Ukranian March – Holomodor

Posted November 17, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan, Wanderings

My main source of information on upcoming events in NYC has failed me again (http://www.nyc.gov/portal/site/nycgov/index.jsp) .  They got almost every single point wrong.  Okay, they got the day right, and they got the nationality right.

Here’s the announcement:

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I was a bit askance at it from the beginning.  There’s no such thing as an “all day” parade.  But, I figured that if I went out around 11am and walked around the path (5th Avenue above 30th Street and 7th Avenue from 15th Street), I’d find out a little more about it.  No problem.  It was a nice day for walking and I thought I’d just pick up lunch while out and, even if the start were delayed until late, like 2pm, I’d survive.  I suspected it was nothing but a street fair, but that’d be okay if it were oriented toward the Ukraine.

So I went out.  Once I got to Fifth Avenue, I knew it wasn’t a parade.  There was no sign of any of the barriers that get put up the night before any parade.  So, I decided I’d go for that nice long walk though Chelsea and maybe see something a little new.

I followed the path southward and kept seeing…nothing.  I traced the entire route of the “parade”.  And. Saw. Nothing.  By the time I got to 15th Street, I gave up any hope of even a street fair.  So, I resigned myself to just a little wandering and went around and about the area and then decided to wander eastward and go up through the East Side.  Just a nice long pleasant walk in the cool temperature of the day.  Very pleasant, if a bit boring.

And then I reached 3rd Avenue and saw something.

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I couldn’t read the signs, but something told me this was the Ukranian Parade.  I started walking northward and easily outpaced the marchers.  They stretched up a long, long way so I certainly never got to the front of them, but I did find out that it was the Ukranians.

It wasn’t a “parade”.  It was a protest march.

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And they were restricted by the police to one lane of 3rd Avenue.

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They were protesting Joseph Stalin and the enforced collectivization and starvation of the Ukraine during the 1930s.  This was the 75th Anniversery of that event, known formally as the Holomodor.

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The era was in the darkest days of the American Depression (which actually spanned the whole world), but we had it so much easier than the Ukraine.  In that event, as many as 10 million died in the attempt to bring socialism/communism to fruition.  From Wikipedia: children as young as 12 could be executed for gathering corn that was missed during the harvest.  It was that generation’s “killing fields” and there is no excuse for it.

The marchers certainly held no qualms over the blame:  Stalin and the Russians.

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And there were symbolic demonstrations.

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The above was the first in a procession.

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I walked beside and with the procession for about 15 blocks.  I talked with some of the women who were handing out literature on the event.  They hadn’t been aware of the NYC event calendar error.  They said the march had always been planned for 3rd Avenue and that they had started at 11am from 7th Street, not 7th Avenue.

This being New York, they didn’t really understand why I hadn’t checked out the Ukrainian web sites.  Well, I had googled the parade, but it hadn’t turned up anything.  Maybe if I had known it was the 75th Anniversary of the famine and if I had googled a march instead of a parade, I’d have known.  Maybe I should have just dialed 311 for information.  Nah, that’s not the sort of thing I do.

The protest was an attempt to get the US to declare the Holomodor a genocidal event.  It’s not going to happen.  Look at the big international fiasco that happened when Congress wanted to classify the Armenian Genocide by the Turks a genocide and condemn (rightfully) the Turkish refusal to recognize it.

-H

The 14th Street Salvation Army Headquarters

Posted November 16, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Manhattan, Union Square, Wanderings

Nowadays, Manhattan is wealthy and nicely appointed.  Union Square and 14th Street are nice and fashionable areas for the most part.  But only a few years ago they were horrid areas filled with wasted and wasting people.

But the Salvation Army was there for them.  The Army still has its headquarters on the spot.  It’s about 11 stories high and takes up a big chunk of the block near Fifth Avenue. 

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At the front is a large entryway (not shown above) with a long quote from their founder General William Booth.

