Category Archives: culture

right turn, march

And so most of the Hungarian electorate did yesterday. The BBC describes the situation and the results HERE. Some papers blame the Socialist’s ineptitude. No matter. It’s four more years for Mr. Orban and his “change Hungary machine.”

Dumbfounded, I asked a Hungarian friend to explain the result. He did. And so, to be sure I understood, I asked “So Hungarians (not all of course) are looking to Mr. Orban as Russians look to Mr. Putin, a hero who is protecting Hungary from the world? Yes! My friend replied, that’s it, they need a hero. But will this help Hungary get out of the “unhappiest” country category anytime soon?

Yet another reason to say that this world, these Shadowlands, are not our home, we’re just passing thru heading to that which is Real.

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Filed under culture, Eastern Europe, shifts

“We don’t want to be Russians”

From The Economist:

“We don’t want to be Russians, we want to be Ukrainians,” he said, sitting in a room of brightly coloured bunk-beds. He and his wife had moved to Crimea in 1992 from Uzbekistan, where their parents had been sent during Stalin’s deportation of the Crimean Tatars in 1944. They worked in construction and got on well with the local Russians. Then the Russian soldiers took over last month. “Now Russians are squabbling over how they will divide up the houses of their Tatar neighbours,” said Kerim’s 21-year-old son. “Even those who are still there.”

I’ve heard this before. It sounds a bit like ethnic cleansing.

Read the complete blog post HERE.

 

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Filed under culture, Eastern Europe, shifts

please don’t forget #prayForUkraine

The latest from the AP via AOL & Luke Davis…  click here

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Filed under culture, shifts

Hungary votes #prayForHungary

Hungary is voting today. The Economist previews it HERE.

Please pray for Hungary.

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Filed under culture, things Central European

Preparing to help Ukrainian orphans as Russia threatens

Sergey and Nadya are foster parents of six children and they have lived in Lugansk, a city in Eastern Ukraine, for many years… until everything changed for them a week ago. Their home is just twenty miles from the border with Russia. The crisis in Ukraine including the recent occupation of Crimea by Russia and the threat of further invasion has turned their lives upside down and filled their hearts with anxiety about the future of their family.

“We prayed, fasted, and talked about this situation a lot as we are worried for our children so much.  Then we realized that we need to move with them to a safer place”, said Nadya. This family is among millions of people in Ukraine who pray for peace but prepare for war.

Learn more about how to get involved here… 

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Filed under culture, shifts

preparing for the worst in eastern Ukraine #prayForUkraine

I got on Skype with a ministry partner in Ukraine this afternoon to follow up on a report I heard on a Christian radio station this morning. That report made some pretty scary statements that have not been (and may never be) verified about Russian munitions stored near orphanages during the height of the crisis in Crimea. Don’t freak out, that, if true, is most likely over… but one thing is for sure, now that Crimea is part of Russia, the Russian adoption ban applies to children in Crimea. I learned today that there are at least four adoptions that have been stalled and will probably stop now that Crimea is under Russian law. These adoptions were at a variety of stages as American families were working to give homes to children from Crimea.

With this fact in mind, our partners are preparing for the worst… further incursions of Russia into Ukraine. Should that happen, then other adoptions will be stopped, foster family arrangements may be thrown into question and certainly the funds that the Ukrainian government provides foster families will cease if Russia take additional territory from Ukraine.

Sound far fetched? Alarmist? What might you have said in December if I told you that Crimea would be part of Russia in March?? Remember, two weeks before Russia invaded and annexed Crimea, Putin told reporters that he had no intentions on Crimea. Yeah, right.

Therefore, it is only responsible and is important for leaders in Ukraine (who have committed their lives to the plight of at-risk children in Ukraine) to collaborate and develop a plan to make sure the plight of Ukrainian orphans does not get worse. They have done so and you can learn more AND GET INVOLVED by going to www.ceokids.org and reading a plan our partners are working on.

Please, please, PRAY for Ukraine.

 

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Filed under culture, shifts