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Showing posts with label memories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label memories. Show all posts

Saturday, June 18, 2016

Hold on to Your Memories


People often ask me what is the most memorable moment I’ve had. It is hard to choose one unforgettable moment once you’ve passed the half-century mark. There have been many pleasant and dark phases in my life. Some of them I wish had never happened, and some of them I was happy to carry throughout my life. Like many of us, I often look back, recalling joyful flashes and regretting sad moments. One thing I know for sure is that each of those moments added something to my knowledge and taught me something about other people and myself. My character has been shaped by countless lessons, learned in moments that made me, challenging my strength, beliefs, and self-worth.

I’ve prayed for many things over the years. One of them was that I would never have to say goodbye to a woman who was my guardian angel, who devoted her entire life to helping others. Her name was Maria. She was one of my mother’s older sisters, a beautiful soul with a huge heart and an endless love for people. My aunt was only 15 years old when World War II cut her youth short. She lived in the same village where I was born, hidden deep inside the Carpathian Mountains, a beautiful place to visit, but hard to adopt. Poor and neglected by its numerous governments, it switched rulers like gloves, with increasing poverty and uncertainty. When the Nazis occupied the region, they took young people to Germany and forced them to work in labor camps. In summer the young boys and girls hid in the mountains, surviving on berries and food snuck in by their parents. In winter they had no choice but to return home.



One night, Germans surrounded the village. Maria’s older sister and a few other young villagers were hiding in a hole beneath the stable, dug at night by my grandfather. The trained dogs found the hiding spot, and soldiers dragged the young teenagers to the train station, where they’d go to Germany the next morning. Parents walked all night to reach the town, carrying small packets of belongings for their children. Among them was Maria with her father. The train was packed with girls and boys, who’d been dragged from their beds in the middle of the night. Crying and screaming, they were fearfully staring at the line of armed soldiers and viciously barking dogs. Weeping, Maria begged the commander to spare her sister from the frightful journey. Laughing, he offered to take her instead. She agreed. Leaping into the horror of war that was devastating Europe, Maria disappeared from the radar. 

World War II finally came to an end, but nobody had heard from Maria. The innocent young people who were taken to Germany ended up in labor camps in Siberia. The unlucky never returned, while the lucky ones came back with broken souls. Some of them joined the National Ukrainian militia that led a partisan war against the Soviet army.

Maria’s older sister did not escape her horrific fate. She was sent to Siberia a few weeks shy of her 19th birthday, where she spent her young years slaving in the Soviet forced labor camp in Kolyma, the coldest inhabited place on the planet. Surviving Kolyma was more difficult than any other Gulag locale. She was there until Stalin’s death. Her crime was that hungry Ukrainian militants stole milk from the communist farm where she was milking cows in the early morning.



As the years passed, many tears were shed and countless prayers were prayed. Life went on without the two young girls lost in postwar chaos. The country was slowly recovering from its wounds, celebrating births and weddings, anniversaries and reforms. For us, holidays were sad occasions, with two old pictures set in the center of the table. My grandma could not move on without closure. 

One day, like snow in the middle of summer, a letter arrived from Poland, sent by my grandpa’s sister. Inside was a tiny picture of Maria, who had succeeded in locating her aunt in Poland. To confuse the KGB, my grandpa’s sister called the woman in the picture Mary. Healthy and beautiful, a happy Maria smiled from the picture, which had taken in the United States. That was the day I met my new Aunt Mary. The horrible ordeal of the war had not touched her spirit, which shined through her warm eyes and followed me whenever I visited my grandparents’ home. I later learned that the courageous Maria jumped from the truck taking her to the train leaving Germany to Siberia. With other young survivors, she walked for days until they found an American army unit. Years later, she was granted a visa and immigrated to America.

We lived a world apart, separated by the ocean and thousands of miles, but I felt as if I’d known my new aunt forever. Her picture was placed between two icons for as long as I can remember. As a child I thought she was one of them, sweet and beautiful, just like the Holy Mother. For years there were no letters or news from the country the Soviet Union despised so much. A few times a day my grandma sent us to the mailbox, which was a half-mile away, to check the mail. Grandpa’s sister visited us once a year. It was a huge occasion when she brought Mary’s letters and pictures. Word about the letters spread through the extended family like lightning. At evening, aunts and uncles and their countless children gathered in grandpa's house. There were more than a few dozen kids, crawling and jumping, laughing and crying, from time to time pointing at the pictures of the two Marys. Waiting for grandpa to read the letters, some children fell asleep on the homemade rugs covering the dirt floor. Grandpa read Mary’s letters slowly, savoring every word, repeating sentences and paragraphs, enjoying every moment connecting him to his lost daughter. Grandma prayed through the tears, hugging the wrinkled envelope with the picture inside. Mary’s letters were more than news; they linked us to a world we knew nothing about and gave us those special moments that people value for life. They kept us together.

