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Looking at the Ukraine-Russia Crisis from my Ancestral Village

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  • Looking at the Ukraine-Russia Crisis from my Ancestral Village

    The New York Times
    April 19 2014

    Looking at the Ukraine-Russia Crisis from my Ancestral Village

    By NICHOLAS KRISTOF April 19, 2014, 3:19 pm


    For my Sunday column, I returned to the village near Chernivtsi,
    Ukraine, where my father grew up. What struck me there was the deep
    yearning for connections to the West, for a future tied not with
    Russia but with Western Europe. Obviously, one encounters somewhat
    different sentiments in eastern Ukraine, but overall this popular
    yearning for a future in Europe runs both deep and broad.

    A word about my father's roots. His family was Armenian but had left
    Armenia centuries ago, then moved to Iasi in what is now Romania, then
    to a Polish-speaking area in what is now western Ukraine, and finally
    in the early 19th century to this village of Karapchiv. The family's
    Armenian name was Hachikian, but it was translated by meaning into
    Polish as Krzysztofowicz-which my father shortened to Kristof. When my
    dad grew up the area was Romanian, northern Bucovina, but in 1940 the
    Soviets annexed it. After spying for the free Poland government in
    exile, my family fled mostly to Poland; some relatives were executed
    by the Nazis and others by the Soviets. For his part, my father fled
    to Romania, then Yugoslavia and, after years in a labor camp, to
    Italy, France and finally America. He arrived in 1951 and finally
    passed away, at age 91, in 2010. His life story-from
    Austrian-Hungarian nobility to war refugee, concentration camp
    survivor and finally American university professor-was astonishing.

    The next few days in Ukraine are likely to be pivotal-either the
    pro-Russian militants will begin to back down, or Russia may annex
    part of what it calls "New Russia" in Ukraine-but I'm hoping that the
    popular yearning for change and for a life in Europe will ultimately
    prevail at least for the great majority of Ukraine. Read the column
    and share your thoughts.

    http://kristof.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/04/19/looking-at-the-ukraine-russia-crisis-from-my-ancestral-village/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=0



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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