Where there is no law, but every man does what is right in his own eyes, there is the least of real liberty
Henry M. Robert

A compliment from the US president

How Donald Trump praised Den’s former photo reporter Mykola Lazarenko
27 June, 2017 - 11:21
Photo from Iryna HERASHCHENKO’s Facebook page

As Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko was meeting his US counterpart Donald Trump in Washington on Tuesday, June 20, the American leader paid a compliment to… the Ukrainian photo correspondent Mykola Lazarenko, calling him “a true Cossack.” Iryna Herashchenko, Vice Speaker of Parliament, a member of the delegation, wrote on her Facebook page: “Journalists often ask for informal details of the meeting. Here is a lovely Washington story. When presidents Poroshenko and Trump were posing for a protocol photo in the Oval Office, the US president looked closely at our Mykola Lazarenko and asked: ‘Is this the way true Ukrainian Cossacks look?’ So the US president knows that true Cossacks look like this – with an oseledets [traditional Ukrainian Cossack haircut. – Ed.] and a moustache. And our Mykola is proud now.”

Mylola Lazarenko, the personal photographer of President Petro Poroshenko and, formerly, that of Viktor Yushchenko, calls himself alumnus of the Den photography school because he was our newspaper’s longtime photo correspondent, often took part in and won the Den Photo Competition and confessed more than once that, while working for our newspaper, he learned to see original details in the seemingly traditional “parquet photography.” Den gave him in fact a chance to make a name for himself. And the talented photographer amply revealed himself as a professional in our newspaper. Before Den, he worked for Kyivska Pravda. He once dared to take part in the Den Photo Competition and… won! The photographer himself often recalls this story – both in public interviews and in private conversations with colleagues. “In 2001 I took part in the Den Photo Competition for the first time. I won the Grand Prix for the picture Full Marks. Then Den’s editor-in-chief Larysa Ivshyna approached me and suggested that I work at the newspaper, to which I said: ‘Madam, I’m not yet up to the job at Den.’ But she turned out to be a persistent editor, and I began to work at Den two years later. I really worked here very much. Den encourages you to constantly grow and improve your skills. Then I was invited to work for the president,” Lazarenko says.

Den/The Day congratulates its colleague on the US president’s compliment and traditionally expects him to show new work in the newspaper’s photo competition.

By Vadym LUBCHAK, The Day
Rubric: