On September 11, 2019, students of the academic groups PR-202, PR-203, PR-204, accompanied by mentors Irina Litvinova, Anna Rybikova, and Lilia Grekova, visited the Mamayev Sloboda Museum.
Mamaeva Sloboda is an open-air educational museum with a restored 18th-century architectural ensemble of the Dnieper. In the center of the architectural ensemble, with 98 objects, there is a Cossack three-story wooden church in the name of the Intercession of the Blessed Virgin with a bell tower, similar to those that stood on Zaporizhzhya Sich in the time of Bohdan-Zinovy Khmelnytsky.
Not far from the church, a windmill, a symbol of peaceful Ukraines bakery, is visible on a hill in a small field of wheat. Further over the two covered reeds, lilies and laths of lakes, there are the estates of the titar, the Cossack jur, the Cossack sergeant, the blacksmith with the forge, the potter with the pottery workshop, the fortune teller, the ham of the Jewish shopkeeper, and the apiary and water mill. The estates are made up of buildings of different economic purpose: they are barns, twigs, stables, cellars, sheds, clubs, booths and more. This traditional Ukrainian landscape is complemented by a bazaar, administration and a Cossack pledge.
Such measures will shape future lawyers feelings of patriotism and respect for the history of Ukraine, the revival of original folk traditions, customs, rituals, forgotten work skills and crafts.