Saturday, February 19, 2011

Prague: Looking for Vaclav Havel


































“I really do inhabit a universe in which words are capable of shaking the entire structure of government, where words can prove mightier than ten military divisions."
Vaclav Havel, former president of Czechoslovakia and then president of the independent Czech Republic until 2003.


I was in Prague and so I decided to look for one of my heroes, Vaclac Havel, the brilliant, talented poet and former president of the Czech Republic. He stepped down in 2003 and has since returned to theatre, teaching, international relations, and writing. He is one of the people in this world, along with the likes of Jefferson, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, with whom I’d love to have dinner. I’d ask Havel about his life’s work, his passions, his role as a leader of the “velvet revolution’ that peacefully freed the country of Communist occupation. I’d ask him how a poet became a president, how a poet, playwright, and artist became a political activist and an icon of independence. I’d listen to him read his poetry and newest plays over coffee and dessert, savoring every moment with this great man.

Prague, the Czech capital, is an incredibly beautiful city, I think one of the most beautiful I have ever seen. How wonderful it must have been, how enriching and inspiring, to grow up here. My search for Havel began with a night cruise down the historic Vltava river. It was our group’s introduction to the city, led by experienced guide Bella, who lives in Prague and speaks fluent Russian. She knows the city like the back of her hand. She pointed out the sights along the river as we passed under lovely bridges, including the Charles, the oldest in Europe. As night fell and over a hearty dinner with some great Czech beer, she gave us some history, talked a little about Havel and the revolution he helped lead. Havel wasn’t on the boat, but his presence was felt.

After the cruise, Bella led us on a walking tour of the city. As tired as we were, after a 27-hour bus trip from Lviv that included a 7-hour wait at the Ukraine-Poland border, it was a wonderful walk, like a luscious dessert topping off a grand five-course dinner. Our group of 30 diverse people, many from Kyiv where the tour started, turned out to be such enthusiastic tourists it was contagious! We walked through squares, between buildings, under elaborate archways, around grand churches, cultural centers and towers, and stopped for closer looks at many, including the Maisel Synagogue, a fanciful pure white building that shines like a beacon in the night. Kind of unusual architecture for a Synagogue I thought, but, then, we are in Prague, and everything imaginable is possible.

There’s something about seeing a city for the first time at night that is wondrous: all the sites are lit up like a gigantic Christmas tree of many colored lights, decorated with the most elegant arts and crafts, Bohemian crystal in every shape and color, elaborately carved, painted and enchanting decorations. It reminded me of the antique Christmas bulbs that belonged to my grandmother and to her mother and my mother, which we get out every year to adorn our trees, but multiplied a thousand-fold over a magic fairytale land of one’s dreams. It’s dazzling.


But it was getting late, and I think Havel was either relaxing in his beautiful home in Wenseslas square, or listening to jazz at one of his favorite jazz cafes. When Havel invited Bill Clinton to Prague, they attended one such café, and Bill took a turn on a sax! What a team! Our group, however, as enthusiastic as it remained, was ready to call it a day. I would look for Havel tomorrow.

During the day, Prague is even more stunning, because you can see all the details of the magnificent architecture that defines the city. I think Havel must know them intimately; they inspired his poetry and his patriotism.

The city is packed with palaces and churches, ornate gates and towers, theaters and cultural centers, sacred and secular monuments and statuary in a range of gorgeous architectural styles from the Medieval to the Renaissance, Baroque and Gothic and up through 18th and 19th-century classics. Havel no doubt inhabited or visited them all at one time or another: the humanist and artist who used words not weapons to bring a revolution. I was in his footsteps.

I realized it didn't matter where we were, Havel's spirit was there. Surely he worshipped at times at the glorious St. Vitus Cathedral, part of the Prague Palace and Monestary complex, on a hilltop overlooking the whole city. His family once lived nearby, an intellectual and upper class family. The Cathedral was built over several centuries, not years but centuries, so it contains all of the different styles and elements that are part of prague’s architectural heritage. It features lovely slender Gothic towers, distinctive on the Prague skyline, along with incredible Neo-Gothic and Art Nouveau stained glass windows. The nave rises into the heavens, it’s that high. The spirit of Havel hovers. I could see how such beauty and artistry would inspire a revolution.

