Before arriving in Edinburgh, Nataliya Bezborodova’s impression of Scotland was formed largely by Hollywood. “My data of this nation was just about primarily based on the movie Braveheart,” she admits with amusing, standing earlier than the grand neoclassical columns of the Nationwide Galleries of Scotland. As if on cue, the citadel’s day by day gun salute fires overhead, scattering pigeons and punctuating our dialog with a jolt.
Three years have handed for the reason that 47-year-old anthropologist left her residence in Kyiv for Edinburgh, after the Russian invasion. Celluloid warriors have lengthy been changed by the rhythms of life in a metropolis she now is aware of just like the again of her hand. So nicely, actually, that she has launched a strolling tour revealing a layer even locals may miss: the story of Edinburgh’s vibrant Ukrainian group.
Bridges Throughout Borders: Tracing Ukrainian Roots within the Coronary heart of Edinburgh began in June and is the newest in a rising portfolio of women-led immersive walks developed in partnership with Ladies in Journey CIC, the UK-based social enterprise that fosters gender inclusion within the tourism trade. It now presents seven excursions celebrating multiculturalism in its many varieties: from a Saudi-led deep dive into west London’s Edgware Street to a sensory stroll alongside Ealing Street in Wembley, north-west London, with its Hindu temples and scorching avenue meals. All tour leaders are skilled by Ladies in Journey’s guiding academy, which goals to assist girls earn an revenue by sharing their tales with travellers looking for a deeper connection to a spot.
The 2-and-a-half-hour strolling tour attracts a mixture of locals and vacationers, Nataliya tells me. “I’ve even had folks from Ukraine be a part of the group, who had no concept about our shared heritage with Scotland,” she says, as we stroll alongside Princes Avenue, the town’s most important artery.
Scotland’s Ukrainian inhabitants has grown for the reason that full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine started in 2022, with about 5,000 refugees arriving by way of Edinburgh. However, as Nataliya factors out, the ties return centuries. Dominating the horizon, the crenellated define of Edinburgh Fortress looms giant. It homes St Margaret’s Chapel, constructed within the twelfth century and named after a queen considered 1 / 4 Ukrainian. Edinburgh and Kyiv had been additionally formally twinned in 1989, Nataliya provides. We move the Scott Monument, its blackened gothic spires piercing the sky. At its base, a kilted busker skirls a haunting tune on the bagpipes.
We’re quickly puffing our means up and down the leafy slopes of Calton Hill, pausing first at a plaque to Saint Wolodymyr – who helped convey Christianity to Ukraine greater than a thousand years in the past – after which on the Holodomor memorial stone honouring the seven million Ukrainians who died within the compelled famine of 1932-33. “It’s a reminder that this stuff mustn’t ever occur once more,” Nataliya displays.
A brief stroll away lies Royal Terrace, on the japanese fringe of New City, a good-looking Georgian sweep of sandstone townhouses by the Scottish architect William Henry Playfair. Tucked between swish boutique lodges and stately properties, blue-and-yellow flags flutter on the Ukrainian group centre.
Inside, a plate of selfmade potato dumplings, cooked by the centre’s summer season camp kids and topped with a dollop of bitter cream, awaits. As we tuck in, Nataliya explains how the arrival of current refugees has rekindled satisfaction amongst Edinburgh’s older Ukrainian diaspora, whose first main wave got here within the Nineteen Forties: “The newcomers helped them reconnect with a tradition that had gone underground.” Right now, the centre hosts espresso mornings, cookery courses and language classes for the Ukrainian group, alongside a rolling programme of live shows and movie screenings open to all.
Again out on the road, trams rumble by as we head west, passing acquainted landmarks, together with a bronze Sherlock Holmes, preserving watch at Picardy Place in tribute to his creator, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, born simply across the nook. Within the shadow of the redbrick Scottish Nationwide Portrait Gallery lies our last cease: the Sq., a Ukrainian-owned cafe that opened in 2023.
This modest slip of a constructing, with its slate-grey facade and plant-fringed window, is simple sufficient to overlook. Inside, although, it’s quietly pioneering: the primary place within the metropolis to serve each Scottish and Ukrainian staples (although not on the identical plate). The complete Scottish breakfast – haggis, tatties and all – sits alongside Ukrainian classics equivalent to holubtsi (cabbage rolls full of calmly spiced meat).
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The house owners, Ievgen and Valentyna Loievska, arrived in Edinburgh from the southern Ukrainian metropolis of Mykolaiv in 2022. “The cafe was our means of bridging cultures and bringing folks collectively,” Ievgen tells me. Inside minutes of sitting down, the desk groans below bowls of steaming borscht, plates piled excessive with dumplings, and deruny (crisp golden potato pancakes drenched in parmesan sauce). Simply as I feel I can’t handle one other chunk, out comes the grand finale: syrnyky – candy curd-cheese pancakes swimming in velvety berry juice – as Nataliya shares what creating the tour has meant to her personally.
“Placing the tour collectively made me realise simply what number of Ukrainian landmarks are hidden throughout this metropolis,” Nataliya says. “It’s about discovering connections between seemingly distant cultures.”
As we wrap up, I’m handed a doggy bag for the journey residence, a gesture that feels extra like leaving a favorite grandma’s kitchen than ending a strolling tour. An expertise that originally appeared a bit of leftfield now makes good sense inside the context of this metropolis, I realise. In a spot steeped in storytelling, Nataliya’s tour provides a recent chapter to Edinburgh’s ever-evolving narrative.
Ladies in Journey’s Bridges Across Borders: Tracing Ukrainian Roots in the Heart of Edinburgh tour runs each Wednesday at noon and prices £58pp, together with a taster plate on the Sq. cafe. Created with the assist of Visit Scotland