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The novel Wretched Land by Mila Komarnisky describes the passionate love, the intense suffering and the miraculous survival of one family who lived in Ukraine through the hardship of World War One, a Civil War and World War Two, the famines of 1921, 1932-33 and 1947 and a cruel Stalinist regime.

 
The story is fictional but it is interwoven into the fabric of Ukrainian history.

The main character, Dmytro Verbitsky, is an impoverished aristocrat who nurtures dreams of Ukraine’s independence. He secretly marries the love of his life, goes to World War One and returns home only to find that his wife was raped. Will he avenge the brutality she has suffered?
 
The novel won an Anna Pidruchney Award for New Writers in June 2010.
 
 

The Wretched Land is a historical romance with a panoramic back-drop of the Ukrainian countryside, that could only be described by Dr. Zhivago himself.

                                             K.Hill, librarian
 
The novel is released in April, 2011 by Savant Books and Publications www.savantbooksandpublications.com
  
 
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Brief history of Ukraine
  • At the beginning of the 20th (twentieth) century, Ukraine was a part of the Tsar's Russia. Russian was the main language in the Eastern Ukraine. However, the Ukrainian nationalistic movement in the country kept the Ukrainian language alive.
  • At the beginning of the World War One, the Russian army defeated the German army, and in 1915 occupied Galicia (the western part of Ukraine). Tsar Nicholas wanted the Western Ukraine to become a part of Russia and expected the population to speak Russian. But the nationalistic movements in the Ukraine resisted the task.
  • In December, Germans pushed Russians back into the Eastern Ukraine and recaptured Galicia.
  • In October of 1917, the Russian Revolution brought the Bolsheviks to power in the country and Russia became a Socialist Republic.
    In January 1918, the Sichovy Striltsi, the soldiers in the Ukrainian Independent Army, fought for the Ukraine's independence from Soviet Russia on the outskirts of Kiev. However, the Ukrainian army lost the battle.
  • Ukraine lost its temporary independence and became a Socialist Republic. The population in the country divided into Reds and Whites and the country emerged into the Civil War.
  • World War One, Russian revolution and Civil War brought poverty, disorder and hunger throughout the country. The communist government allowed the peasants to own plots of land, taken from the land that was confiscated from the rich family estates.
  • However, the drought in 1921 caused famine in the Ukraine. Many people died.
  • New Economic Policies introduced in 1922, allowed peasants to sell their produce on the market for prices that represented their true value. Many people became prosperous.
  • In 1923, the Ukraine along with Russia and other Soviet Republics became part of the Soviet Union.
  • In 1924, Lenin died and Josef Stalin came to power.
  • In 1929, Stalin introduced collectivization of the land and cancelled the private ownership of land. Many people refused to join the collective farms. The government forced people to accept the collectivization. Many prosperous peasants were exiled to Siberia. The government heavily taxed the produce of those who refused to join the collective farms.
  • Drought in 1932 did not allow peasants to fulfill the government quota of wheat. The wheat grown and kept for personal use was taken by force from Ukrainian households. People were left without food. Those who worked in the collective farms did not have food either.
  • Heavy famine (holodomor) struck the Ukraine. Many people and entire villages died from hunger. There was no help from the government, who did not want to admit that the Ukraine was struck with a deadly famine.
  • In 1934, the government gave small amounts of seeds to collective farms, and started to feed those people who came to work at the farm. Some people in order to survive the famine left the familiar countryside for the unknown life in the city, where they could find some food.
  • After the famine, the peasants returned to the countryside and resumed their work at the collective farms. Many Russians occupied the empty houses in the villages of the Ukraine.
  • World War Two brought disaster and hunger to the Ukraine as well.
  • In June 1941, during a Germen invasion in the Western Ukraine, Ukrainian nationalists declared the Ukraine independent, but Germans did not allow that, and arrested the leader of the movement, Stepan Bandera.
  • The Germans sent young people to Germany to work as free labor. Many did not come back.
  • In 1943, the Red Army liberated the Ukraine from the Germans; however, the Germans burnt down the houses in villages as they were passing through, going back to west. The Ukraine started rebuilding the country with even more determination.
  • In 1947, another drought struck in the Eastern Ukraine that caused famine, and again there was no help from the government. Some people went work in the cities, some died from hunger.
  • In 1985, a young communist Mikhail Gorbachev came into power in the Soviet Union and a new wave of “Glasnost” and “Perestroika” swept the country.
  • In 1991, Ukraine declared independence from the Soviet Union and on August 24, it became an independent country.
  • Peasants now can own the land in Ukraine.
  • The wretched land was tamed, at last. 
 
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