Letters from Mary did not come to Ukraine until the Soviet dictator finished his life the same way that his victims had. Then something happened that no one expected. Mary found a way to send money, clothing, goods, and medication, first through Poland and then to Ukraine. For a poor family, it was a blessing from the heavens—the first sweater, the first dress, the first real doll for children. After Stalin’s regime loosened up, Mary regularly sent packages to Ukraine. The fees to receive a small package from the United States cost more than a few months of one family’s earnings, but it was worth it, because one headscarf from it sold at the market paid for the entire package. Mary’s packages came at Christmas and Easter. There were enough things for kids to have something special to remember.

A month before Easter, Grandpa left to town to get Mary’s package. We impatiently waited for the bus all day. He arrived at evening, carrying a big cardboard box on his shoulder. We walked behind him, praying he would open it as soon as he got home. But instead Grandpa locked the package inside his closet and went to sleep. That was the longest week in my life. After Sunday mass, the entire family gathered at Grandpa’s house. There were many people crammed in his tiny house, but everyone was quiet. I could hear a fly buzzing behind the door. Like a magician, Grandpa pulled from the box the colorful headscarves (babyshka/xystka), sweaters, toys, and the colorful floral fabric that made a huge impression on the girls. Their eyes were glued to Grandpa cutting it in six pieces. He gave a piece of fabric to each of his daughters. All month my mom sowed skirts for the girls, and we would wear them at Easter, looking like a bunch of happy twins. In every package Mary placed a small surprise for each child. Because of her, I tasted my first bubble gum. Later in life, whenever I bought a piece of gum, I smiled. The bubble gum reminded me of the woman whose sweaters kept me warm, whose dresses made me pretty, and whose first doll made my childhood tolerable.

Aunt Mary had her own family to raise, but it did not stop her from helping others. Without hesitation, she sent clothing and food to our neighbors, her old friends, and just people in need who wrote her. She changed many lives in the most wonderful ways, by denying herself of the things she desired. With her help, we finished universities and colleges and were able to improve our lives. We all needed Aunt Mary in different ways. Sometimes we were selfish and needy, but she did not stop loving us for what we were. 

The third generation was born. My girls got their first pink dresses sent by Aunt Mary. She filled their cribs with dolls and toys. She did everything possible to give me the opportunity to live my dreams in a new country, and there is no way I could repay her for her generosity. I was the luckiest one to have Aunt Mary in my life as long as I did. My memories of her could go on and on. I could write pages about her life and kindness, but I know what she would say. She always thought that she didn't do anything extraordinary. She did it because she cared, because people should love and help each other. The world needs more people like Aunt Mary, giving, forgiving, and loving; an angel who nobly cared for others throughout her life without any expectation of recognition or glory.



Life is unpredictable. Life is struggle. You climb one hill just to see another, steeper and more rebellious. It is an ocean of problems, sprinkled with sparkles of happiness to keep us on course. But it is also beautiful once you are blessed with people like Aunt Mary, a wonderful soul who taught me the most valuable life lesson: love the person next to you if you want to be loved in return.


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Saturday, April 30, 2016

The Morning Tram in the Old City in Spring




    Spring was finally in charge of the ancient city, relishing the sight of chestnut trees blooming, spreading a sweet, heavenly fragrance throughout the lively neighborhoods. The old buildings, sinking in white blossoms, had that distinctive European flair which people fall in love with the minute they step foot on the narrow streets covered with stone paving. Through the centuries, Lviv, which is situated in West Ukraine, has absorbed many cultures that created a special charm, attracting both foes and followers of history.

     In spite of all odds and many outlandish rulers, the proud natives have preserved their language, which flows like a breath of spring breeze. Catchy and musical, it charms ears and brings smiles to strangers’ faces. There is something soothing and melodic when Ukrainians speak in their native language, something that brings out a pride for their flocks and country.Every country has something unique to be proud of. It may be enormous landmarks like the Eiffel Tower and the Egyptian pyramids, or just something small like blossoming chestnut trees thriving in May. 

