THE VOICE OF INTERNATIONAL LITHUANIA
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The ‘Lithuanian’ senator, Richard ‘Dick’ Durbin (67) with President Barack Obama.
Durbin is the senior United States Senator from Illinois and the Senate Majority Whip, the second highest position in the Democratic Party leadership in the Senate. Durbin was born in Illinois to an Irish-American father, William Durbin, and a Lithuanian-born mother, Ann Kutkin (Lithuanian: Ona Kutkaitė). Durbin has over many years done a truly great job not only for America but also for his motherland, Lithuania!
Text: Aage Myhre, Editor-in-Chief
aage.myhre@VilNews.com
During a visit to the U.S. some years ago I spoke with immigrants from various countries who now live in the United States. All with one thing in common; that they had abandoned their homelands. I met exiled Cubans. I saw Iranians who fled to USA after their Shah, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, was overthrown from the Persian Peacock Throne in 1979. I talked to many Eastern Europeans who escaped Stalin's atrocities during and after World War II. I talked to Jews who were born in the U.S., but still feeling and having very close ties to Israel.
It strikes me that the U.S. has done much more for exiled nationalities than what our Western European nations have done.
It was probably not without reason that the majority of Eastern Europeans who managed to flee westwards towards the end of World War II preferred the U.S. over Western Europe. For in truth our Western European support to our eastern brothers and sisters was rather half-hearted during the post-war years.
The incredibly bloody partisan war that the Balts fought against the Soviet occupiers in the years 1944-1953 was barely mentioned in Western Europe. The fact that over 100 000 people were killed, tortured and assassinated right outside our own doorsteps got shamefully little attention. Information on the countries' own language played an invaluable role. Radio signals reached behind the Iron Curtain... |
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"Chicago is Lithuania's second largest city," said the young man smilingly when he welcomed me to the LWC, the Lithuanian World Center in Lemont in the outskirts of Chicago. It is an impressive centre, with a church and much more which this 'nation outside of the nation' has built. It was here from Chicago that the struggle against the Soviet occupation of the Baltic states continued nonstop from World War II until liberation finally came in 1990-1991. I hear statements like; ‘those who fled to the United States were living the good life, while those who weren’t that lucky were subjected to deportations and atrocities of the Soviet power’. What I also see is that Lithuania's leaders only very hesitantly want their countrymen and women welcomed home after the 50 painful years of cold war between east and west. Lithuania is about to lose a tremendous opportunity. But all hope is not lost. |
VilNews e-magazine is published in Vilnius, Lithuania. Editor-in-Chief: Mr. Aage Myhre. Inquires to the editors: editor@VilNews.com.
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