Source: NorthJersey.com BY CHRISTOPHER MAAG STAFF WRITER THE RECORD When the hunger began, Peter Velechko ate grain meant for horses. When the horses died, he ate horse meat. When the meat was gone, he clawed the farmers’ fields with his hands and ate the seeds. When the seeds were gone, he found the holes of field mice and ate their stores of grain. When the hunger lifted in 1933, Velechko looked like a skeleton. But he was alive. “Even if the grain was bad, we ate it,” said Velechko, 89, a survivor of the Holodomor, the famine forced upon Ukraine…
Trending
- A Different Kind of Pope – Analysis by Theodore Kalmoukos
- A Zoom Retreat on “Pride” for Clergy Wives and Widows
- Pascha With St. John of Shanghai
- Over 200 Entered the Church this Pascha in Hatfield, UK
- On the Unity of the Church: An Interview with Dr. Symeon Paschalidis
- OCA Delegation Attends Funeral of Pope Francis
- Another Joyful Milestone at St. Vladimir’s Seminary
- The “Chernobyl Savior” Icon