Just as important as the magnificent and monumental palaces and cathedrals are the lovely and lively town squares: Wensaslas Square (Vaclavske namesti), Old Town Square and Lesser Town Square, centers of commercial and cultural activities, where people gather and where Czech partisans in 1968, and later in the late 1980s, held organizing meetings and public protests. Havel’s motto then, during those revolutionary days, was “Truth and love must replace lies and hate.” I could imagine him stirring up a crowd, surrounded by the stunning beauty of a Prague square, with these words.

The walk down from the hilltop to the squares, on winding cobble-stoned streets lined with the former homes of merchants and craftsmen, is a feast in itself. You get both beautiful panoramic vistas of the city, and close-up views of the beautiful details of every building. You get a sense of the prosperous and proud city of the past, and the free city of the present. Havel’s family, I learned, was very much a part of this culture in this place. Havel absorbed it all, from an early age, a proud Czech with an artistic vision and a world view.

The details of Prague architecture fuse into an elaborate mosaic of red and brown roofs with white and pink chimneys, interwoven with green, yellow, rose, lavender, ochre and colorfully painted facades, decorated with pastel paintings, bas relief, decorated doors and windows above which are lovely house signs. Bella explained that these signs are not only artful decorative items, but also tell of the original owners' occupations. Thus there are signs featuring musical instruments (we saw one with three violines, very lovely), knights on horses, swans and birds, fabric and metal objects, fruits and vegetables, each designating a profession or trade, or perhaps a special interest.
Among these beautiful houses is the Storch House in Old Town Square, built in the late 19th century on the site of a Gothic building. The walls are covered with frescoes and colorful decorations, called I learned afterwards, “sgraffito” decorations, the origin of what we today call “grafitti” on our urban buildings. A knight on a white horse painted boldly on the Storch House turned out to be St. Wenceslas, the patron saint of the Czech state.
The Old Town Square (Staromestaske namest) also features a fantastical (if there is such an adventive) Astronomical Clock. Every hour, moving figures, the apostles, appear in the upper windows, marching around the tower, along with the toll of bells and the sound of a live trumpet filling the square with majestic sound. The crowd applauds, and the trumpeter, in regal red dress, bows. We are enchanted!

We wonder off toward a grand church with a distinctive large green cupola that draws us to it like a magnet. What is this magnificent Baroque structure that dominates the Square? It's St. Nicholas Church, and it’s interior is as elegant as its exterior, full of amazing paintings and statues, lovely stained glass windows, and a beautiful ceiling fresco above an elaborate Nave. Popes spoke here, to throngs of worshipers, Havel among them. I'm not sure what Havel's religious beliefs are, but under his spiritual side lies a free spirit who loves Frank Zappa and Smashing Pumpkins and other alternative forms of music and art. At the same time, I can picture him worshipping at one of these grand churches, or enjoying a Mozart concert in the Smetana auditorium of the beautiful Art Nouveau Cultural hall or at Philharmonic Hall, a massive Renaissance building.

There is one building in Prague which is among Olga's favorites and which she said she must see again. Would we go with her? Yes, of course. We walked along the river, along a grand boulevard, to a funny-looking building that looked as if it was swaying in the breeze. "This is it," Olga exclaimed, jumping 3 feet into the air! "It's the Dancing Building!"

So this gray "leaning-tower-of-Pisa" building wasn't swaying in the breeze, it was dancing! It was happy; it was free. I later read in a guide book that it stood on the site of a building that was bombed in 1945, and that it was designed and built between 1992 and 1996 by an American architect and a Czech architect, working together, combining old and new world styles. The architects: Frank O. Gehry and Vlado Milunic. The same Frank Gehry who designed the Toledo Museum of Art addition and the modern glass building and other buildings of distinction in America.
The Dancing Building seemed such a joyful metaphor for change and hope. It embodied the eclectic spirt of Vaclav Havel, the old and the new, dancing together into a brilliant future.
I didn’t see Havel, but his spirit is everywhere: creativity and political reality fused into a magnificent mosaic composed of the past and present. Havel inhabits Prague's essence. That’s where I found Vaclev Havel, poet-president of the Czech republic.









Thursday, February 10, 2011

A Sense of Place












The responses to the 2011“Starobelsk Memories” calendar have been positive and enthusiastic, evoking the pride and pleasure people derive from seeing their city highlighted and beautiful. The calendar promotes a sense of place, a sense of a shared community with its own distinctive architecture, character, environment, landmarks and memorials, and folklife traditions. When we see our town in bold relief, we feel pride.

