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Category Archives: 1989 A Month in Moscow USSR
Part 7: Plan B, teamwork, and tearful goodbyes
Tues 2nd– 9am to Shadow Puppet Theatre with Sergei’s wife Helen because Sergei is sick. Also Will, Susan, Hannah, and Andy are getting sick with colds & fevers. The show must go on, and the Cabells are real professionals, sickness … Continue reading
Part 6: Kids, musicians, and artists, oh my!
Day 21 of a 28 day odyssey in Moscow, 1989. To recap, our Russian hosts had worked out the details of our month-long visit about a year in advance. The plan had been to spend Weeks 1 and 2 in … Continue reading
Part 5: The third week!
Although the main purpose of our trip was to work in schools spreading the hope of ecological consciousness to Russian children, we knew there were dignitaries to impress as well. By far the most important was Gennady A. Yagodin, Soviet Minister of Higher and Specialized … Continue reading
Part 4: The first ten days in Moscow
I just reread my journal notes from 28 years ago and my first thought is, “I can’t share any of this!” Then the second thought was, “Why, because you all acted like human beings occasionally?” And that is exactly what … Continue reading
Part 3: From Russian with love
“How on earth did you ever get to go the Soviet Union?” In 1989 I was married to a musician (David) who had a performing partner (Deborah). Their specialty was teaching and performing for American children, mostly in New England … Continue reading
Part 2: From Russia, with bittersweet love
Context is everything, I know that. The story of the Soviet Union’s final years is dramatic and far more complex than anything I could ever pretend to understand. My four-week experience there in the spring of 1989 was as a guest … Continue reading
Part 1: “Typical American!”
How did that headline feel? Like a compliment? Like an insult? Like a gross generalization? It has happened to all of us of course. When you hear someone is from California, Alabama, Minnesota, or Massachusetts, you can’t help but assume … Continue reading