Monday, May 9, 2022

Holodomor

While reading The Trials of Harry S. Truman by Jeffery Frank last week, I became aware of the Holodomor in Ukraine (1932-1933).  It is amazing how much we don’t know!  I had never read or heard of the Holodomor—a term coined using the Ukrainian words for hunger (holod) and extermination (mor).

The Holodomor was a man-made famine.  It occurred when Soviet leader Joseph Stalin tried to collectivize agriculture in Ukraine (then a part of the Soviet Union).  The Communist Party forced peasants to relinquish their land, personal property and housing to collective farms.  This policy was resisted by the Ukrainians.  Rebellious farmers, towns and villages were prevented from receiving food (the “police” took everything edible from them).  They were not allowed to leave the Ukrainian republic in search of food.  


The result:  3.9 million Ukrainians perished from hunger.  Mass graves were dug all across the country—just as they are being dug today.  


Yesterday, May 8, 2022, 2:15 PM ET — “A UN official said that Russian forces are stealing and destroying grain in Ukraine, which may result in food shortages there and around the world.  Warnings of famine carry an echo of the Holodomor, when the Soviet Union’s decision-making resulted in the deaths of some 5 million people across the U.S.S.R., at least 3.9 million of whom were Ukrainian.”






Sunday, May 8, 2022

Mother's Day 2022

My mother was also the mother of my six siblings.  She was born in 1919, and graduated to a new realm of existence in 2014.  Mom was unique, beautiful, wise and loving.  I miss her.


My Mother in 1960.


My mother in 2012




I’m grateful for the mother of my children today as well.  I use to tell my children, especially on Mother’s Day, that she was my wife, not my mother.  She was their mother, but on this day, I join my children in “missing” her.