Connecticut
Jeff Jacobs: Russian invasion strikes deep at the hearts of Connecticut’s Ukrainian athletes
Maria Weselyj, baby of Ukraine and writer of essentially the most dramatic shot in Connecticut highschool basketball historical past, was working with a affected person who had undergone a craniotomy at Hartford Hospital.
You know the way of us say, “Hey, this isn’t mind surgical procedure.” This was mind surgical procedure and a good distance from the size of the courtroom play that took 3.8 seconds and ended with Weselyj’s 3-point, buzzer-beater and 2013 state championship for Mercy Excessive of Middletown. A second so dramatic, so joyful that the video clip unfold from Mohegan Solar all over the world. Brad Paisley even included it within the video of his hit nation tune “At the moment.”
Weselyj, who went on to attain 1,000 factors at Southern Connecticut and to get her grasp’s diploma at Bridgeport, is a neurosurgery doctor assistant these days for Hartford Medical Group. From devising the most effective remedy plan to administering the ultimate sutures after surgical procedure, Weselyj is there for a affected person.
“It’s rewarding,” she mentioned. “And precisely the place I’m presupposed to be.”
So possibly Weselyj was presupposed to be in that hospital room on Feb. 24. As she was ending along with her affected person, the girl’s roommate began calling for some assist. Weselyj peeked by means of the curtain to see what she may do.
“The lady was watching the information on TV and so they had been reporting on the invasion of Ukraine — that’s how I discovered,” Weselyj mentioned. “She requested my title and seen the “j” on the nametag. She requested my nationality. I advised her I’m Ukrainian.”
There was quiet.
“I’m Russian,” the girl mentioned.
“She wasn’t my affected person, I used to be simply making an attempt to regulate her pillow and her mattress, assist her attain her breakfast,” Wesleyj mentioned. “There was this second of silence and sympathy after which she poured out her coronary heart how she fled Russia at a younger age and understood the whole lot that occurred in historical past.
“It was this second of compassion and understating, that it’s not all Russians which can be for the struggle. Whether or not it was propaganda or not, the very fact is there may be evil occurring and precipitated for a very long time by their president Vladimir Putin. To have the ability to share her historical past and my historical past at such a susceptible second was very particular.”
Russia’s merciless, relentless struggle on Ukraine strikes deep on the hearts of Ukrainians in Connecticut and meaning it strikes deep with athletes like Maria Weselyj and Nikita Omelchenko.
“That is very emotional for me,” she mentioned.
Weselyj was born in Lviv in western Ukraine, a metropolis that has turn out to be the nerve middle of media reporting all over the world because the Feb. 24 invasion.
Omelchenko, a senior at Wilbur Cross and one of many high distance runners within the state, was born in Zhytomyr about 90 miles from Kyiv.
Maria was 5 when she was adopted by Oleh and Luba Weselyj and almost six when she arrived within the U.S.
“I do have very vivid reminiscences of my setting, the orphanage, the opera home in our metropolis,” she mentioned. “Adoption was the best present my Ukrainian-American mother and father may give me, the present of being right here, the present to to not be within the scenario my nation has been in.”
Nikita was two when his mother and father Yuri and Nataliya, on the lookout for a brighter future, arrived within the U.S. His sister Anna, a Wilbur Cross sophomore and likewise a high distance runner, was born in New Haven. The 2 superior to the New England cross nation championships within the fall and Nikita lately turned in a 4:15.18 indoor observe mile in the course of the New Stability nationals. He’ll run for UConn beginning within the fall.
“I have a look at the information and I see all of the issues taking place and it’s laborious to attach with in it in a single sense,” Omelchenko mentioned. “After which I look and I see the way it has affected my household a lot. And I’m a part of that.
“My mother, my mother and father, are calling each single day. My whole (prolonged) household is within the Ukraine. My mother and her sister are very shut and he or she is about to offer start. My mother is making an attempt to determine a approach so she will be able to transfer in with us or transfer over right here by some means. My grandma is over there, too. Clearly we’re going to assist, but it surely actually has been troublesome.”
