Other members of our family headed for the Baltic states and
were caught behind the Iron Curtain; we have no idea of their names and
addresses. Axel, the cousin our mother loved, was killed on the Eastern Front.
The farm, annually buried in winter so deep in snow that the family were locked
in and lived off stored provisions, warmed by the high tiled oven (a coffee cup
went missing for months because a tall relative had left it on the top), furnished
with art and fine furniture including an amber-topped table: who knows if it
still stands, or who lives in it.
Mother got to Hamburg, where displaced people were surviving
by stealing from the ships in harbour; her sack of swag turned out to be tobacco,
so she bought a pipe – she had used to half-smoke cigars for a fat old uncle to
concentrate the tar and nicotine in the other half for him. An American GI tried
to strangle her in revenge for the death of his buddy; mother broke his hold, climbed
over a wall and came to see his CO the next day so no-one else would be killed.
Then she met a British soldier.
Her parents made it to Holstein, where father, pushing
sixty, worked with his hands for the first time in his life; we still have a
painting by her mother of haystacks. Then Wiesbaden and a flat paid for out of
government compensation, where Opa helped refugees reunite; we have an oak
plaque from his former neighbours, with the motto ‘Die Treue is das Mark der
Ehre’ (fidelity is the mark of honour.) A big man, squashed down from 600 acres
with dozens of farmworkers, to four rooms in an apartment block.
Survival; but a permanent shattering of community and shared
history.
This is what has been wished on the Ukrainians, and not just
by the Russians. A word inserted by PM Johnson (among others) early into the
narrative of the invasion is ‘unprovoked’, presumably with an eye to dragging
President Putin to a war crimes tribunal. I can hardly wait for that day, so
that the other third parties whose meddling has caused this tragedy can be exposed.
Provocation does not exonerate violence, but can mitigate the punishment; who
would be coming to the court with clean hands?
Not the EU, gobbling one ex-Warsaw Pact country after another
like a Labrador with no appetite off-switch, even though nations it has already
digested have reason to regret their membership; so letting them into NATO, which
has played ‘What’s the time, Mister Wolf?’ for thirty years after the Soviet
Union’s collapse, bringing military threat ever closer to Russia’s borders
despite promises that it wouldn’t. Not the offshore-billionaire Zelenskyy,
almost a prisoner of his ultranationalists, trying to draw the wider West into
a conflict that raises the ghost of 1962 and surprised when, like the Syrian
Armenians, his supposed friends have left him high and dry. Not the countries
that have stood off but poured in money and weapons (what a bonanza for the arms
manufacturers who spend so much on lobbying) to ‘help’ Ukraine, so prolonging
and intensifying the conflict.
Now, months after Putin’s demand that Ukraine remain out of
NATO https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/dec/17/russia-issues-list-demands-tensions-europe-ukraine-nato
was rejected out of hand, Zelenskyy has agreed, saying (he is his own
spin-doctor) that Russia is becoming more reasonable in negotiations; perhaps
the hawkish commentators detecting imminent Russian military collapse are mistaken.
Will we get back to Minsky II, but only after a reported three million refugees
and the vast, heart-breaking wreckage of the nation’s property and
infrastructure?
On the road again, the ordinary people played with by war
planners and geopolitical strategists.
12 comments:
Putin has few choices left, short on going NBC.
He started an unnecessary war to divert attention from his problems at home, as he did with Chechnya, Georgia and the Crimea.
Now, his army has been shown to have serious problems: short of fuel, munitions and food, the reactive armour in the tanks is instead cardboard, and the equipment keeps breaking. It is likely that generals and others have siphoned off most of the money for themselves. He has made a bad situation in his economy much worse.
Here is some data for you: https://www.gobankingrates.com/net-worth/politicians/volodymyr-zelensky-net-worth/
I'll not enter the fray but shall link to this now. Fine piece, "bear" boys.
@P: OTOH https://www.occrp.org/en/the-pandora-papers/pandora-papers-reveal-offshore-holdings-of-ukrainian-president-and-his-inner-circle
@P: I have a different take on Georgia/Crimea, pondering a piece.
@S = even that piece does not claim that he is worth $1.5 billion, and does note that whatever money he does have was acquired before he became President.
The relative left the cup on top of a cabinet
According to Mum's stories to me, they took stuff from a ship that sank in the harbour, and her haul was a whole bale of tobacco, which she used to float to shore, and then pulled out a clay pipe to smoke.
Unfortunately I wasn't there for so many of the family stories. You should write them all up for the children and grandchildren.
Ze: accounts differ, but he would be a fool not to salt money away heavily against the day when he is no longer useful.
https://caknowledge.com/zelenskyy-net-worth/
You are relaying stuff here that I never heard. In the end, they won't really care.
@P: You don't know that. The fact that you remember some of this, and know more than I have heard yet, says it was worth hearing. Obviously it mean more if told, but writing preserves it. Wait for more gkids.
Post a Comment