Zelensky visits Picasso’s ‘Guernica’ painting after drawing parallel to Ukraine’s bombing

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, observe Pablo Picasso's 'Guernica' painting at the Reina Sofia museum, in Madrid, Spain, November 18, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 18 November 2025
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Zelensky visits Picasso’s ‘Guernica’ painting after drawing parallel to Ukraine’s bombing

  • Among the last century’s most famous paintings, “Guernica” depicts the horrors of war — specifically the bombardment of civilian targets

MADRID: Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky made a one-day visit Tuesday to Spain and seized the opportunity to view Pablo Picasso’s “Guernica.”
It was a move laden with symbolism.
Among the last century’s most famous paintings, “Guernica” depicts the horrors of war — specifically the bombardment of civilian targets. The enormous, black-grey-and-white painting features screaming women, flailing horses and a gored bull. Picasso used them to represent the bombing by Nazi and fascist Italian war planes of the town named Guernica in 1937, during Spain’s Civil War.
The painting’s distorted, cubist figures have since become a symbol of suffering, violence and resistance. At the United Nations, a tapestry of it hangs at the entry to the Security Council’s chamber, where Russia is one of five nations with a permanent seat.
Zelensky referenced the painting before. In April 2022, while remotely addressing Spain’s parliament just months into Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, he said:
“Imagine that people now — in Europe — live for weeks in basements to save lives. From shelling, from air bombs. Daily! April 2022 — and the reality in Ukraine is as if it’s April 1937. When the whole world learned the name of one of your cities — Guernica.”
The painting has had other famous visitors. Former US President Barack Obama viewed it in 2018 on a visit with Spain’s King Felipe VI. The novelist Salman Rushdie came to see “Guernica,” too, a few years after a stabbing attack that cost him his vision in one eye.
“Guernica’ is possibly the world’s first anti-war painting,” said Giles Tremlett, a historian who has written extensively about Spain under former dictator Gen. Francisco Franco. “It represents something that has had continuity since then ... and today is highly visible in Ukraine, so it seems highly apt.”
Spain’s Civil War ended in 1939, after which Franco ruled as dictator until his death on Nov. 20, 1975 — almost exactly fifty years ago.
Picasso had forbidden the painting from being shown in Spain while Franco remained in power, so it was lent to New York’s Museum of Modern Art in 1939 and displayed there for decades.
The painting returned to Spain in 1981, months after Spain’s young democracy survived an attempted military coup that was considered the last serious attempt to revert its transition to democracy.
“When ‘Guernica’ came to Spain in 1981, for us, it was a symbol of hope that there was no way Spain was going back,” said Antonio Cazorla-Sánchez, a professor of Spanish history at Trent University in Canada.
Zelensky’s tour of European capitals, including Spain, underscores Kyiv’s urgent need to reassure allies and continue to shore up support for Ukraine. Engaging partners through speeches to parliaments and appearances at major forums has become a hallmark of his leadership.
Those efforts come amid growing pressures at home and abroad as a damaging corruption scandal and other domestic strains threaten to distract attention from the war effort.


US signs $228m deal with Rwanda for health under new aid model

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US signs $228m deal with Rwanda for health under new aid model

  • Under the health deal, the US will provide up to $158 million to Rwanda to fight HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other infectious diseases, the State Department said
  • The health funding agreement comes a day after Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame and his Democratic Republic of the Congo counterpart, Felix Tshisekedi, affirmed their commitment to a deal to end the conflict in eastern Congo

KIGALI: The US and Rwanda have signed a deal providing $228 million for the health sector in the East African nation, the State Department said, the second such pact under the US administration’s new approach to overseas aid.
Kenya became the first country this week to strike a deal with Washington under the “America First Global Health Strategy,” unveiled in September by the administration and aimed at improving target countries’ self-reliance in managing their health sectors.
The $228 million will be provided by both governments.
The Rwanda deal lays out “a comprehensive vision to save lives, strengthen Rwanda’s health system,” the State Department said, while helping to make America “safer.”
The health funding agreement comes a day after Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame and his Democratic Republic of the Congo counterpart, Felix Tshisekedi, affirmed their commitment to a deal to end the conflict in eastern Congo.
Under the health deal, the US will provide up to $158 million to Rwanda to fight HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other infectious diseases, the State Department said. 
The cash will also strengthen disease surveillance and outbreak response.
“In turn, the government of Rwanda plans to increase its own domestic health investment by $70 million, taking on greater financial responsibility as US support is gradually reduced over the years,” the department said.
The agreement will also build on an initiative that sees drone-delivery startup Zipline taking lifesaving medical products where they are needed, in co-operation with Rwanda, the department said.
“The agreement underscores Rwanda’s ambition to build a self-reliant, adaptive, and technology-enabled health system,” said Oliver Nduhungirehe, Rwanda’s foreign minister, after he signed the deal with US officials in Washington.