Each Ukrainian and Russian is spoken within the Omelchenko home. Nataliya teaches each languages to space highschool college students at Yale by means of its World CLASS Program. Nikita helps his mother.
Weselyj, who speaks fluent Ukrainian, grew up attending St. Michael’s Ukrainian Catholic Church and continued going to Ukrainian College in Hartford each Saturday from 9 a.m. to three p.m. till she was a junior in highschool. When class ended, she’d keep to take part in Plast, the Ukrainian Scout group. Weselyj stays concerned with the Ukrainian sorority Spartanky — the Spartans.
“A lot of them reside in Ukraine and they’re going by means of rather a lot,” Weselyj mentioned. “Our conversations with them have been minimal. A variety of them have needed to go away their brothers and husbands behind. It has been very troublesome.
“I’ve seen with my very own mother and father how a lot they’ve been affected. They nonetheless have cousins there. They needed to go to Poland and go away brothers and husbands behind.”
The mode of communication is the WhatsApp, which can be utilized over WiFi.
“There may be such a stage of uncertainty,” Weselyj mentioned. “These conversations do showcase their braveness.
“I’ve adopted intently past essentially the most escalated atrocities occurring proper now. This stems very far, a long time and a long time. Even in my childhood, understanding there at all times has been pressure from Russia. Listening to tales from my grandmother and what she had gone by means of again within the’30s in the course of the Stalin efforts of making a man-made famine (the Holdomor, that killed hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians), one other type of genocide which may be very a lot what we’re seeing.”
Weselyj stops for a second and switches instructions. She talks about how she usually seems at her embroidered Ukrainian shirts. She talks in regards to the Pisynka, the Easter eggs, so meticulously performed with wax, and the way each coloration dye and design is symbolic and historic. How the Ukrainians love their music loud and joyful. How they spontaneously will shout, “Slava Ukraini!” Glory to Ukraine!
“I’m so pleased with the resilience that the Ukrainian folks proceed to point out,” she mentioned. “I actually do suppose they’re the modern-day Cossacks. Our president (Volodymyr Zelenskyy) continues to point out braveness and heroism throughout the board.”
There could also be a silent j on the finish of her Ukrainian title, however there may be nothing quiet about ardour for Ukraine.
“I get very emotional seeing what’s going on,” she mentioned. “It’s on the earth’s eye. It’s one thing we see every single day. I’m so grateful for the outpouring of emotion and assist folks have given, folks in Connecticut, New Britain, all over the place. My largest worry is with every day that passes, about 50 days now, I get nervous now people right here, Ukrainian-Individuals, all those that are exhibiting large assist, that we’ll get increasingly more used to the struggle crimes and graphic photos we see.
“If I had been to ask the people who’re residing with the atrocities and shellings and dropping their kids, have you ever gotten used to residing with out your mother and father? Have you ever gotten used to seeing your metropolis burning and father die? I feel that’s very troublesome. That’s so laborious to abdomen.”
When she performed, Weselyj, who works with Level Guard School basketball camps in the summertime and fall, wore the bracelet, “My Sport, His Glory.” Of us nonetheless ask her in regards to the shot, one which she calls the “greatest dialog starter ever,” the shot she calls from the grace of God.
“There’s a religion I’ve,” Weselyj mentioned. “It’s so essential to imagine within the fact we will likely be delivered from evil. You proceed to wish every single day. You proceed to count on huge issues of God.”
Massive issues like peace in Ukraine.
Massive issues like Slava Ukraini!
jeff.jacobs@hearstmediact.com; @jeffjacobs123
Connecticut
Connecticut farmers to benefit from federal disaster relief package
Funding to help farmers impacted by disaster is on the way for those who have been seeking help.
