"Sunflower for Ukraine": photo, collage & digital. |
2GN2S ...
Photo: Nikodem Nijaki |
60 pairs of iron shoes now line the river's bank, a ghostly memorial to the victims. 'Shoes on the Danube Promenade' by Can Togay and Gyula Pauer.
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This month marks the 151st birthday of Ukrainian poet, Larysa
Kosach-Kvitka. She used a pseudonym, Lesia Ukrainka, because in the
Russian empire, publications in the Ukrainian language were forbidden.
Known for her plays, poems and for her political activism, Lesia
Ukrainka is regarded as one of the most notable Ukrainian writers of
Ukrainian literature. She traveled extensively throughout Europe and
Egypt in search of treatment for tuberculosis, and she learned much
about the world beyond her native land. Writing from Vienna in 1891 she
said, “I look at the Europe and the Europeans before me, and I want to
say something true even though I’m on the sidelines… My first impression
was that I had entered another world – a better world, a freer world.
It will be much harder for me now when I return to my country. I’m
ashamed that we are so enslaved, that we carry such heavy shackles and
sleep so peacefully under them. I have awakened, and I am sad and I
grieve; I am in pain…”
Kosach-Kvitka had a gift for languages, speaking English, German,
French, Italian, Greek, Latin, Polish, Russian, Bulgarian, and her
native Ukrainian. She wrote prolifically in spite of a debilitating
illness that often kept her bedridden for months.
Excerpt from Rufin and Priscilla (1908)
“If this continues, we will soon become
strangers in our native land,
exiles from the heavenly state,
because it has no place in our world,
and we can not get there,
where we must first die to come to life
and lose all human likeness,
to become not people and not gods,
but something like a shadow, like smoke, like steam. ”
Thanks for coming by today.
6 comments:
Stunning support art! Thank you. :-)
In 2010 we spent one week in Budapest and we too got to see these iron shoes. It was so moving and it felt so painful and I couldn't understand how this could happen. But also I don't understand what's going on in Europe at the moment. I never thought this could happen. It's so sad and terrifying.
Thanks you, John, the least I can do.
Yes, it's so hard to be hopeful on such bruta;ity, but we must.
Your blog is always so thought provoking. I loved the video. It was like watching God make art. The shapes that kept changing we so beautiful. I also liked the "just don't let them be a mean kid" quote and plan to put it into my new journal.
Thank you Jacki. And I am so glad that so many of my artist friends are doing sunflowers in sympathy and empathy with the Ukrainians.
Thank you Carrol! I am getting to this a year late, but I love you comments and anted to thank you. ;o)
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