Saturday, June 20, 2015

Vitayoo Lisa!

"Disability does not mean no ability." ~ London 2012 Olympic Swimmer Jessica Long, a double amputee adopted from Russia


Lisa Halâvčenko-Babich, a 13-year-old Ukrainian pianist with Downs Syndrome has won at the International Music Festival in Bulgaria.

Photos Courtesy of hromadske.tv






Congratulations Lisa! We are proud of you!
 ~Your friends in America, united for Ukraine

For more information about help for Special Needs children in Ukraine (especially orphan care), please visit Ting Ministries at www.tingministries.blogspot.com

New Photos from "Night Serenades"






If you remember, I did a post a few days ago, on a group of Kyiv Soloists who were doing a concert on Friday night, called Night Serenades. Today I have some new pictures to share for the event that raised support and awareness for the political prisoners that are being falsely detained in Russia.

Here at Flowers of Freedom and Peace, we would like to extend our warmest thanks and support to the musicians, audience and everyone who made Friday night possible. Though we could not join you in person, you were in our thoughts.

Photos by: hromadske.tv

















Friday, June 19, 2015

Океаны (Oceans) Hillsong United

Recently I came across this beautiful praise song, by Hillsong United, in Russian. To every brother and sister in Christ in Russia and Ukraine...Please remember in the deepest waters of turmoil, our Lord has never failed us. Where our feet fail, His grace abounds.


You call me out upon the waters
The great unknown where feet may fail
And there I find You in the mystery
In oceans deep
My faith will stand

And I will call upon Your name
And keep my eyes above the waves
When oceans rise
My soul will rest in Your embrace
For I am Yours and You are mine


Your grace abounds in deepest waters
Your sovereign hand
Will be my guide
Where feet may fail and fear surrounds me
You've never failed and You won't start now


So I will call upon Your name
And keep my eyes above the waves
When oceans rise
My soul will rest in Your embrace
For I am Yours and You are mine

[6x]
Spirit lead me where my trust is without borders
Let me walk upon the waters
Wherever You would call me
Take me deeper than my feet could ever wander
And my faith will be made stronger
In the presence of my Savior

 I will call upon Your name
Keep my eyes above the waves
My soul will rest in Your embrace
I am Yours and You are mine








Thursday, June 18, 2015

Selfie Soldiers








*Viewer Warning: Some graphic violence included*


For months, President Vladimir Putin has been denying the presence of Russian soldiers in the country of Ukraine. VICE News challenges this, tracking a Russian soldier moving into Ukraine by using social media.

Smachnogo!

This blog celebrates all things Ukrainian, and what better way to know and love a culture than through it's food? So, without further ado, I give you the first Ukrainian recipe:


Verenyky with Sour Cherries~ Courtesy of Ukrainian-recipes.com


4d8e83






Ingredients:

  • 3 eggs
  • 5-6 glasses milk
  • 0.5 glass milk
  • 0.5 glass water
  • 800 g cherries
  • 0.5 glass sugar
  • 2-3 tbsp semolina
  • salt – to taste
Cooking


Divide yolks and whites. Whip the whites stiffly. Add milk, water, flour, and salt. Knead stiff dough. Leave it for 30 minutes.

Filling

 Remove the seeds from the sour cherries. Mix them with sugar and semolina. Leave the ingredients for half of an hour. The semolina is used in order to prevent the runout of the cherry juice and the adhesion of varenyky during the boiling. The semolina does not influence the taste.

Then roll the dough, cut off the rounds. Place filling on each round, join the edges and paste them up.

Boil varenyky in salty water. Serve hot with sour cream.



Mmm! What are your thoughts? Leave a comment below to share your ideas or experiences with any other recipes! We'd love to have your feedback!

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Songs for Ukraine:

"Night Serenades: MFA Concert for Ukraine’s political prisoners in Russia"

Sasha's Words: On May 23, Ting Ministries Presented "Songs for Ukraine," a night of fellowship and music from local artists, to celebrate the people and culture of Ukraine. Now, a group of Ukrainian musicians are doing the same thing, in Kyiv, this Friday. While our two groups are very different in language and culture, we are both united in purpose and spirit. We extend our best wishes to each of the performers as they spread messages of freedom and peace through the beauty of music.



National Chamber Ensemble, Kyiv Soloists
National Chamber Ensemble, Kyiv Soloists 


Article by: Paula Chertok
June 16, 2015


Ukraine’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced today that the National Chamber Ensemble “Kyiv Soloists” will hold a classical music open air concert “Night Serenades” dedicated to all the Ukrainian prisoners illegally detained by the Russian Federation.  This concert aims to raise awareness in Ukraine as well as in the international community that Russia is violating these individuals’ human rights as well as disregarding the rule of law by continuing to hold them as prisoners.
Screen Shot 2015-06-15 at 2.15.49 PM

The outdoor event will be held on Friday, June 19, 2015 at 21.00 Kyiv time on Mykhailivska Square located in front of the Foreign Ministry between the columns and the facade of the building, a location with uniquely beautiful acoustics. This project is an important step in the process of developing the Foreign Ministry not only as a governmental office but also as an art venue. Join the fb event here.