That’s one aspect of what came out of a vote in Washington D.C. that in part prevented a government shutdown.
A 13 minute hailstorm in August destroyed William Dellacamera’s crops and cost him $400,000. He was only able to receive a little less than half of that from programs already in place.
“From that day on, basically everything I had grown for the season was destroyed,” said Dellacamera of Cecarelli’s Harrison Hill Farm.
He’s become known locally for driving his tractor from Connecticut to Washington D.C., advocating for more state and federal funding for farmers like him.
In his travels, he landed meetings with the USDA and Connecticut’s delegation.
“I think they’re taking it seriously, and they did. They took it seriously,” said Dellacamera.
President Biden signed a disaster relief bill into law, advocated for in part by Connecticut’s delegation.
Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro says Connecticut has lost 460 farms over the last five years, primarily related to weather events that put their livelihoods at stake.
“I am pleased that we have an agreement on $100 billion in disaster aid,” said DeLauro on the House Floor Friday, who advocated for the bill.
As part of that, Connecticut farmers like Dellacamera will be able to tap into $23 million of relief from crop losses, according to Representative John Larson.
“Now knowing this is going to make a difference is a big deal. And I hope it does, I hope it does make a difference,” said Dellacamera.
Also part of the bill, DeLauro advocated for a block grant of $220 million that’s only for small and medium-sized farmers who have lost crops in 2023 and 2024.
All of New England would fit in the parameters for the grant, allowing farmers to get help without crop insurance or a national disaster declaration.
“We came to a conclusion that these were all of the pieces that were needed to move forward,” said DeLauro on the House Floor Friday, about the bill as a whole.
DeLauro’s team tells us that disaster relief funding will go from the USDA to the states to get payments out.
Dellacamera says he’s grateful, and there’s more work to be done. He hopes this block grant and general disaster relief funding will be able to live on.
“It takes the red tape out of it a little bit,” said Dellacamera of the block grant. “Hopefully it could be funded into the future, you know, as it might be needed more and more,” he said.
In the meantime, the state of Connecticut will be identifying which farmers experienced disasters in 2023 and 2024 to see who would benefit from block grant funding.
Connecticut
Gifts of Love provides for Connecticut families in crisis
Connecticut
Connecticut National Guard families come together for annual holiday event
HARTFORD, CT (WFSB) — On Saturday morning, families of the Connecticut National Guard gathered for an annual event designed to provide support and comfort during the holiday season.
Operation Embracing Lonely Families has been a tradition for 23 years, offering much-needed support to military families separated from loved ones who are deployed.
The event focuses on easing some of the financial burden and emotional stress that military families face during deployments, especially during the holidays.
“It’s an enjoyment because it brings everyone closer during the holiday so they can still be around their family too,” said Newton Maldonado, a National Guard soldier.
One of the attendees, Nicole Scalora, whose husband was recently deployed to Africa for a year, shared the challenges of military life.
“It’s tough. We have to take it one day at a time. Doing everything at home by yourself, not having that shoulder to rely on can be difficult. But I have a lot of family and a lot of support, so that helped a lot. Also, the military is constantly reaching out. Making sure that we’re good and that if we need help, they’re there,” she said.
Saturday’s event included treats and toys for the families, as well as a visit from Santa Claus.
The tradition, which began under former Governor Jodi Rell and continued by each subsequent Lieutenant Governor, has become a symbol of appreciation for those who serve and their families.
While this year’s ceremony was smaller in scale, organizers are expecting the event to grow significantly next year, with nearly 800 families anticipated to attend.
These families are affected by the various deployments of National Guard members overseas.
Lieutenant Governor Susan Bysiewicz expressed her gratitude, noting, “, I’m really glad for the people of Connecticut that our celebration is rather small, because it means our national guard families are here at home celebrating.”
The event remains an important opportunity for the community to come together and honor the sacrifices made by military families throughout Connecticut.
Copyright 2024 WFSB. All rights reserved.
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