Kyiv newcomer in St. John's is bringing Ukrainian news to N.L. airwaves - Action News
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Kyiv newcomer in St. John's is bringing Ukrainian news to N.L. airwaves

Two weeks of planning led to the first episode of . airingthis week, a radio show whose name translates to 'we are from Ukraine.'

We Are From Ukraine launched on CHMR radio last week

A mother and daughter sit behind the microphone in a radio studio. The walls are a bright yellow, and the back wall features the logo for CHMR 93.5 FM.
Nataliia Bortsova, right, has been on the air in Ukraine for over three decades. Now in Newfoundland, she's launched a Ukrainian-language radio show in St. John's. (Alex Kennedy/CBC)

When veteran radio host Nataliia Bortsova-Goriachievasigned off of the air on Feb. 23, she had no idea it would be her final broadcast in Ukraine.

And she certainly couldn't have imagined her next broadcast would be in Newfoundland almost eight months later.

Born in Ukraine when it was part of the Soviet Union,Bortsova-Goriachievaspent over three decades as a journalist and host for TAVR Media, a national broadcaster based in the capital of Kyiv. She told CBC News she was part of the first FM radio station in Ukrainebut wasn't sure what a radio host looked like when she began the role.

"We didn't really know how people are supposed to work on the radio," Bortsova-Goriachievasaid through a translator her daughter, Anastasiia.

"So what we did is we watched American movies, and we copied the way that radio hosts in American movies acted and tried to do something self-taught."

Bortsova-Goriachieva was unable to report on the Russian invasion of Ukraine, she said, as it wasn't safe to enter her studio after it began. FM broadcasting had been shut down and suppressed by Russia, and Kyivfaced shellingand bombings at the time.

Fast-forward to earlier this month, when Bortsova-Goriachieva and her daughter arrived in St. John's.

In a Facebook post, she detailedher life as a radio host, and wound upmeeting with the Association for New Canadians, which introduced her to Rhea Rollmann, program director of CHMR, a community radio stationbroadcasting out of Memorial University.

"We try to provide diverse programming for all the different communities here in St. John's. So the opportunity to work with someone of Nataliia's calibre and experience was something we really jumped at," Rollmann said Tuesday.

I like to think that I am making the lives of Ukrainian immigrants here a bit more interesting and a bit more happy.- Nataliia Bortsova-Goriachieva

Two weeks of planning led to the first episode of . airingthis week, a radio show that translates to 'We are from Ukraine.'

The show is a 30-minute news and music program detailing stories from Ukraine, Canada and Newfoundland and Labrador, delivered entirely in Ukrainian.

"The idea about creating a program like that came to me when I was still in Ukraine waiting for a visa," Bortsova-Goriachieva said.

"I thought that that would be really therapeutic maybe for people.Like hearing a voice that they recognize, because lots of people listened to my voice when they were in Ukraine and I was a radio host in the Ukrainian station. And also thatwould mean the world for them to hear their native language here being so far away from home."

WATCH|Natallia and Anastasiia Bortsova-Goriachieva speak with the CBC'sAlex Kennedy:

Newcomers launch Ukrainian language radio program in St. John's

2 years ago
Duration 2:37
Nataliia Bortsova-Goriachieva launched We Are From Ukraine on CHMR Radio this week, a 30-minute news and radio show performed entirely in Ukrainian. It's helping newcomers have a piece of home, and allowing her to continue what she loves to do.

Monday's show was a huge success, according to Rollmann, who says the station received calls from both Ukrainians and Newfoundlanders and Labradorians excited to hear Ukrainian on the radio.

"We've had a lot of folks reaching out and that's both newcomers to the province as well as Ukrainian community members who have been here for many years," Rollmann said.

"You know, there's something very powerful about being able to turn on your radio and hear locally produced programming in your first language.Playing music that you're familiar with, talking about issues that matter to you as a community. That's really powerful and really important."

A woman wearing over the ear headphones speaks into a microphone for a radio show. Another woman sits to her left, and is handling the microphone levels and music on a computer.
We Are From Ukraine, a 30-minute news and radio show performed entirely in Ukrainian, airs Mondays on CHMR. (Alex Kennedy/CBC)

Many of the Ukrainian newcomers who called or emailed Bortsova-Goriachieva were curious to learn more about their new home and stories of Newfoundland and Labrador, she said topics she hopes to explore in future episodes.

"They want to know more about the history of Newfoundland, about the national cuisines of Newfoundland, about the superstitions and the mythical creatures and stuff like that, the celebrations. So people are really curious about everything about Newfoundland," she said.

She also plans to grow the show with interviews in Ukrainian, musical guests and potentially introducing more English language programming as Ukrainians acclimate to the language and the province.

It's an exciting time, she said, as it allows her to continue to do the job she's loved for so many years.

"[The show]is extremely important to me here because radio is my life.When the war started, I thought that I'm never going to be able to do this again. And I was ready to do all kinds of job here, just to have a job and to get by," Bortsova-Goriachieva said.

"I like to think that I am making the lives of Ukrainian immigrants here a bit more interesting and a bit more happy."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador