4 
 COURIER LIFE, MARCH 25-31, 2022 
 BY MEAGHAN MCGOLDRICK 
 Hundreds of people from Russia, 
  Ukraine, Georgia and Kazakhstan  
 took to the Riegelmann  
 Boardwalk in Brighton Beach on  
 Sunday to stand with residents  
 of Ukraine — just one day after  
 a similar showing of support  
 in one of the Russian diaspora’s  
 largest  communities  outside  of  
 eastern Europe. 
 The March 20 protest was organized  
 by a group called For  
 Freedom in Russia, which bills itself  
 on social media as a means to  
 “fi ght the Putin regime.” 
 Organizer Alexander Korzun  
 told Brooklyn Paper the rally was  
 important for two reasons. 
 “First, this war is horrible and  
 it should be stopped as soon as possible,” 
  he said, noting the humanitarian  
 crisis in cities such as Mariupol, 
  Kyiv and Kharkiv, where  
 bombs are dropping daily. “People  
 are dying, civilians and children  
 are under fi re in Ukraine.” 
 Secondly, Korzun said “Russian  
 people should not be silent  
 now.” 
 “As  Russians  we  do  want  to  
 say that we are strongly against  
 this war, we  condemn Russian  
 President Vladimir Putin’s aggression  
 and those who support  
 this war. And we stand with  
 Ukraine,” he said. “Russia is  
 turning  into  totalitarian  dictatorship  
 — and that’s a horrible  
 development, too — so a lot of people  
 in Russia can’t express their  
 opinion now. Yet still we use an  
 opportunity to speak freely here  
 in New York to say that Russian  
 people can’t or afraid to say.” 
 Just the day before, RUSA  
 LGBTQ+, a local community of  
 queer Russian speakers and immigrants  
 from  former  parts  of  
 the Soviet Union, organized its  
 own march  and  rally  along  the  
 boardwalk. Marchers stepped off  
 from the Coney Island section of  
 the boardwalk and walked east  
 to Brighton Beach, stopping several  
 times to sing and dance to  
 Ukrainian music. 
 As the march progressed,  
 chants of “No Putin, no war!” and  
 “Get out of Ukraine!” reverberated  
 down the boardwalk — rare  
 sounds in an otherwise sleepy  
 neighborhood — and pedestrians  
 frequently stopped to record videos  
 or clap along. The marchers,  
 including many Ukrainians, also  
 repeated the controversial demand  
 to impose a no-fl y zone over  
 Ukraine — something the United  
 States and other western countries  
 have strongly opposed due to  
 the risks of a global war. 
 Similar calls and chants were  
 made Sunday, as the  invasion  
 overseas continued to escalate. 
 In a sea of Ukrainian blue-andyellow  
 fl ags  —  and  posters calling  
 for the imprisonment of Putin  
 — stood many white fl ags with a  
 center blue stripe. This “so-called  
 Russian anti-war fl ag,” Korzun  
 said, is reminiscent of a “Russian  
 fl ag without blood.” 
 “This fl ag is already banned in  
 Russia but for us it’s a symbol of  
 freedom,  peace,  and  responsibility  
 to stop this bloody chapter of  
 Russian history,” he told Brooklyn  
 Paper. 
 This weekend was not the fi rst  
 in which southern Brooklynites  
 took to the streets to decry the  
 war. 
 Scores of locals massed at Asser  
 Levy Park on Feb. 27 draped in  
 the nation’s yellow-and-blue fl ags  
 to show their support to a country  
 under siege. Yet another large  
 gathering in support of Ukraine  
 took place on March 6 on the historic  
 boardwalk  connecting  Coney  
 Island and Brighton Beach. 
 Among those who have shown  
 support for the  local rallies are  
 INSIDE 
 Your entertainment 
 guide Page 31 
 Police Blotter ............................... 8 
 Camps  .........................................20 
 Op-Ed ............................................28 
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 Brighton Beach rallies  Protesters called for an end to the war  
 in Ukraine — and the mprisonment of  
 Russian  President  Vladimir  Putin  at  
 back-to-back  Brighton  Beach  rallies  
 on  Saturday,  March  19  and  Sunday,  
 March 20.  
   Photos by Erica Price and Matt Tracy 
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