“While women weep, as they do now,
  I’ll fight;
While men go to prison, in and out,
In and out, as they do now,
  I’ll fight;
While there is a drunkard left,
While there is a poor lost girl
Upon the streets,
While there remains one dark soul,
Without the light of God,
  I’ll fight —
I’ll fight to the very end!”

Okay, now that I wrote it, I might as well show the picture.

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I’ve seen the place a bunch of times before. I think extremely highly of the Salvation Army and I thank God that there are people there to reach down to areas of humanity that I’d have a tough time dealing with and treat them with compassion and love.

I met a few of the “soldiers” or whatever they call themselves as they were loading into a van.  One of them thought she recognized me.  She said “I know you.”  She looked pretty intently at me, as if she’d worked with me on occasion.  I’ve had some times in my life, but I’ve never had the need of the Salvation Army so I just smiled and said that I didn’t think so.  She then said that she thought I looked like one of her colleagues, but I think she was just embarrassed.

I did tell them that I admired them for their work and their dedication and that people really needed what they did.  I think they appreciated that.

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-H

Veterans Day Parade Part 4

Posted November 15, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan, Mid-town, Parades

This is my final posting on the 2007 NYC Veterans Day Parade and I’m going to use it to cover some of the oddball stuff that happened during the parade.  Not all of it is particularly strange, but the stuff that is strange, is very strange indeed.

The parade was held on a Sunday.  It was cold, almost certainly the coldest day so far this Fall, although the wind was minimal and the sun did come out and warm it up later in the day.

The worst part of the parade is that it was so sparsely attended.  When I went to the Polish Day Parade, also held on a Sunday on 5th Avenue, it was jammed.  On the other hand, here’s a couple of pictures most of the way through the Veterans Day parade.

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You don’t have to take just these two pictures as evidence, look at pictures in the previous posts.

It was cold.  I’m sure that kept a lot of people away.  But I don’t think it was a good enough excuse.  The low points on this issue came when, three separate times before and during the parade, people came up and asked what was going on.  They didn’t even seem to remember what the day was.  I hope it was more or less a fluke, but I’m afraid of what I suspect is the truth…they didn’t care to remember it and their lack was emblematic of a much larger problem of know-nothingness and apathy.

People, freedom isn’t free.  It was bought by our veterans and their families at a tremendous price.

Before I get into the weirdness, at least one more happy point in the parade.  I mentioned previously that there were a lot of high school JROTC people.  There certainly was.  Good for them and their willingness to prepare for the possibility of an interesting and perhaps dangerous life ahead.  But there was another group I just want to note, too.  The Scouts.  Not a big contingent, but enough.  Both Boy Scouts and Cub Scouts.

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Now, to the weirdness.

I don’t think this group of “royalty” were veterans.  If you’ve read my earlier posts you know I love beauty queens.  Usually, there’s a point to it.  These seemed to be attractive young ladies with crowns who wanted to ride in vintage cars.  At least they could have had a sign thanking the vets or a sign stating their affiliation or organization.  But there was no sign as to what they were doing.  I couldn’t read their sashes.

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They braved the cold, but I’ve no idea who they are or why they were in the parade.

Another weird one was a group of vets.  It was a group of homosexual veterans who carved out a place in the parade.  They mostly consisten of a marching band that played pretty well.  Was the fact that they are homosexual a reason they were “weird”?  Nope (hey, this is NYC so what do you expect).  The fact that they had two ballet dancers leading the group performing a sequence of ballet dance moves was.  The point of the dance?  I can’t figure out any semblance of meaning from the display other than to announce their presence and look strange enough to prompt discussion.  Sorry, but no picture.

The third weird group were probably not veterans.  In fact, they were doubtless the weirdest group to ever march in a Veterans Day Parade that you could imagine.  Well, maybe not.  But you’d be hardpressed to find one less veteran-like.  It was the Falan Gong.  Or, as they put it in their signs:  the Falan Dafa.  They are a Buddist group that has been outlawed by the Chinese government.  Their lack of military affiliation is total.

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I’m utterly incapable of saying why a dragon dance has any relevance to Veterans Day.  Maybe it’s relevant to anything.  They did it well, though.

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This group was actually the end of the parade.  Maybe they just hung around 26th Street and jumped in and pretended to be part of the parade?  I’m sure they were authorized, but why?

The last group I’ll mention is one that I couldn’t believe appeared.  The Falan Gong and the beauty queens would seem to be completely extraneous to Veterans Day especially because they made no reference to the day itself.  But the final “weird” group did have veterans.  Or, more precisely, they represented a group of well-known veterans. (I don’t think any of the old timers were marching.)

It was the Abraham Lincoln Brigade.  It amazes me that the memory of them is nearly gone.  It pleases me immensely that no one seems to know who they were.

I was so shocked that I took no pictures.  I regret it, but not too much.

The Abraham Lincoln Brigade was a group of Americans who went to Spain right before WWII to fight on the Republican side of the Spanish Civil War.  It’s amazing in these days to think of leftists fighting with Republicans (not that the “Republicans” of that Civil War were related to the modern day American Republican Party, but it’s amusing to think of it in that fashion).

Personally, I don’t care what any revisionist may say:  my view is that these were a group of Stalinists and fellow travelers who, when they were ordered to do so (at the signing of the Hitler-Stalin Non-Aggression Pact that divided Poland in half), supported the move with a single-mindedness that was Orwellian in scope.  Those that rejected Stalin when they realized what he and the American Communist Party were doing have at least some of my respect; but I don’t think this group that marched in the parade represent those.  They were protesting the Iraq War and they flashed their radical credentials proudly.

I’m not ending this series of posts with such a picture.

-H

Veterans Day Parade Part 3

Posted November 14, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan, Mid-town, Parades

The last post left off at the Korean Vets.  After they came by, there was an interesting group:  the Merchant Marine.  Not the Marines, mind you, the Merchant Marine.  The Merchant Marine aren’t a military group directly, but they operate under the auspices of the Navy during wartime.  And, as the float states, they suffered terribly during WWII.  The float has a statement that they had the highest casualty rate in the war with 1 out of every 32 sailors being killed.  I hate to quibble, but it’s really the highest American casualty rate.  The kamikazis and the German U-boats had higher rates.  I’ll bicker a little bit more:  according to the merchant marine records, the casualty rate was even higher:  1 out of 26 sailors died.  And, as their sign said:  they were all volunteers.  Incredible stuff.

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The merchant marines were followed by Vietnam Vets.

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The next guy, a Vietnam vet, came by handing out flags.  As the announcer kept saying to the vets:  welcome home.

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Another foreign veteran group came and it was a bit of a mixup on the part of the announcers.

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Their signs said “ROC” and one of the announcers thought they meant “ROK” (Republic of Korea).  After about 15 seconds of extolling their service he was informed it was the Republic of China (Taiwan).  He then did a complete mea culpa and extolled them again.  Just one of those things.

The last of the foreign vets came by:  Korean veterans of the Vietnam War.  Apparently they were the biggest group besides the Americans and the South Vietnamese to have fought in that war.

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After them, another group of re-enactors.

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The next group was the single most impressive group in the parade.  It was the 77th RRC of Ft. Totten, New York.  “RRC” stands for “Regional Readiness Command”.  There were 1500 soldiers in the march, of which (we were told over and over again) 500 had just returned from Iraq.  These guys got a very warm welcome from all of us.

The one thing that I learned about them during this writeup is that they are the same group known as “the Lost Battalion” of World War I.  In that battle, 554 of them were separated from a coordinated attack and spent days surrounded and under attack by the German army.  In the end, after six days of battle and near starvation in early October 1918, only 194 of them emerged uncaptured and able to continue to take up arms.  The story in the link is quite inspiring.  It’s a story of confusion, gallantry, medals of honor, and communication by a carrier pigeon that became a legend among the school children of a long-ago age.

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The start of the marchers.

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And they kept coming.  The different companies within the marchers were often calling out in cadence.  Very impressive.

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And they kept coming.

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You have to remember that these are just a very few of a whole bunch of pictures of these guys.

