On April 26 1986, Chernobyl nuclear reactor #4 exploded. 40 years later, the event is still one of the most distinctive events of its time. Here is a piece, I wrote on one of the medallions given to the "Liquidators" who helped clean up after the accident: https://coinofnote.com/1986-ukraine-chernobyl-liquidators-medal/

While writing this post I discovered the #ChornobylNotChernobyl hashtag from which I learnt "Chornobyl (Чорнобиль) is the correct Ukrainian spelling and transliteration, which is increasingly adopted to reflect Ukrainian identity and decolonize place names. Chernobyl (Чернобыль) is the Russian spelling, which was standard internationally during the Soviet era and remains common in Western media."
https://www.reddit.com/r/chernobyl/comments/1higops/whats_up_with_the_new_spelling_chornobyl/#:~:text=Chernobyl%20is%20the%20Russian%20(default,Russians%20nor%20Ukrainians%20existed%20then.

#Numismatics #Medallion #Chernobyl #chernobyl40thanniversary #Nuclear #NuclearAccident #History #Histodons #OnThisDay #TodayInHistory @numismatics @histodons

@EugeneMcParland I did not know about the difference in spelling. Thanks for calling our attention to it.

A quick search shows I've never used the word here, so I will resume scrolling with a clear conscience. If you have used it, I trust you were as innocent/ignorant as I, and I look forward to seeing your edited posts in my feed.

#ChornobylNotChernobyl

#Ukraine urges global use of 'Chornobyl' over 'Chernobyl' to respect its language, sovereignty, and decolonize place names, as with 'Kyiv' over 'Kiev'.

Spelling Matters.
#ChornobylNotChernobyl

Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine.