More About The Rally on Sunday

The moment Lena and I walked out of the alley and headed to the CTA station, a person on the other side of the street cheered us and asked where the rally would be. In the Loop, we were pleasantly surprised by a huge turnaround. The number of people who responded as interested in the event was less than 200. Still, we saw people with flags and signs everywhere (also going in different directions, which was confusing). Since we had to meet Anna at the train station, we were in the Loop ahead of the rally, but we still met people who stopped us and asked in Russian or English where exactly things were going to be. 

t turned out that there were multiple gathering places and marching before the rally. We went to the Bean, marched with people there, and headed to the Daley Plaza.

Continue reading “More About The Rally on Sunday”

Chicago’s Response To The War

I take back all my resentments about Chicagoans – here is today’s tribune front-page article:

Marta Farion received a call from a friend in Ukraine on Tuesday, asking her how she was helping the embattled country from Chicago. Her friend, a veteran in Ukraine who had stayed behind to fight, was calling from an actual trench, one of many that have appeared in the country as it resists its Russian aggressors, using a generator for a phone charge.

Farion, president of a nonprofit that supports the National University of Kyiv Mohyla Academy, had a variety of answers: lobbying the American government, supporting a protest this weekend and fundraising.

For Chicagoans with or without connections that close in Ukraine, it can be overwhelming to know how to help. Here are some of the ways advocates suggest people get involved.

Where can I donate supplies?
Ukrainian shipping service Meest-Karpaty is organizing a major effort to send a plane of supplies from Chicago to Kyiv every week, a representative from the company’s location in Palatine said.

They’re looking for military goods, as well as nonperishable food, blankets and clothes, advocates said.

Supplies can be dropped off or shipped to the Chicago location, 6725 W. Belmont Ave. The shipping service is also collecting supplies at 1645 Hicks Road in Rolling Meadows, a representative posted on social media.

Edgewater resident Leonard Mogul, a community advocate and founder of Chicago children’s organization Arts4Kids Foundation, is partnering with Waukegan pastor Julie Contreras to send care packages to women and children in Uzhhorod, Ukraine, Mogul said. Mogul’s organization has previously sent food to refugee children in detention centers at the Mexican border, he said, so Contreras reached out to him about turning aid toward Ukraine.

They’re looking for essentials including diapers, children’s clothes, socks and women’s hygienic products, Mogul said. People can donate or volunteer time by contacting Arts4KidsChicago@gmail.com, he said.

When is the next big rally?
Supporters of Ukraine plan to gather in Daley Plaza at 2 p.m. Sunday, said advocates including Pavlo Bandriwsky, vice president of the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America in Illinois.

How can I tell if a fundraiser is legitimate?
Chicagoans should look for established organizations that have a proven track record of providing assistance with low administrative costs, Bandriwsky said.

Smaller campaigns, like those organized on social media, can be positive resources as they may have very low overhead, said Mogul, who has helped found and moderate Facebook pages for Eastern European people across Chicago. But potential donors should make an effort to ensure those smaller fundraisers are legitimate, he said.

Donors should see how well the purpose of the money is described, and what means the fundraiser has to deliver the results, Mogul said. They should also feel free to ask the organizer any questions, he added.

What are some national or international organizations I can donate to?
Locally, people can donate to the Ukrainian Congress Committee for America in Illinois, advocates said. F.R.E.E., a synagogue for the Russian Jewish community in Chicago, is hosting a fundraiser for Jewish people in Ukraine.

The nonprofit Razom for Ukraine has a list of army, medical and humanitarian initiatives accepting donations, and is accepting aid to its own emergency response fund.

The National Bank of Ukraine is accepting funds to both its humanitarian account and military account. The Red Cross, UNICEF and World Central Kitchen are all accepting donations for the crisis.

Advocates have also asked people to contact their representatives to demand stricter sanctions against Russia, and the closure of airspace over Ukraine.

One Chicago couple is worried and asking for funds to get their preemie newborns, born via surrogate, home safely from Ukraine.

Alexander Spektor and Irma Nuñez became parents on Feb. 25 when their twin sons, Lenny and Moishe, were born in Kyiv. They were born two months early and need continued medical care before traveling to the U.S. The family is frantically trying to coordinate a specialized medical transport capable of moving preemies out of the country.

“It’s unimaginable,” Spektor told the “Today” show. He explained that the twins’ prematurity works against them as they need stability and care, but also to be moved out of a war zone.

