Russia: I Really Wanna Say Goodbuy To Ukraine!


Hello,

This is Kyle from Kiev, Ukraine. I will be back this weekend around the 1st and 2nd of November. It has been a long wait but if God willing, I pick up my visa on the 31st of October and catch a train that night. 12 hours later I will be home. 🙂

I have lots of stories to tell and wish that I could get going right now.

I will say that Ukraine is not Russia! I will be talking in the future about multiple of differences that are obvious between the two countries. I have walked a lot of kilometers the last few weeks all over Kiev. (I will tell you I miss Moscow.) The two cities are two different worlds.

The posts will be coming after I get a decent internet connection again. I have struggled with getting things to work and right now I am on my backup system and using Puppy Linux. I have to admit that Puppy Linux is one of the best rescue disks and main operating systems that I have ever used.

The last time we went through the Israel border the computer got jostled around pretty hard and I had issues with things working correctly. I have got everything backed up and working thanks to Puppy!

I was dual booting Windows XP and Xubuntu. Windows XP refused to boot after the border and Xubuntu was marginal at the best. I had the Puppy disc as a rescue disc and I am glad I did. After booting Puppy Linux I was able to cut cds of all pictures and apply the pictures to flash drives. 🙂 (We got lots of pictures.)

I am not sure what happened at the border crossing but somehow I think that I picked up a virus on the windows side at the airport WiFi, because the wireless drivers were corrupt as the first issue that came up.

Since I have been here in Kiev I have seen while walking, about a dozen car wrecks. (I thought Russians were bad drivers.) Ukraine drivers give a new meaning to: red light means run fast and accelerate, A cross walk means: see how many pedestrians you can hit and a sidewalk is just another main road to get around other car traffic. 🙂

Gotta run the Internet bill is running off the scale right now! This little post will cost me around 20 American dollars. That is just to steep for my tastes.

So hello to everyone and thanks for the comments that have come in and I will get to answer them when I get back to Moscow.

Kyle

comments always welcome.

Russia: Stuck in Kiev, Ukraine!

Hello,

My wife has made it home to Russia and I am stuck in Kiev, Ukraine due to technical reasons. Somewhere around the first of the month (Nov.) I will be back in Russia.

It is a long story and as soon as I get proper internet I will explain the whole story.

So for now: I am living in the Slavutich Hotel with very limited internet connection. I have had lots of long walks and have seen very interesting things. (Like a grocery store robbery with the bad guys (Lada) car being shoot full of holes by the police….) The car looked like Swiss Cheese when the cops were done. ……

That is a story I will tell when I get better connection and no I did not have my camera! (I wish)

Gotta go for now the cost of internet in this Hotel is outrageous.

Kyle

comments always welcome.

PS: Yes, we have lots of pictures of Israel and this time I did not lose them. I have them cut to cd’s and put on flash drives. 🙂

Just Israel Pictures!





Bus Station



Russia: The Israel Trip 4

Hello,

My Sweetie (Svet) looking great as always. We have arrived at the Dead Sea!
This is our hotel: The Dead Sea Gardens Hotel.
The first site of the Dead Sea Beach.
Me floating and soaking up the sunshine.
Svet and I explored the Beach and found salt, salt, salt, salt, salt and more salt!
The Hotels are in a Oasis like area.
The great American Tourist.
Mountains (faint background), more salt and the Dead Sea.
First Burger King in over two years for me, first ever for Svet.

Holiday time again (Sukkot) in Israel!

Hope you enjoyed the pictures and there will be more. We are having a blast and Svet says that it is the best ever vacation. I agree!

Kyle & Svet

comments always welcome.

Russia: The Israel Trip 3

Hello,

We are still running around Israel. Svet and I are at the Dead Sea today. It is fabulous, fantastic and wonderful, all rolled up together!

So after a good night sleep and a float (hard to swim) in the Dead Sea. I plan on posting an article with pictures and all. We are staying at the Garden hotel and plan on staying 3 nights here.