It reminds me of my working days with the state humanities councils in DC and Florida. One of the NEH chairmen, William Ferris, a southern Folklorist and director of the Center for Southern Culture in Mississippi, was a premier advocate of a “Sense of Place.” The idea resonated in both DC and Florida, places that couldn’t be more different from each other yet so similar in their need for recovering and celebrating their distincitve identities.

In DC, the compact 63-square-miles nation’s capital on the Potomac River, the humanities council focused its grantmaking and programming on exploring and extolling the heritage and distinctiveness of the residential city beyond the Capitol, the White House and the National Mall. This is the city that thousands of residents have called "home" for generations. The DC council funded and created hundreds of programs—award-winning documentary films, seminars, publications, public forums, exhibits, oral histories--on the city’s vibrant neighborhoods, its migrant and immigrant experiences, the stories of people who came to the city in search of a better life, its art, culture and folk traditions.

The same in Florida, one of the largest states in the US with over 16 million people and immense diversity from the North to the South. The Florida council awarded grants throughout the large state to explore local history and the built and natural environments, which are unique and splendid; offered heritage tourism weekends; invoked the state's indigenous Indian roots, its Spanish heritage, and its ethnic diversity; involved teachers in Florida history; and published a magazine devoted to Florida culture and traditions. In a state where so many people migrated from other places, “making Florida home” was the Florida council’s mantra.

The Starobelsk calendar fulfills a similar purpose. It is unusual here in this small village of 18,000 in far-eastern Ukraine near the Russian border to glory in local history, to be a “booster” for the town. Most residents, who have lived here for a long time, take their environment for granted, have other priorities besides the town’s identity or a shared heritage rooted in place.

The calendar highlights and extols the virtues of the village, in all seasons, in all its variety: The town center, the park, the Aydar river, holidays, folk art and architecture, its houses and churches, the university, and the Cultural Center, library, administration building, post office, and other downtown places where people shop, chat, and gather. All places people know and with which they are intimately familiar. Yes, “gathering places,” so special in a village where everyone walks from here to there and everywhere. I did more work by bumping into people on the street than anywhere else. Gathering places, public spaces, on the streets, are central to daily life here in Starobelsk. The calendar focuses on these special places, and in so doing evokes wonderful "aha" experiences and draws people together in a collective embrace of place.

"An embrace of place." It anchors us in a distinctive environment, a physical spot on planet earth, a geographic location that fosters attachment and belonging. It grounds us in a community of memory. It speaks both to our individual stories and to our shared stories, our collective history. “Starobelsk Memories” pays homage to a town that embraced a stranger from America. It is truly a special place.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Weather Changes


Photos: Icicles on Natalia's house. Iryna (Ira), Luba's dear friend and mine, was with us when we sledded down Panfelova, so I want to save this memory. And looking up Komyzarov on my way home to Kyrova Street.



We’ve had a few almost warm days lately, and the snow and ice are melting, the icicles are falling off houses and buildings, and the sidewalks, paths and streets are full of water. Up to your ankles. I’ve heard the crash of icicles falling to the ground outside my window. Natalia’s house had some huge icicles hanging from the roof. Huge. No more. I was warned more than once to avoid them, with dire warnings of death. Ghastly images floated through my mind: death by icicle stabbing. "It fell right through her heart, poor soul." At first I didn’t take the warnings seriously, but now I know: it really is a danger, and deaths from falling icicles have been reported in Kyiv recently.

With the melting snow and ice, I am reminded once again that my warm, snuggly LandsEnd boots with the handy dandy yaktracks are great for ice and cold weather walking, but they are not waterproof. Not at all. A brief walk to the store from Natalia’s and I had water up to my knees. I sloshed back home in soaking wet boots and socks and cold feet.

Does this mean Spring is in the air. It’s a bit early here in Ukraine. We could still have freezing weather and more snow. But lately we’ve had the kind of temperatures that make you look for buds on the lilac bushes and tulips pushing through the ground. The days are getting longer, too, with that lovely dusky light at the end of the day before sunset and the moon rise.

I’m in no hurry, though. Going with the flow, literally and figuratively. It will be on to Prague this week, no matter what the weather, then to Western Ukraine: Lviv, Tourka, Uzhgorod, Slavsky for my PCV group 36 Close of Service conference. After that I'll go to Khargiv to visit Natalia's daughter Anna, studying at one of the famous universities there, and explore that city a bit.