And there were other veterans.  Here’s a group of vets from Afghanistan and Iraq.

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A rather unexpected, but terrific sight:  veterans from the City University of New York (CUNY).

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Followed by a Navy drill team.  They performed in front of the reviewing stand and, idiot that I am, I didn’t realize what they were doing until the very end.

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There was even a contingent from the Coast Guard.  They, too, serve in our foreign wars; most famously in Vietnam.

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I’ve deliberately included few of the high schools that participated.  There were hundreds and hundreds of Junior ROTC cadets marching for who-knows-how-many local high schools.  I was surprised and pleased that a number of them were geared toward the Air Force.  Unfortunately, the high school presence (with their leaders) were the only Air Force representation in the parade.  Now, my family is closely aligned with the Air Force, so I’m definitely predisposed to support them.  But I really can’t find much praise for this:

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Who are they trying to appeal to?  Toddlers?

Following this display, there was a nice support by a commercial company:  U-Haul.  It was founded by a Navy Vet and the announcer said that they give a lot of support to military families.  I’ve no doubt it’s true, but when I was a kid, all we ever seemed to see for moving was Mayflower.

More in Part 4.

-H

Veterans Day Parade Part 2

Posted November 13, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan, Mid-town, Parades

At the start of the NYC Veterans Day Parade, I was next to a mother and daughter from Ohio.  They had lived in NYC for some time, but had left about five years ago.  The mother was a little upset that her city driving skills had atrophied over the years and she had had a run-in with another motorist.  She was talking with the official film photographer (noted in Part 1) and me and he kept saying she probably deserved the screaming-at she received.  I have to agree (she had blocked someone from parking without realizing it and not even bothered to steal the space when she encroached; she just prevented the person from reversing and waited and waited).

But, despite her adrenaline rush, they were happy to be back and were waiting to see the daughter’s high school marching band from Pickerington Central High School:  the Marching Tigers.

Apparently, there were a number of families that showed up for it, too.  There were lots of cell phone calls and plans and strategies for getting the right photos from the right angles at the right time.  It was actually very fun to listen to them debating how/whether they could sneak onto the street to grab a front-photo and how they would accommodate getting the pictures of the daughters’ closest friends and classmates.  I thought it was a bit overwrought, but I wasn’t aware of how big the band was.  And, I will also admit that the band was pretty good.

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After they came by, veterans from the USS Intrepid came.  The ship, a WWII aircraft carrier, is undergoing maintenance and will be back at its dock near 42nd Street and the Hudson River next year.  It’s open year-round for tours.

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Right after them came some vets traveling in style.  I imagine the cyclist had himself a great time and I hope he got a big tip.

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A wonderful set of soldiers then came by.  The “tin can sailors”.  That means that these vets were on destroyers during WWII.

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The next was something really special, but I didn’t realize it until I was writing this.  A truck came by with the ship’s bell of the USS Murray (DD97).

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The reason it was special is its source, or rather, the service of its source.  As far as I can determine, it was the only part of the parade that was WWI-specific.  There were some marching groups that existed in WWI (like the Fighting 69th), but nothing was specifically from that time period except that bell.  The guy on the flatbed was ring it and it sounded good. 

Another very small group of note:  the China-Burma-India veterans association.  These men fought in one of the forgotten theaters of WWII.  It isn’t that forgotten, though.  Remember that Louis Mountbatten was “the Earl of Burma” and Vinegar Joe Stillwell were participants in that theater.

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Behind them was the Hartselle High School Marching Band from Hartselle, Alabama.  Yeah, I had to take a picture or two.

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The next group was a group of airborne paratroopers:  the 187th Infantry Rakkasans.

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Their website notes that this regiment fought in WWII, Korea, Lebanon, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Persian Gulf and that their motto is “Let Valor Not Fail”.  They also have another statement “The Right of the Line” which apparently denotes their traditional position alongside other regiments.

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Following them were a lot of Korean War vets.

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Even Republic of Korean veterans of the war.

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More in the next post.

-H