So stay tuned for a good post tomorrow….

Kyle & Svet

comments always welcome.

Russia: The Israel Trip 2

Hello,

We have arrived in Israel just in time for Yom Kipper a very important Jewish holiday.

Yom Kippur is probably the most important holiday of the Jewish year. Many Jews who do not observe any other Jewish custom will refrain from work, fast and/or attend synagogue services on this day. Yom Kippur occurs on the 10th day of Tishri. The holiday is instituted at Leviticus 23:26 et seq.

The name “Yom Kippur” means “Day of Atonement,” and that pretty much explains what the holiday is. It is a day set aside to “afflict the soul,” to atone for the sins of the past year. In Days of Awe, I mentioned the “books” in which G-d inscribes all of our names. On Yom Kippur, the judgment entered in these books is sealed. This day is, essentially, your last appeal, your last chance to change the judgment, to demonstrate your repentance and make amends.

So today is a total day of rest and fasting in Israel. Which means we are goofing off. 🙂 No cars or any motorized transport runs at all, including Airlines or busses. Here is a video done by friends of ours in Israel. Chelita is taking the movie, starting from left to right we have Chelita’s Mother, Svet, Kyle and Misha! We just got done with traditional feast the day before Yom Kipper. Now comes the 25 hour fasting.


We are having a blast in Israel and are taking lots of pictures.

That is all for today…

Kyle & Svet

link to Chelita’s Blog
http://thegelady.blogspot.com/
http://thegelady.blogspot.com/2008/10/blog-post_9095.html

comments always welcome.

I survived the Georgian war. Here’s what I saw.

We want to thank Blackseabrew for finding this article for us. It is a first hand account of the war that was waged on South Ossetia….

In a speech before the United Nations last month, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili implored world leaders to set up an international investigation to find out the truth about the war in South Ossetia.

I couldn’t agree more. But I think the results of an honest investigation would reveal a very different “truth” than what President Saakashvili claims.

I know this because I was in Tskhinvali, the capital of South Ossetia, on Aug. 7 when Georgian troops marched into the city and killed my friends and neighbors. I huddled with my family in terror for three nights while Saakashvili’s tanks and rockets destroyed hundreds of our homes, desecrated cemeteries, gutted schools and hospitals.

I also have good reason not to trust what Saakashvili says. For three days before the attack I had been getting calls from many Georgian friends warning me to get out. They said Saakashvili was planning an attack. Most of the Georgians living in South Ossetia left because they knew what was coming.

On the night of Aug. 7, Saakashvili went on television and assured the frightened civilian population of South Ossetia that he would not attack us. This was long after the time Saakashvili now claims Russians had begun “invading” Georgia.

Ossetians went to bed relieved and thankful for a peaceful night.

Less than two hours later, according to credible international accounts, his artillery, bombers, and three brigades of ground troops unleashed what I can only describe as a fierce hell on our city. In the moment, we knew only our fear as we hid. Afterward I spoke with hundreds of Ossetians to find out what was done to us.

My friend’s elderly father tried to douse the flames set by Georgian fire on the home he had built with his hands. His leg was severed by shrapnel from Georgian weapons. He bled to death while his disabled wife crawled from their burning home.

Ossetians saw Georgian tanks firing into basements where women and children hid for safety They saw fleeing families shot down by Georgian snipers. We learned that the Georgian military had used Grad rocket systems and cluster bombs against Tskhinvali.

Yes, I would very much like to see an international commission investigate the truth of what happened.

When I came out from hiding, thanking God that the Russians had saved our lives, I was dismayed by the reaction of the international media to what had happened. There was nothing about Ossetian deaths and the unprovoked horrors inflicted by Saakashvili’s military. It made my heart sick.

The truth has been crushed by Georgia’s powerful public relations machine as mercilessly as Georgian tanks rolled over the defenseless civilians of Tskhinvali.

I know that Americans are a generous and fair people. But Americans haven’t been told the truth about what happened to us. Americans don’t understand that Ossetians are an independent, Christian Orthodox people with a deep history in our land. The world talks only about Georgian freedom. What of freedom for my people? Does our suffering, do our voices, mean nothing?

I don’t blame the Georgian people for what happened to us. The vast number of Ossetians and Georgians want to live in peace. I blame Georgia’s leaders.

Saakashvili has persuaded the world that he is a “beacon” of democracy and openness. But he won’t even tell his own people the truth. My Georgian friends weren’t allowed to see any Russian news sites during the conflict because all of those sites were blocked by Saakashvili’s government.

I know we are a small people, and I make no claim to understanding the experts in geopolitics with their theories and pronouncements about the great powers. But I have fought for women’s rights in Ossetia for 12 years and I believe in the truth.

In a recent article, Saakashvili cynically dismissed Ossetian suffering and deaths because, he said, Russia had “lied” about how many of my people were killed by the Georgian military.

It breaks my heart to even engage in this discussion. No one – including Saakashvili – knows how many Ossetians were killed by his Army. I have friends who buried loved ones in their backyards because there were no alternatives. Many people are still missing.

Does Saakashvili believe his vicious attack on a civilian city was justified if he only killed a few hundred rather than a few thousand? Do Americans realize that a military trained and equipped by the US government attacked a civilian population as they slept in their beds? Can they justify sending another billion dollars to Georgia and nothing for those Georgia attacked?

I have made an urgent appeal to the world for humanitarian relief for our people at the website helpossetianow.org. I beg the United States and the world to find out the truth. Please hear our voices.

• Lira Tskhovrebova is the founder of the Association of South Ossetian Women for Democracy and Human Rights and has worked for more than a decade to improve relations between people of Georgian and Ossetian descent in the Caucasus.

Find this article at:
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/1008/p09s02-coop.html

Russia: The Israel Trip 1

Hello,

The first day in Israel was a mixture of emotions. First off we were so tired that we had to sleep for about 13 hours. It was that stressful fighting with the airports. To make a long trip short, we flew from Moscow Russia to ZĂĽrich Switzerland. Ran (literally) across one of the biggest airports we have ever seen. Then caught our transfer with about 1 min. extra, to Tel Aviv, Israel. Then found a taxi and made it to home for the next few days.

After sleeping forever: We went to the Russian Consulate in Israel and started the visa dance that is so much fun in this world. That is enough stress that you want to scream.

After being told about (the and what) thousands of things that we have to get together for the next visit tomorrow, we went to eat some delicious Israeli food. Yummy!

Then we took a walk and Svet went swimming in the Mediterranean Sea. Svet had a blast!

Palm Trees Everywhere!
One thing first noticed is every pole has a bike chained to it!
Not every bike is safe though!
The water was warm and the breeze is cool and gentle.
The beach is lined with every big name Hotel on Earth!
Beach is better than looking at Hotels! 🙂
Found some neat art work at a culture building on our walk! See the fake shadows on the building!

So the first day was interesting and tomorrow we have to go dance the visa waltz again!

Everyone have a good day and we will post again soon….

Kyle & Svet

comments always welcome.

Russia: We made It To Israel!

Hello,

We made it and just got up from 13 hours of sleep. I think that the jet trips are hard on people.

We will have a bigger post tonight about our first day in Israel….

Gotta go get my visa done, then we play.

Kyle & Svet

Russia: Commemorate Parliament siege victims!

Around 1500 people gathered in central Moscow on Saturday to commemorate those who died during a confrontation between the Russian President Boris Yeltsin and the Parliament in October 1993.

It’s 15 years since the constitutional crisis almost led to civil war.

Around 150 people died, including civilians as well as servicemen. Many died during clashes with police and when the Ostankino TV center was stormed.

The conflict ended when the then Parliament building – the White House – was shelled by tanks by forces loyal to the president. That forced the legislators who had impeached president Boris Yeltsin to surrender.

The events changed the political face of Russia – a new Constitution adopted after the crisis gave the Russian president increased powers.