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Epic Journey

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This account follows one man’s journey through the 20th Century’s Communist experiment in Soviet Ukraine, the Second World War, and the struggles and successes of immigrants in the United States in...
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  • 07 April 2020
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Epic Journey is indeed an epic journey, a sad, tragic, and ultimately inspiring tale of oppression, defeat, flight, and salvation that addresses the very essence of the human condition. But Epic Journey is also an important addition to the small, but steadily growing, body of memoirs that give voice to the Ukrainian encounter with catastrophe in the twentieth century. As such, it sounds a warning about the dangers of authoritarianism, fanaticism, and intolerance to all people of good will.” —Alexander J. Motyl, Rutgers University-Newark

Wasyl Andreievych Kushnir was born in Ukraine in 1923, and was witness to the tragedies and horrors of the early years of collectivization under the Soviet regime in his homeland. His father fought in the Ukrainian National Army against the Russian Bolshevik invasion and ultimate occupation of Ukraine, and his grandfather was murdered by Chekist Bolsheviks. Early in Wasyl's life, his family's home and all personal possessions were confiscated by the communist authorities, and both parents were exiled, his father to Siberia, and mother to a prison in Mariopol. His uncle Danylo was also arrested and exiled to forced labor in Siberia, and then to Komi SSR. 

 During this period, Ukraine experienced genocidal famine, and Wasyl himself suffered hunger during the Ukrainian Holodomor, in which millions perished. Upon the escape of his parents from prison camps, the family reunited, only to be torn apart again during World War II when Wasyl was taken by the Nazis as a slave laborer to Germany. At the war's conclusion, Wasyl drove trucks for the American Army in Germany, and married his wife, Maria, also a forced labor survivor, who bore him two sons. The family ultimately emigrated to Mississippi, and then Chicago, Illinois where two other children were born. Wasyl pursued the American dream, sought an education, and was ultimately successful in business, retiring in Florida where he spent his last years.

The story of Wasyl’s life, which extended almost a century, is told by his son Andrei in his father’s voice. Andrei combined his father’s memories, written longhand in Ukrainian, with translated documents and additional narrative. This non-fiction work attests to the struggle for survival under the harsh Soviet regime in Ukraine, the courage and persistence of one remarkable man, the importance of family, and the strength and endurance of the human spirit.

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Price: $32.95
Pages: 142
Publisher: Academic Studies Press
Imprint: Cherry Orchard Books
Publication Date: 07 April 2020
Trim Size: 8.50 X 8.50 in
ISBN: 9781644691106
Format: Paperback
BISACs: Memoirs, True stories of heroism, endurance and survival, European history, History of the Americas, Second World War
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Andrei Kushnir is an American artist/author of Ukrainian-American descent. He is the author of Oh, Shenandoah, Paintings of the Historic Valley and River; Painted History, and other collections of his artistic works.  He is a graduate of the University of Illinois (BA), Georgetown University (MA) and Howard University School of Law (JD), and served as a civilian attorney with the Federal Aviation Administration, and U.S. Department of the Navy.

Table of Contents 

Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations

Introduction

Family History
Dispossession and Father’s Arrest
My Mother’s Travails
My Life After the Arrests of My Parents
The Holodomor
My Parents, and Their Lives During and After the Holodomor
I Rejoin My Parents
Uncle Danylo
Life with My Parents in Bilychi
The German Army Enters Kyiv
Return to Nova Bubnivka
Conscription to Forced Labor in Germany
Correspondence I Received as a Forced Laborer in Germany
The War Ends; I Am Set Free
Life in the Refugee Camp, Regensburg, Germany
I Start My Own Family
We Immigrate to the United States
Life in Chicago
Reconnecting with my Mother
Family Life in Chicago
Move to Palatine, Illinois
Our Family in America
Our Move to Florida. The Family Grows
Last Thoughts