Sunday, November 19, 2023

Deadly war

A Ukrainian civic group has estimated that more than 30,000 of its country's troops have died since Russia's invasion began. The real figure was likely higher, they added, noting that many of the 15,000 troops listed as missing were likely dead.

According to Kyiv Independent, Russia has lost 317,380 troops in Ukraine since the beginning of its full-scale invasion on Feb. 24, 2022, the General Staff of Ukraine's Armed Forces reported in its morning update on Nov. 18.

The military also said that Russia has lost 5,422 tanks, 10,141 armored fighting vehicles, 10,091 vehicles and fuel tanks, 7,726 artillery systems, 896 multiple launch rocket systems, 586 air defense systems, 323 airplanes, 324 helicopters, 5,726 drones, 22 ships and boats, and one submarine.

Saturday, November 18, 2023

Ukrainian children taken forcibly to Belarus and Russia



Why were 2400 children taken from Ukraine to 13 centres across Belarus?  Why were some 19,000 taken from Russian-occupied territories?  Some of the children as old as 17 are going to remember this. Some of the younger ones may assimilate but they too may remember losing their loved ones. 

Yale University has published this research and specialists are developing a plan to prosecute those responsible in international criminal courts. I hope I live long enough to see this through. 

Meanwhile, three Ukrainian teenage girls who developed apps for children who have fled the war have been awarded this year’s International Children’s Peace Prize at a ceremony in London.

Thursday, November 2, 2023

War is taking a heavy toll on Ukrainian academics

 



2nd November, 2023

Today’s The Life Academic examines the mental toll war is taking on Ukrainian academics.

THE LIFE ACADEMIC

Working in higher education is a struggle even in the best of times. With massive workloads, constant pressure to publish, and a frustrating lack of administrative support, it’s no wonder academic staff around the world are grappling with burnout.

For academic staff in Ukraine, where residents have been wrestling with the impacts of full-scale war for nearly two years, professional burnout seems inevitable. A recent study published in Scientific Reports found soaring rates of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and feelings of professional inadequacy among faculty and staff at Ukrainian universities, all of which have increased as the conflict drags on.

Some of these issues are universal. In their latest edition of the International Classification of Diseases, The World Health Organization describes professional burnout as both a “syndrome” and an “occupational phenomenon,” placing it somewhere between the status of workplace hazard and medical disease. Symptoms include exhaustion, indifferent or negative feelings toward one’s job, and reduced productivity. Though mainly regarded as a psychological condition, chronic work-related stress can disrupt sleep, mess with the immune system, and even increase the risk of heart attack. Large-scale crisis events, such as the global COVID-19 pandemic, can exacerbate burnout by increasing overall stress.

War may be an even greater stressor. As military operations continue to devastate Ukraine, the nation’s academic staff face constant threats to their work and personal safety. The Russian occupation has forced many researchers to flee, with some finding refuge at universities in other countries. Others have remained in Ukraine and kept on working, usually without reliable internet access and often in the face of missile attacks.

Officials at national and institutional levels must take immediate action to improve the mental health of academic staff, the authors of the new study say. This will no doubt be an uphill battle, as employees struggle to avoid burnout even in nations not at war. Studies show that, when academics attempt to maintain a healthy “work-life balance,” they actually end up increasing their mental load. In the context of full-scale war, when healthcare workers are stretched thin and experiencing burnout themselves due to trauma, many typical “self-care” strategies simply aren’t feasible. “You can't tell someone to go see a therapist when there are no new therapists taking patients,” one physician working in Ukraine told MedPage Today.

But although the Scientific Reports study paints a sobering picture of the state of higher education in Ukraine, the authors also seek to highlight the incredible courage, perseverance, and ingenuity of the nation’s academics, who continue to perform their duties even in the face of seemingly insurmountable obstacles. “Despite these extraordinary circumstances,” the authors write, “universities and academic staff persist in fulfilling their main mission of delivering high-quality, modern education, steadfastly holding their line.”




Saturday, October 7, 2023

What it means to be Irish...




In a talk by Dr Edmund Gilbert, Royal College of Surgeons of Ireland, titled 'The Irish DNA Atlas: providing a map of Irish genetics in and out of Ireland', he presented the Irish genetic pre-history. In Neolithic period, DNA evidence shows that the settlers arrived from the Middle East. In the bronze era, the DNA brought new ancestry predominantly of settlers from the Eurasian Steppes, and that ancestry forms the basis of modern Irish genetic makeup.

I asked the following questions:

I believe you said that the DNA of the modern Irish genome originated in Eastern Europe -- the Eurasian Steppes. Is that the area that would now be Ukraine?

