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Ukraine’s Kalush Orchestra pose after winning the 2022 Eurovision Song Contest in Turin, Italy on May 15. Photo: Reuters

Ukraine wins Eurovision Song Contest in show of support for the war-ravaged nation

  • Kalush Orchestra were the bookmakers’ favourite among the 25 bands and performers. The public vote from home was decisive in securing their victory
  • The six-member, all-male band received special permission to leave the country to represent Ukraine at the music contest in Turin, Italy on Saturday
Ukraine war

Ukrainian band Kalush Orchestra won the Eurovision Song Contest in the early hours of Sunday in a clear show of support for the war-ravaged nation.

The six-man band that mixes traditional folk melodies and contemporary hip hop in a purposeful defence of Ukrainian culture was the sentimental and bookmakers’ favourite among the 25 bands and performers competing in the grand finale. The public vote from home was decisive in securing their victory.

The band’s frontman, Oleg Psiuk, took advantage of the enormous global audience to make impassioned plea to free fighters still trapped beneath a sprawling steel plant in the southern port city of Mariupol following the six-man band’s performance.

Kalush Orchestra from Ukraine perform at the Eurovision Song Contest in Turin, Italy on May 14. Photo: AP

“I ask all of you, please help Ukraine, Mariupol. Help Azovstal, right now,’’ the band’s frontman, Oleh Psiuk, said, to the live crowd of some 7,500, many of whom gave a standing ovation, and global television audience of millions.

The plea to free the remaining Ukrainian fighters trapped beneath the Azovstal plant by Russians served as a sombre reminder that the hugely popular and at times flamboyant Eurovision song contest was being played out against the backdrop of a war on Europe’s eastern flank.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was quick to offer his congratulations.

“Our courage impresses the world, our music conquers Europe! Next year Ukraine will host the Eurovision song contest,” Zelensky said in an online message. The winners traditionally get to host the event the following year.

“I thank the Kalush Orchestra for this victory and everyone who gave us your votes! I am sure that the sound of victory in the battle with the enemy is not far off,” he added.

Kalush Orchestra were among 25 bands performing in the Eurovision Song Contest final in front of a live audience in the industrial northern city of Turin, Italy, while millions more watched on television or via streaming around the world.

Ukraine launches counteroffensive near Russian-held town of Izium

Fans from Spain, Britain and elsewhere entering the PalaOlimpico venue from throughout Europe were rooting for their own country to win. Still, Ukrainian music fan Iryna Lasiy said she felt global support for her country in the war and “not only for the music.”

Russia was excluded this year after its February 24 invasion of Ukraine, a move organisers said was meant to keep politics out of the contest that promotes diversity and friendship among nations.

Ukraine’s song, Stefania, was written as a tribute to the frontman’s mother, but has transformed since the war into an anthem to the beleaguered nation, as lyrics take on new meaning. “I’ll always find my way home, even if all roads are destroyed,” Kalush Orchestra’s Oleh Psiuk wrote.

The six-member, all-male band received special permission to leave the country to represent Ukraine and Ukrainian culture at the music contest. One of the original members stayed to fight, and the others plan to return as soon as the contest is over.

Back in Ukraine, in the battered northeastern city of Kharkiv, Kalush Orchestra’s participation in the contest is seen as giving the nation another platform to garner international support.

Ukrainian service members watch the performance of Kalush Orchestra from Ukraine during the final of the 2022 Eurovision Song Contest on May 14. Photo: Reuters

“The whole country is rising, everyone in the world supports us. This is extremely nice,” said Julia Vashenko, a 29-year-old teacher.

“I believe that wherever there is Ukraine now and there is an opportunity to talk about the war, we need to talk,″ said Alexandra Konovalova, a 23-year-old make-up artist in Kharkiv. “Any competitions are important now, because of them more people learn about what is happening now.”

Kalush Orchestra from Ukraine after winning the 2022 Eurovision Song Contest in Turin, Italy on May 15. Photo: Reuters

The Eurovision winners take home a glass microphone trophy and a potential career boost.

The event was hosted by Italy after local rock band Maneskin won last year in Rotterdam. The victory shot the Rome-based band to international fame, opening for the Rolling Stones and appearing on Saturday Night Live and numerous magazine covers in their typically genderless costume code.

Twenty bands were chosen in two semi-finals this week, and were competing along with the Big Five of Italy, Britain, France, Germany and Spain, which have permanent berths due to their financial support of the contest.

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