The National Chamber Ensemble “Kyiv Soloists” will perform its program entitled “Night Serenades,” consisting of musical compositions dedicated to lyrical hymns of love and tenderness, including works by Peter Tchaikovsky, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Antonin Dvorak, Edvard Grieg, Felix Mendelssohn, Edward Elgar, Fritz Kreisler, Johann Strauss, and Astor Piazzolla.


“Serenades,” from the Italian word for “calm” and “serene,” “serenada,” harken back to musical concerts performed in the warm air of Italy and Spain. Now they will be played under the night sky in Kyiv’s historic Mykhailivska Square.


Partners of the event are: Ukrainian Human Rights Group EuromaidanSOS, Amnesty International, Українська правда. Життя, Ukraine Today, EuromaidanPress, Kyiv Post, hromadske.tv, Zinteco Design & Engineering, LoraShen, and Camellia.


The National Chamber Ensemble “Kyiv Soloists” is unique in both diversity and sound. As each of the musicians has an impressive history as solo performers, the resulting ensemble has an extraordinarily beautiful sound. The musicians of “Kyiv Soloists” are all from the conservatory founded by the “Ukrainian Paganini,” conductor and teacher Bohodar Kotorovych. The Chamber Ensemble has held the title of “Ambassador of Ukrainian culture in the world” for more than 10 years. The Ensemble’s current musical director is world renown cellist and conductor Dmitry Yablonsky (USA/Israel). Its artistic director is Honored Artist of Ukraine Oles Yasko. You can find more information on Kyiv Soloists here and here.
Screen Shot 2015-06-15 at 2.19.02 PM


Dmitry Yablonsky has performed on such famous stages as Carnegie Hall, La Scala, Moscow Great Hall, St. Petersburg Philharmonic Hall, Taiwan National Hal, Théâtre Mogador, Cite de la musique and the Louvre. His chamber music partners have included Victor Tretyakov, Leif Ove Andsnes, Yuri Bashmet, Vadim Repin, Boris Berezovsky and many more. In 2007, the cellist was nominated for a Grammy Award. Dmitry Yablonsky has organized many international festivals all over the world, including the Qabala (Gabala) Festival in Azerbaijan, the festival of “Wandering Stars” which is held by young performers in Europe, Russia, the U.S. and Israel.
Concert organizers and partners invite everyone to this unique concert (please note that while seating is limited, there will be plenty of standing room to enjoy the music). Let’s spread our hopes and good wishes that our compatriots will return home to their loved ones soon.

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Seventeen and Exiled

Not only does this blog seek to celebrate Ukrainian culture, it also seeks to unite those working together to plant flowers of freedom and peace, no matter what country they are from. Hopefully, this article about a 17 year old Muscovite demonstrates this.


Courtesy of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
       

Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Aleksandr Herzen, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Andrei Sakharov. Now, a 17-year-old from a Moscow suburb is joining such notables in the long-standing Russian tradition of being exiled for his political views.
"All the democrats in Russia were sent into exile," teenager Vlad Kolesnikov says, "and I feel like I have been sent into exile."


For some weeks now, Kolesnikov has been leading a quixotic and lonely campaign to protest Russia's annexation of the Ukrainian region of Crimea and Moscow's involvement in the conflict in eastern Ukraine.


Most recently, he wore a T-shirt with a Ukrainian flag and the words "Return Crimea" on it to his school in the Moscow suburb of Podolsk. He tells how a school official met him outside the classroom.


"You know, I will never forget how he looked," Kolesnikov tells RFE/RL's Russian Service. "At first he looked at me like a normal, sane person. But when he saw my shirt, he looked into my face and I saw such hatred!"


In class a few minutes later, Kolesnikov says, the student sitting in front of him turned around and said, "Kolesnikov, do you want me to smash in your face now or later?"


A few days later -- after Kolesnikov published a couple of Facebook posts about the incident -- he was jumped by some classmates. He insists that he wasn't beaten up. "It was just a split lip, a few bruises, some bumps on the head, and three drops of blood," he says.


Last Straw
That was the last straw for Kolesnikov's grandfather, a former KGB officer in whose apartment the youth was living in Podolsk. He packed Kolesnikov off on a train to his father in the Samara Oblast town of Zhigulyovsk.


[...] When he called to tell his grandfather he had arrived safely, he was told a couple of police officers had stopped by asking where he got a Ukrainian flag and what had become of the infamous T-shirt.




He has been unenrolled from his school -- officially, "at his own request," he has been informed.


The blue-and-yellow T-shirt, though, was not the beginning. Kolesnikov's life as an outcast began a few weeks earlier when he showed up at the local military commission for his medical examination and his conscription registration.
Kolesnikov says he had no intention of serving in the military or fighting in Ukraine. 


"As I was going in, I decided to turn on the Ukrainian national anthem [on his cellphone] because I do not support the Russian Army and consider it shameful to serve in it. So I turned on the Ukrainian hymn and said, 'Guys, I will not fight in the Russian Army. I will not go.'"


Stunned silence was quickly followed by outraged shouting. In the end, the registration commission handed Kolesnikov a form in which it said he had "a personality disorder."


Social Media Solidarity
Kolesnikov admits that very few people in Podolsk share his views. But, [he says] "I am already planning to leave Zhigulyovsk, go to Moscow, and stage a couple of protests," he tells RFE/RL. "If anyone thinks I am going to get a passport and leave for Ukraine and that will be the end of this, they are mistaken."