraine will honor all such individuals with a new state
award: the Order of Europe. A symbol of the effectiveness of our joint defense
of Europe.
Ukraine has fully earned the right to have an order with
this very name – earned it through its round-the-clock fight for Europe’s life.
And all those who have stood and continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with us
in this fight will be honored with this distinction: Ukraine’s Order of Europe.
Dear Ukrainians,
I began this speech by speaking about what a decisive force
our Ukrainian unity is. And I want to emphasize this once again, because today
we are all united in what matters most: Ukraine wants peace. Ukraine wants to
live its own life on its own land and be free to determine its future, to
choose its friends, to be proud of those who truly deserve it, and to be strong
enough not to surrender what is truly valuable to all of us. When Ukrainians
are together, and when we work toward a common goal, we achieve extraordinary
things. I believe that together we will also achieve what we all dream of – a
durable and just peace, peace for Ukraine. It will certainly come. Our
independence will endure. Our Ukrainian people will endure. Our sacred places
will endure. We protect them. We care for the state. We work for our Ukraine. I
thank everyone who protects those beside them and cares for our national
interests as they would for themselves.
Happy Constitution
Day of Ukraine!
Glory to Ukraine!