Competition email banner scaled | UNWLA - Ukrainian National Womens League of America

UNWLA and HURI launched The Ukrainian Book Challenge: One Book, One Act of Solidarity

The Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute (HURI), together with the Ukrainian National Women’s League of America (UNWLA) and with support from the HUCUS Foundation, announces a new long-term campaign: the Ukrainian Book Challenge. The campaign, designed to spread over social media much like other such viral initiatives, makes a simple but impactful ask: to buy at least one book in English about Ukraine or by a Ukrainian author – at least once a year.

Oleh Kotsyuba HURI | UNWLA - Ukrainian National Womens League of America

Every book sold is a vote for Ukrainian culture, because what russia’s war on Ukraine is really about is eradicating Ukrainian culture and erasing Ukrainian identity as a result. When readers buy even one book, they make it possible for more Ukrainian authors to be heard—because this way global publishers know that there is sustained interest in such books, and so they can make a safe bet that publishing them won’t cause financial trouble for their business. Hard data like sales numbers is the foundation for decisions all publishers have to make when considering new titles for publication, and participants of this campaign can actively contribute to laying that foundation, one book at a time.

Oleh Kotsyuba, director of publications at HURI

Launched in December 2025, the campaign turns small individual actions into a collective wave of support. Participants are encouraged to take a selfie or record a short video with their chosen book, post it on their social media, and challenge five friends to do the same using the hashtag #UkrainianBookChallenge.

I’m urging you to take part in the Ukrainian Book Challenge. The challenge is to read, give away, buy for yourself, and recommend at least one Ukrainian book this month. One that I can recommend is the novel The City by Valerian Pidmohylnyi—the first novel I read from beginning to end in Ukrainian, way back when I was learning the language. It’s now available in a really good English translation by the great Maxim Tarnawsky from the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute publishers. So, that’s one book – there are so many others that you could choose, but this is a place to start. Please take the challenge!

Timothy Snyder, professor at the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy, Chair in Modern European History supported by the Temerty Endowment for Ukrainian Studies, and director of the Public History Lab at the University of Toronto.

Snyder for book challenge 1 | UNWLA - Ukrainian National Womens League of America

Not Just Another Holiday Sales Campaign, or Why It Matters

Petelina | UNWLA - Ukrainian National Womens League of America

In the long-term perspective, this initiative goes far beyond solidarity. By buying, reading, and sharing Ukrainian books, Ukrainian-Americans and friends of Ukraine in the US and beyond help elevate Ukrainian voices and contribute to Ukraine’s cultural survival. After all, a book lives on only when someone opens and reads it—similarly, culture needs to be made tangible through engaging with it on an everyday basis if we want it to survive. 

Anna Petelina, National Education Chair at UNWLA

Publishing Ukrainian books in English is still a fragile effort—translations are expensive, it’s a niche market, and sales remain uncertain. The Ukrainian Book Challenge builds visible, grassroots demand so that publishers can keep saying “yes” to Ukrainian topics, authors, and translators.

The Ukrainian Book Challenge wouldn’t have been possible without the meaningful support from the HUCUS Foundation.

Oleksii Prokopenko HUCUS | UNWLA - Ukrainian National Womens League of America

The main goal of the HUCUS Foundation is to build bridges between Ukraine and the world. Sharing knowledge about Ukraine is perhaps the most effective way of doing that. We believe that it is our duty to history and the future to ensure that the world sees and understands Ukraine as it truly is—a strong and culturally rich country. The Ukrainian Book Challenge is a timely and very much needed initiative to achieve that, we are honored to support it, and we urge you all to take the challenge. As for myself, I already have.

Oleksii Prokopenko, CEO at HUCUS Foundation

How to Participate

  1. Everyone who cares about Ukraine and its people is invited to buy at least one book in English about or from Ukraine at least once a year—be it fiction, nonfiction, poetry, or play.
  2. To spread the word, participants would take a photo or record a short video with the book, post it on their social media, and challenge five friends to do the same.
  3. When sharing it on social media, the participants would add the hashtag #UkrainianBookChallenge and tag the publisher or recommender of the books (such as UNWLA, HURI Books, or others).

More information:

Join us. One book, one post, one act of solidarity.