When I return to Starobelsk at the beginning of March, then I’ll really start thinking Spring. Making a final trip to Kyiv. Going home, back to the States. Leaving my Ukrainian friends. Returning to a post-Peace Corps life. Our lives, like the seasons, always changing, always turning.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Lyceum Day at the English Club


A large group of people greeted me at the English Club at the Library on Saturday (5 February), an unexpected surprise. Turns out it was the English Club from the Agricultural Lyceum (yes, they have an English Club!), which is where my wonderful calendar designer Nik teaches physics. The Lyceum is a great option for students who want to continue their schooling after high school graduation but aren’t sure yet what they want to study.
The Lyceum offers practical and technical courses, and general classes in history, sciences, and languages. It’s similar to the original concepts of our community colleges or technical schools, and most every town in Ukraine has at least one.

The leader of this wonderful group was their English language teacher Artom, an articulate and thoughtful man who also teaches at public school #3. Joining Artom, in addition to 10 students, was Ina, a biology teacher; Iryna, school psychologist; Rita, a writing instructor; and of course Nik.

Actually, this was Nik’s idea. He decided he wanted to organize an exhibit of the "Starobelsk Memories" calendar and the Starobelsk Library English Club at the Lyceum, with photos and signs in English and Russian. He recruited students and teachers to help him, with their first task being to attend a club meeting at the Starobelsk library. Good going, Nik! He wanted to get us together and create new opportunities for sharing, discussion and photos for the exhibit. Young people like Nik and Artom are Ukraine’s future!

The students were bright, talented (several musicians among them) and attentive. Some were more proficient, more confident, in the language than others. Most struggled in English the way I struggle with Russian, and I let them know this. I understand, I told them. I could hear a few sighs of relief. No one was expected to perform; it was okay to stumble. We went on to introduce ourselves and talk about where we live, our families, what we like to do. New members and regular members interacted and learned from each other.

I had prepared two lessons for this meeting, one on the "Meaning of Freedom," using documents from the "Know Your Rights" project, and with Egypt and other earth-shaking protest movements in mind, and the February theme of Love and Valentine’s Day. It was too much to do in one session, but we made a beginning. Both subjects engaged the students and teachers, and we had some good discussion, with great effort to be inclusive and give everyone a chance to participate, and to shine. Any responses in English were greeted with a huge smile from me and applause! Iryna, the director of the Library, rewarded us with tea and offered cake. It was a lovely meeting.

Usually I never know what will happen at an English Club meeting: who will come, what news will emerge, what issues will be discussed. I go in with ideas, and sometimes I use them. Other times the meetings take on a life of their own. They have unexpected twists and turns, shoot off in unanticipated and interesting directions. If we hit a dead end, I can usually pull something out of my tote bag to fit most occasions--colored paper, pens, a few poems, a few project ideas.

It was a little like that today. We talked about freedom for a while, then about the situation here in Ukraine, then about love, which branched off into talking about love of a dear one, love of family, love of friends, and love of country. What is love? How does it make you feel? We made quite a list of adjectives: warmth, security, safety, patriotism, family ties, belonging, trust, love is blind, love can hurt, love smiles, love is a happy face (good one!), and love is kind, love is tolerant, love is forgiving (my personal favorites).

We were kind of all over the map, but we were talking and thinking and sharing. We were encouraging, inclusive, and accepting. No responses were right or wrong. We modeled and mentored in a relaxed, informal way. And that's what the English Club is all about. The meeting turned out to be another enjoyable moment in the waning days of my Peace Corps adventure here in Ukraine.

Friday, February 4, 2011

"Know Your Rights:" Some Lessons on American Principles of Government

These were handouts we used for the public forums that were part of Victoria NGO's "Know Your Rights" project. My small contribution was presenting sessions on Rule of Law and Balance of Power in American government. Another handout included the basic documents of American government, the US Constitution, BIll of Rights, some examples from the Federalist Papers. Options and different points of view were discussed. Translation needs work, but I think the main ideas were clear. It helped when we had an interpreter, but if not people could follow me using the handouts. A question and answer period followed each presentation. Questions about theory versus practice, principles versus reality lent themselves to great discussions of change and reform overtime. I'm blogging these as part of our final grant report to the Peace Corps, and as part of the journal of my Peace Corps experience in Ukraine. These documents have taken on added meaning since the explosion of protests in Tunisia, Egypt and other countries, and we've taken the opportunity to discuss them at English Club meetings. Discussions of democratic principles and the Common Good have been thoughtful and fascinating.


