A number of Russian channels took this video of Ukrainian youth ceremony in Lviv and presented it as "evidence of Nazism in Ukraine", claiming the participants were using Nazi symbolics and shouting "glory to the nation". They are lying, however - the youth is reciting the words of a song - "Mantra" by Fahot. The whole lyrics is presented in English below, so everyone can check that there's no Nazi or even nationalist references there, just as there are none in the video.
Clothed in the veil of Christ,
My skin is iron armour,
My blood is strong ore,
My bones are a sword,
Faster than arrows, more vigilant than a falcon.
Chorus:
Armour is upon me, the Lord is within me!
Armour is upon me, the Lord is within me!
Armour is upon me, the Lord is within me!
Amen...
The clouds have dispersed, the sun is shining,
My heart is beating in my chest.
Oh, spring has come, oh, it has come so beautiful,
Bringing me happiness and joy...
And here's how the musician from Fahot recall the motivation for this song: "It was 16 March 2014, on Sunday, I found out that Pilunsky had been kidnapped during the ‘referendum’ in Crimea. No one knew where he was. Each of us made the same calls to the same people who could help find him, but even after that, just sitting and waiting was not very comfortable."
The man mentioned above is Yaroslav Pilunski, Ukrainian film director, who was indeed kidnapped in March 2014 but fortunately released after 6 days in detention by Russian army covertly occupying Crimea at that time.