In the meantime, they were able to transfer the twins to a hospital in Kyiv better equipped with supplies and staff, according to a GoFundMe raising money to help cover medical and travel costs.

What if I want to help refugees? Or advocate for Ukrainian citizens in the US?
The Ukrainian Congress Committee of America in Illinois is starting to prepare for refugees to resettle in the Chicago area, Bandriwsky said. People in Chicago with space to potentially help shelter refugees can contact the Ukrainian National Museum, he said.

Northbrook immigration lawyer Gene Meltser started a petition to grant Temporary Protective Status to Ukrainian citizens in the United States, a form of deportation relief for people whose visas are from places involved in strife.

Meltser, an immigrant from Belarus with family and friends in Ukraine, said he hopes people will sign the petition and call their representatives in favor of granting the status, regardless of political party.

What will people need when they arrive?
Many groups in Chicago constantly work with refugees and are always taking donations to help the many refugees already in Chicago. World Relief, RefugeeOne and Catholic Charities are all groups that work with federal agencies to resettle refugees.

People who may eventually arrive from Ukraine will be handling layers of trauma, said Corina Ratz, a faculty member of The Chicago School of Professional Psychology who trains people on treating immigrants and whose family in Romania has seen firsthand waves of people already arriving at the border.

Not only were their lives suddenly upturned by war, she said, they are suddenly faced with uncertainty they never could have prepared for.

“It is something you can imagine may happen, but until it actually happens, you’re not dealing with the repercussion of it,” she said.

So they will arrive fresh from a wartime exodus, likely unable to bring much from home, with the double uncertainty of not knowing whether or when they’ll be able to return.

When people have the ability to have a conversation with an immigrant or a refugee, she said, what’s important is to listen. Hear their story, and their narrative of what happened. “Validate their story,” she said. “It’s so basic, and it is so important.” People might assume that refugees are thrilled to be here, or heartbroken. It’s different for everyone.

How have people in Ukraine reacted to support from the States? How do Ukrainian Chicagoans feel about the support from the city?
Advocates described the support from Chicago over the weekend as overwhelming — “nothing short of incredible,” Mogul said. People in Ukraine are grateful Americans are protesting and not remaining indifferent, he said.

Orysia Kourbatov, administrator at the Ukrainian National Museum in Ukrainian Village, said people have been calling every five to 10 minutes, asking for flags to display. The museum was out as of Tuesday afternoon but was expecting more shipments soon, she said.

The conflict may have even incited a cultural change: If there’s a “silver lining to any of this,” it’s that people are becoming more familiar with Ukraine and rallying around it, said Yara Klimchak, a Chicagoan who grew up visiting relatives in Ukraine. Klimchak, who once heard people frequently mistake Ukraine for Russia, now has people from all different parts of her life reaching out and asking how they can help, she said.

Moscow Is Not Chicago Sister City Anymore

From Chicago Tribune:

After nearly three dozen aldermen called for Chicago’s Sister Cities relationship with Moscow to be suspended while the Russian war on Ukraine is ongoing, Mayor Lori Lightfoot directed World Business Chicago to do just that.

“While this is not a decision I enter into lightly, we must send an unambiguous message: we strongly condemn all actions by the Putin regime. This suspension will be upheld until the end of hostilities against Ukraine and the Putin regime is held accountable for its crimes,” Lightfoot said. “We must continue to support freedom-loving people everywhere and ordinary Russians in their desire to be free.”

The move is largely symbolic but highlights the ongoing condemnation toward Russia throughout the world after Putin ordered an invasion of Ukraine.

On Monday, 33 Chicago City Council members signed onto a proposed order suspending Moscow’s Sister City status.

Ukraine’s capital city of Kyiv is among Chicago’s 27 remaining Sister Cities, whose roster also includes Bogotá, Colombia; Accra, Ghana; Osaka, Japan; and Warsaw, Poland. Chicago formalized its Sisters Cities program under former Mayor Richard M. Daley in 1990, the proposed order states.

The document calls for the immediate return of gifts, materials or services provided by a revoked participant and states that it won’t be considered for readmittance “until normal diplomatic relations are reinstated.”

Vietnamese Lunar New Year Parade

it was a small, but very nice parade! I am too impatient to post on YouTube two dozen of tiny videos, so just embedding the Instagram posts here.