Would you now be looking at the shared features of the current Ukrainian migrant population and the ancient Irish DNA?

But they didn't answer questions being asked online. Very interesting. 

IMIRCE: MIGRATION & IRELAND THROUGH TIME

Presented by the National Monuments Service of the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage and organised by Archaeology Ireland

By WORDWELL GROUP

273 followers

Follow

Date and time

Sat, 7 Oct 2023 08:30 - 16:45 IST

Location

The Printworks Event and Exhibition Centre

Dublin Castle Dame Street 2 Dublin 2

Show map

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event

About this event

8 hours 15 minutes

Mobile eTicket

Imirce: migration and Ireland through time

From the voyages of the first Mesolithic colonisers to the present day, the island of Ireland has seen many new arrivals coming for many different reasons. Archaeology can provide unique insights into how these people adapted to their new surroundings. Imirce: migration and Ireland through time will investigate how identities were negotiated within these new contexts.

Imirce—migration, the overall theme of this programme—looks at the evidence for arrival in Ireland, alongside examples of Irish arrivals elsewhere, as a means of exploring and revealing the multiplicity of identities that have contributed—and continue to contribute—to Irish society through time. This evidence ranges from the growing body of ancient DNA evidence that is beginning to answer some lingering questions about Irish prehistoric populations to the legacy of new or introduced artefacts, burial or settlement types that give us some insight into the lives of these new arrivals. Equally, such evidence has an important role in telling us about Ireland’s connections with the wider world. During the ages of exploration, colonisation and transplantations, ships crossed oceans to trade, raid or transport. Irish people were on board. The emigrations of the nineteenth century following the devastation of the Famine witnessed a population shift from Ireland to distant lands, where broader connections were forged and where the Irish diaspora expressed their identities in different contexts and emerging new communities.

07 October 2023, The Printworks, Dublin Castle


Thursday, January 5, 2023

Soccer or futbol in the new world

 

Me, circa 1959, greeting the Ukrainian National Football Team in the US.
My favorite player was Noha (a name meaning 'leg') standing to my right.

My father, Marian Korzeniowski, was coach of the Ukrainian National Football Team in the US, Philadelphia to be exact, in the late 1950s, early '60s. Theirs was a powerful team that traveled the country and occasionally the world to play 'футбол' or 'копаний мяч' or kick ball as my father called it. They were considered the best in America, not that soccer was very big in America at the time. 

Tato recruited players from all over the world, including Brazil, which meant he had to learn all their languages. My father told me he spoke 13 languages. I know he spoke Ukrainian, Polish, German, Austrian, Italian, Chech, Slovakian, Portuguese and English. I don't know what the others were, perhaps Spanish and Russian among them.

It was the Ukrainian diaspora's way of kicking it to the Soviets who kept them from returning home after the war. They made their way the only way they knew, by being the best, the strongest, the most fit and ready to defend their honour, their liberty and their freedom. 

My dad, on the left wearing a suit.


















Keepers of the culture

Me, circa 1959


I am going through such revelations with the Ukrainians in my circle here. The Russian speakers don't believe that I do not understand Russian because everyone in Ukraine understands both languages. They think I am pretending to make a point. So many words the Ukrainian-speakers use are Russian without them knowing it. They have very little understanding of Ukrainian history before the Soviet Union. Fortunately, I kept all my books from Uki school, and I am sharing my Encyclopedia for Young People so they can study pre-soviet history. It includes history, culture, archeology, anthropology, sociology, literature and more. Such a fascinating and heart-breaking journey. We have about 60,000 displaced Ukrainians in Ireland, none of whom wanted to leave their country, all of whom are grateful to be welcomed here.


Tuesday, January 3, 2023

Dream with Ukraine


I feel for the youth of Ukraine. But what Russia doesn't understand is that they've cemented the resolve of the Ukrainian people to relearn what it means to be Ukrainian and to maintain freedom and sovereignty at all cost. The people born under the Soviets were not permitted to speak their language or practice their religion. They were not taught their own history, only some fabrication of untruths. They lived their lives in relative harmony with their reality.

They are now searching out and relearning all the things the Soviets tried to stamp out. We in the diaspora are the keepers of the culture. In my classes, I am not just teaching English to Ukrainians, I am sharing what I learned about Ukrainian history and culture, and I am teaching what I know about Ireland. The past, the present and the future carry equal weight. And the youngest of them are very hopeful. They are determined to create a strong Ukraine for their future. It is their duty.

Washington Post article 'As war drags on, young Ukrainians are rethinking their futures'

By Siobhán O'Grady and Kostiantyn Khudov 

https://wapo.st/3WINZA4