    The sweetly scented white and pink flower of the horse chestnut is one of the symbols of Ukraine. Growing to a height of thirty-six meters, these impressive trees have a domed crown and stout branches, creating a huge umbrella of shade in the summer months. Tall and majestic, they tower above the tiled roofs and golden churches. The leaves consist of five to seven leaflets which change from light to dark green as they grow, and transform into a breathtaking array of gold, copper, and bronze as they die off in winter and fall to the ground. The flowers produced in spring consist of panicles with between twenty and fifty flowers on each. Between one and five fruits develop on each of these panicles, and within the green spiky capsule-like shell is a nutlike seed called a horse chestnut, or conker. Planted along streets and in parks, they flourish for hundreds of years with beauty and charm, gracefully changing moods with each passing season. The spontaneous burst of flowering trees is intimately linked to the annual rite of spring. The appearance of the flashy, spiked efflorescence, the color of pale spring sunshine, is a natural miracle that marks the return to life in the streets and parks of the old city. For Ukrainians, chestnut trees represent the re-creation, strength, and stability. 

    I was sixteen when I left a village deep in the Carpathian Mountains and moved to Lviv to attend college. The city met me with the noise of the old trams, swarming on the streets like red fire ants. For years, the loud trams have consoled and inspired artists and poets, actors and lovers, and even a simple girl like me. I woke up to the their noises, announcing the beginning of a new day, and went to sleep with the thought that tomorrow the bell would ring in front of my window, greeting me with a happy shriek. The old tramway was one of these places where I fell in love, read, talked, hid, and thought until midnight. It was my shelter from rain and snow, sun and cold, sadness and frustration, loneness and vagrancy. It took me to places I wanted to go. It was my refuge and escape, comfort, and place to unwind, a tiny getaway at the end of the day. It cradled my children when they could not sleep. It watched me crying when I had to leave my country. It was more to me than a mere machine or transport. It was my friend for sixteen years.


    Often sipping dark coffee under the crown of the blossoming trees, I turned my melancholy gaze to the screeching trams, covered in glittering petals, spinning like tiny snowflakes above their red roofs. It was something melancholic and at the same majestic to watch a morning tram going through the tunnel of the flowering trees, glowing in the dawn like young brides.


    May in Lviv was one of those beautiful seasons that always brought peace to my soul. It reinvigorated my thinking and gave me a fresh outlook on my life. Majestic silhouettes of temples, surrounded by the flowering chestnut trees, make me feel closer to Mother Earth and God. Magnificent outlines of old streets, blooming parks and wide avenues, created a feeling of purity and being born again. Elegant buildings of different ages and architectural styles surrounded by thriving chestnut trees formed that unique and unforgettable atmosphere that I will never forget.


    Years passed, things changed, but my memories will always hold the sound of the first morning tram, slowly crawling beneath the flowering chestnut trees thriving with a wild passion.


LVIV IS A UNIQUE BLEND OF EAST AND WEST CULTURES. TODAY IT IS ONE OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL CITIES IN EUROPE, AN IMPORTANT INDUSTRIAL, SCIENTIFIC, EDUCATIONAL AND CULTURAL CENTER OF WESTERN UKRAINE. LVIV IS CONSIDERED TO BE THE MOST EUROPEAN AMONG OTHER UKRAINIAN CITIES, WITH HIGH CULTURAL AND MENTAL PROXIMITY TO EUROPEAN PEOPLE.




Courtesy of Google search

Lviv is definitely one of the most picturesque cities in Ukraine. The historic center of the city has the status of the UNESCO World Heritage Site. Also, Lviv has the largest number of monuments in Ukraine



Courtesy of Google search


Lviv architecture reflects a lot of European styles corresponding to different historical epochs. Fortunately the city was not heavily damaged during the wars of the 20th century.


Courtesy of Google search

After fires of 1527 and 1556 there were almost no traces of Gothic Lviv, but the following epochs are well presented: Renaissance, baroque, classicism. The historical center of Lviv has a lot of architectural monuments of the 14th-17th centuries.

Courtesy of Google search

One of the beautiful churches is built in the neo-Gothic style. It is located in Lviv, on Kropivnitsky Square. According to legend, originally, it was named in honor of the Empress Elizabeth Habsburg, the wife of the Emperor of Austria-Hungary Franz Joseph I.
Since 1991, the church is owned by the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church and is called the Church of Sts. Olha and Elizabeth.




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