The Last Minutes Of Chicago Christmas Tree

One of the perks in my new company is having one Friday of the month off in addition to the regular PTO. They are called Wellness Fridays. One of these Wellness Friday was this week, and I went skating at Millennium Park. The regular entrance was closed, and that’s what I saw:

Christmas Tree Removal

I have always cut and chopped my Christmas trees and burned them in my fireplace for the past several years, so I didn’t need to think about their disposal. But I also knew that there was a certain day when I could leave a tree by the garbage containers, and the village would pick it up.

With this in mind, I didn’t think it would be a big deal to get rid of a Christmas tree while living in Chicago – I heard that there were a lot of free programs available. But when I checked on the first week of January, it turned out that you have to drop your tree off at designated sites. I couldn’t do it without a car, and no Uber would drive a tree for me. I looked and looked, and nobody was offering this service. A couple of websites indicated that they are sold out. Finally, I found one service called Tree Santa and signed for a tree pickup on January 10.
The night before, I stripped the tree of all decorations, and Igor and I carried it down and put it in the corner of our courtyard.

They were supposed to text me the day before about a more precise pickup time, so when there was nothing, I messaged them, and they replied that they had too many requests and staff shortage, and they extended pickups till January 21, and can they move me to the EOW. I told them I could only wait till Wednesday, and they promised to reschedule.

The new pickup time was set to 2:30 PM on January 12. At 3:15 I messaged them and asked what’s the ETA :). They said that they are struggling (which I completely understand!) and that they will update me. At 5:15 (since they are supposedly working till 5 PM only) I messaged that it’s OK, I understand, but tomorrow is absolutely the last day. They messaged back: are you sure the tree is still there? I replied – yes, because I would need to unlock the gate for somebody to pick up the tree!

Then, at 6:30, I went skating because I didn’t want to miss this opportunity again. And guess what – when I was skating, somebody called me: can you open the gate? Well, it was almost 8 PM, and I was 50 minutes away from my house!

I started to text my neighbors, nobody responded right away, but in 2 min the tree person called me and said that somebody had let him in. Well, it ended up being my neighbor :). ‘
All well that ends well, but that’s a very typical story of this COVD winter!

Skating And The City Lights

Yesterday, I finally did what I wanted to do for a very long time: I went skating after work, for the last timeslot. Each time I tried before, it was always something that would stop me :). And maybe, I just didn’t want to get out of the house in the dark of the night.

I am so glad I did it yesterday; I had a lot of work that had fallen on me by the very end of the workday, and I made an effort to step out (full disclosure- I took my laptop with me :))

I know it’s a cliche, but the city lights are magical, and skating under the city lights instantaneously filled me with joy! I planned to skate for just half an hour but ended up skating until they called the patrons off the ice 🙂

Happy New Year!

I always wanted to see the city’s New Year fireworks, but it was challenging when I lived in Palatine, even when they had a couple of late-night trains. Going all that way for just fireworks is not worth the time. But now that I live in the city, I thought I had to ring the New Year in the very heart of it!
The fireworks were fired from the Riverwalk, all the way, in multiple places, which made them very convenient to watch.


The only problem was going back. If I only knew there wouldn’t be any trains for 45 minutes, I would suggest Igor walk half the way. But the Ventra app kept showing the next train coming in 14, 10, 8 minutes – and then flipping! Waiting indoors in the crowd of people when not all of them wore masks was not fun. Next year, I will know better!

The Night Ministry Health Outreach Bus In Action

The story behind the mural that got painted in Austin, Chicago last summer

I ended up doing this article because, back in November, a week before Thanksgiving, I was taking the bus past the intersection of Chicago and Laramie avenues and noticed a large, bright mural on the building at the northeast corner intersection that definitely wasn’t there back in June. I noticed the name of the artist – the iconic Chicago muralist Rahmaan “Statik” Barnes – and tried to reach out to him. It took a few weeks to successfully pitch the things and get in touch with Barnes, but I filed the article December 9.

A very truncated version of the article was published in print, in the December 15 issue of Austin Weekly News, but, as of this writing, it never showed up online. Since I thought that the print version lost some pretty interesting parts, and since it doesn’t officially exist online in any form, I decided to post the article as submitted.

A bit of a side note. When I was trying to take a picture below, the group of Black teens who were hanging out nearby weren’t exactly happy to see a white guy with a camera. But when I persuaded them that I wasn’t there to photograph them, they offered me weed.

Continue reading “The story behind the mural that got painted in Austin, Chicago last summer”