Rule of Law in the United States
Верховенство права в США
6 основных принципов верховенства права в США:
1. Никто не может быть выше закона. Никто незастрахован от законов. правительство и егодолжностные лица несут ответственность в соответствии с законом.
2. Всех граждан и всех выборных и назначаемыхдолжностных лиц обязуются поддерживать Конституцию США, образованная в 1787 году, несколько раз вносились поправки, но все же главный "закон страны."
3. законы должны действовать одинаково для каждого гражданина, и для правительства. Законы должны быть усилены, должны быть стабильными и справедливыми,и защиты основных прав граждан и собственности.
4. Законы должны выполняться, ясно, написаны и опубликованы.
5. "Все мужчины и женщины созданы равными", и есть определенные "неотъемлемые права" (the Bill of Rights), закрепленным вБилле о правах к Конституции США, в том числе:
* право на свободу слова
* право собираться
* Право на справедливое судебное разбирательствосудом присяжных из ваших коллег, к адвокату и"невинные пока вина не доказана."под названием"надлежащей правовой процедуры".
* право на свободную прессу
* права голоса

Balance of Power: The Three Branches of Government and the U.S. Constitution.

Разделение властей
Balancing Act: Три (3) ветви власти
Соединенные Штаты 3 ветвей власти: исполнительной, законодательной и судебной ветвями власти. Отцы-основатели США при написании Конституции в 1780, хотел, чтобы разделить власть, чтобы избежать диктатуры. Конституция США нашей системы для создания, исполнения и пересмотра законов.

* Исполнительная власть: Глава президента, следит за соблюдением закона. Можно рекомендовать новых законов. Утверждает законы после того как они проходят в Конгрессе США.
* Законодательная власть во главе с Конгрессом США, в составе Дом Reprsentatives и Сената: принимает законы.
* Судебная ветвь власти во главе с Верховным судом, толкует Конституцию США, обзоры законодательства и дел, связанных с государствами человека. Верховный суд 9 членов, назначаемых президентом, одобрен Сенатом, и срок назначения.

Многие из этих принципов были принятыМеждународные суды и трибуналы, а такжеОрганизации Объединенных Наций в своей "Всеобщей декларации прав человека" (1948) и lnternational пакта огражданских и политических правах (последнее).



































































































































Wednesday, February 2, 2011

A Day in Donetsk

Wikipedia photos of Donetsk and the Euro2012 logo. We passed this stately church on the way to the bank.

On Tuesday I took a six-hour bus ride to the big Donbass city of Donetsk, and then 3 hours later I took the 6-hour bus trip back to Starobelsk. All those hours riding a bus just to get to a Peace Corps-approved bank to get a new ATM card so I can access my PC account and the $250 I get in my monthly allowance! That’s because my old card was eaten by a local ATM machine and reported a “hot” item when my wallet was stolen at the end of December on the train from Lugansk to Kyiv. Luckily my wallet was found and returned with my passport (but no money), so I got to go to Egypt. What a miracle that was, and in so many more ways than anyone could have predicted.

There was no heat on the bus, but the driver was a real expert at driving on snow and ice. The roads were as bad as those photos I've seen of the roads in Chicago after the recent blizzard blew through the Midwest.


I've become an expert in layering up for winter weather, so I snuggled down and relaxed for the ride. A few times I thought our time had come as we skidded this way and that. But not yet. The bus driver was in God’s hands and God, or the goddess as Loren would say, correcting me, got us home.

Unfortunately I didn’t get to see much of Donetsk. It is a big city of over a million and it will be one of the sites of the 2012 European Championship football (soccer, of course) games. It looks like a prosperous city. It was once called Stalin and then Stalino, a big steel producing and coal mining city on the Kalmius River surrounded by the farmland of the Ukrainian steppes. It's had a tortured history of Nazi occupation, destruction, and rebuilding. Today it is the home of president Yanukovich and his good friend Rinat Akhmetov, Ukraine’s richest man.


The city looks to be in pretty good shape for Euro2012. There are even signs in Russian, Ukrainian and English at the ugly old bus station! Streets are being graded and paved. The huge Donbass Stadium, built by Akhmetov, is ready, according to my taxi driver, who spoke about as much English as I spoke Russian. It's a big football city, home to two winning teams.

So you'll be hearing a lot more about and from Donetsk in 2012, especially if you're a soccer fan. Maybe its teams will bring a victory to Ukraine. That would be a huge morale booster for the entire country. Go Donbass! Hope springs eternal.