Ihor Ihorovych Kostenko (Ukrainian: Ігор Ігорович Костенко; 31 December 1991 – 20 February 2014) was a Ukrainian journalist, student activist and Wikipedian killed during the Euromaidan events.[1]
Ihor Kostenko | |
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Ігор Костенко | |
![]() Kostenko in 2013 | |
Born | Zubrets, Ternopil Oblast, Ukraine | 31 December 1991
Died | 20 February 2014 October Palace, Kyiv, Ukraine | (aged 22)
Cause of death | Gunshot wounds |
Education | Lviv University |
Occupation(s) | Journalist, student |
Awards | Wikipedian of the Year (2014)![]() |
Biography
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a6/Ihor_Kostenko_3.jpg/220px-Ihor_Kostenko_3.jpg)
Kostenko was born in Zubrets, Ternopil Oblast. He was raised by his grandparents, as his parents worked primarily in Saint Petersburg. As a child he attended Saint Josaphat Buchatskiy, a Ukrainian Catholic parochial school in Buchach. He had one sister, Inna.[2]
Kostenko received his bachelor's degree in 2013 and was a first-year graduate student in geography at Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, in Western Ukraine. His thesis was the development of the tourism industry in Buchach.[2] He also worked as a journalist for the online edition of the sports website Sportanalitika (Sport Analytics).[3]
He was also a regular contributor to the Ukrainian Wikipedia under the nickname Ig2000, creating more than 280 articles on aviation, economics, football and other subjects. Kostenko's article on the Soviet destroyer Nezamozhnik was recognised with the "Good Article" rating.[1]
Death
Kostenko went to Kyiv on 18 February to take part in the Euromaidan demonstrations, the pro-Western movement that broke out after Ukraine's government refused to ratify its earlier decision to join the European Union (EU). He joined other friends from Lviv in building barricades to protect the protesters. The confrontation between protesters and police worsened in the late hours of 19 February, and snipers began shooting at demonstrators.[1][4]
On 20 February 2014, Kostenko's body was found on the street, near the October Palace. He had gunshot wounds to the head and heart, and multiple fractures to his legs.[2][4]
The day after his death, Kostenko's friend Yuriy Muryn recalled his last communications with Kostenko. "He just called me yesterday and I didn't hear it ring. I called him back today and he didn't answer. I just can't comprehend it," Muryn said. "And during the first riots on Hrushevskoho he sent me his girlfriend's phone number, saying: 'Tell her that I love her, if something happens.' I thought he was joking, but when riots broke out again, he asked: 'Do you remember about my request?'"[2]
On 22 February, a procession of hundreds of people followed his hearse taking Kostenko from Kyiv to Lviv for his funeral. More than 500 mourners held a candlelight vigil in Ternopil.[5] Kostenko and six other victims from Euromaidan were mourned on 23 February at the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Lviv.[6]
Legacy
On 21 November 2014, together with the other activists killed during Euromaidan, Kostenko was posthumously awarded the title "Hero of Ukraine," the highest national award a Ukrainian citizen can earn.[7]
Kostenko was also named 2014 Wikipedian of the Year. Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales announced the award during the 2014 Wikimania Conference in August in London. Wales presented the award to Kostenko's sister, Inna, in September in Kyiv.[8]
The magazine of the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine posthumously named Kostenko "Student of the Year." The auditorium at Lviv University was renamed the "Ihor Kostenko Memorial Auditorium" in his honour.[9] An additional plaque was installed at his high school, Saint Josaphat Buchatskiy.
- Flowers, photos and candles left on Instytutska Street where he was found
- Funeral procession for Ihor Kostenko in Lviv
- Crowd at the church for his funeral
- Ihor Kostenko's grave at the cemetery
- Plaque commemorating Kostenko at the University of Lviv
See also
References
External links
Media related to Ihor Kostenko at Wikimedia Commons
- "Wikipedian of the Year" Awarded in Kyiv
- News report on funerals of Kostenko and Vasyl Moisei
- Kostenko's profile on the "Heavenly Hundred" Memorial Archived 2017-06-10 at the Wayback Machine