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CRA News and Events

70th anniversary of arrival of White Russian refugees from Tubabao to U.S.

January 28, 2021 By cra-bm

1950-1951 marks the 70th anniversary of the arrival of the three Military Sea Transport Ships that brought White Russian refugees from the island, Tubabao in the Philippines to the United States. The three
ships that arrived in San Francisco arrived on November 30, 1950,, January 25, 1951, and June 14, 1951.  Previous ships carried White Russian refugees that made the tent camp their home from 1949 to
other countries, including Australia, South America and Europe.  And some of refugees arrived either by ship or plane from Shanghai, Harbin and other cities of China, directly to the U.S.
With the blessing of Archbishop Kyrimage_67216385ill, a thanksgiving moleben was held on Sunday, January 24, 2021 at the Holy Virgin Cathedral by the relics of St. John of Shanghai and San Francisco after the liturgy.
It was available to view through livestreaming on the Cathedral’s website:   Livestream   http://sfsobor.tilda.ws/livestreaming
After World War II and the defeat of Japan, a full-scale civil war erupted between the Chinese communists led by revolutionary Mao Tse-Tung and the ruling republican party led by militarist, Chang Kai Tsek.
As it became ominously clear that Mao would soon undoubtedly take Shanghai, the White Russians, “stateless” since they no longer had valid “Imperial Russian” passports, and with no nation to shield them
from harm, as anti-communists, they would surely be persecuted by the Chinese communists.
Gregory K. Bologoff, a former Cossack colonel in the Tsar’s Imperial Army, managed to unify several ethnic groups of refugees within the Russian Emigre’ Association in Shanghai and planned their mass
departure.   Bologoff’s powerful leadership resulted in most of the white refugees to affirm their opposition to communism by refusing to accept Soviet citizenship and return to Russia, where they had already
heard from relatives and friends who did return, that life was not as it was before and there was dangerous times for them if they returned.   Bologoff sent letters appealing to the world’s free countries to grant
asylum to the refugees, indicating the imminent danger and great tragedy that was in their future if no help arrived.   Despite receiving letters of comfort and sympathy, no country offered to take any of them.
Then President of the Philippines, Elpidio Quirino, expressed a willingness to house the refugees.  Through the International Refugee Organization (IRO), as transient guests, the Philippines offered the nearly
6,000 White Russians (this included all the ethnic groups that were part of this evacuation) refuge in Tubabao, until arrangements could be made for their immigration to other countries. And thus, from 1949 to
1951, a camp was set-up by the refugees, with tents for family’s living quarters.  Several churches, converted from left-over US army buildings from WWII,  in various denominations held services.  Numerous
groups, founded in Shanghai, League of Russian American Women, All Cossacks Union, Cadets, Monarchists continued their active work.  Russian Scouts in great numbers, not only held their traditional
campfires, processions, they were instrumental in helping clear the brush in the over-grown jungle of Tubabao and build the camp.   IRO set up a school for all the children and youth on the island.  St.John of
Shanghai’s orphans from the St.Tichon’s Orphanage had also come to the island.  A band was organized and entertained residents of the island with weekly dances.  An orchestra, theater group, ballet, folk
dancers all played their part in entertaining the “White Russians”.

Tubabao - Bologoff with Vladyka Ioann
It was with great anticipation and joy that the refugees welcomed St. John of Shanghai to the island.  His prayers and blessings sustained the refugees with hope, and while some refugees were able to leave
the island in the beginning of 1950 to Australia, those that remained for nearly another year, remained optimistic that their prayers would be answered.   It was Vladyka Ioann (St. John of Shanghai and San
Francisco) that intervened on their behalf and appealed to the United States government to permit the remaining refugees to the U.S.  His holy prayers were answered when then-California Senator William
Knowland visited the Tubabao encampment in 1950 and upon returning to the U.S., introduced a bill to change the Displaced Person’s Act to allow the remainder of the refugees into the U.S.
With the passing of the bill, on November 30, 1950 on the Military Sea Transportation Service (MSTS) ship, USS General M. L. Hersey, 620 White Russian refugees arrived in San Francisco. The second ship,
USS General W. G. Haan arrived in SF on January 25, 1951 with another 1117 persons and the final ship of 490 arrived on June 14, 1951 (another 620 refugees came earlier on their own before the MSTS ships).
The remaining nearly 30 TB patients on Tubabao left the island in 1953 for France.  Thus ended the epoch time of the Tubabao refugee camp.
Special thanks to St. John of Shanghai and San Francisco for his holy prayers to accept the refugees to the U.S., to Colonel Ataman Gregory K. Bologoff for his tireless efforts in organizing the evacuation of the nearly
6000 emigres from China to safety and temporary asylum in Tubabao; to then-President Elpidio Quirino and the people of the Philippines for their hospitality, to Senator Knowland for his efforts in changing the bill
to allow entry to the U.S., to all the residents of Tubabao camp that made the camp a home, to the Russian-American community, already living in the U.S. and to the Russian Orthodox clergy in helping the refugees
in their introduction into a new life, finding jobs, finding accommodations, finding friendships in a new country, and to the United States for allowing us to call this country our home.

Filed Under: News and Events

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! С Рождеством и Новым Годом!

December 28, 2020 By cra-bm

mail-1

Filed Under: News and Events

75 years – end of WWII and 45 years – end of Vietnam War.

November 19, 2020 By cra-bm

This year marks 75 years of the end of WWII and 45 years of the end of the Vietnam War.
CRA congratulates all Veterans, regardless of which war or branch of service, and recognizes and appreciates their service in the US Armed Forces.
We especially would like to acknowledge the many Russian Americans who served in all branches of the US Military and the different wars where they participated.
Please visit our page on this year’s anniversary of the end of WWII and see some of the bios and photos of Russian Americans who served in WWII.
If you or anyone you know of Russian American descent, please let us know, so we can add them to our archives.  Please send bio and photo or fill out the convenient military form
to add to the list.

RUSSIAN AMERICANS in the US Military List:(The Army, Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force, Space Force and Coast Guard are the armed forces of the United States)

NAME in English (Last, First, Middle): __________________________________________NAME in Russian (ФИО): ____________________________________________________

 

DATE of Birth (mm/dd/year):       _________    _________    _________PLACE of Birth (City, State, Country): __________________________________________

 

If not born in US, when & from where immigrated to US: ________  __________________Which BRANCH of the US Military did you serve: ________________________________

 

RANK: ___________________________________________________________________Where were you STATIONED: ________________________________________________

 

Which WAR were you in: _____________________    TERM (S): ____________________If you served in more than one war or more than one term, please indicate: _____________ _________________________________________________________________________

Please list any MEDALS, AWARDS, CITATIONS you may have received: ____________

_________________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________________OTHER (Any other pertinent info you wish to add): _______________________________ _________________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________________

YOUR NAME (Please indicate self or if filling out for someone else, relationship to you,

with your contact info):    RELATIONSHIP (e.g. SELF, father, grandfather, uncle, friend, other, please indicate):  ______________________  NAME: ______________________________

ADDRESS (w/city/state): _____________________________________________________

CONTACT INFO: Tele: ____________________ Email: ____________________________

 

Please email your form to CRA.HQ.SF@gmail.com  along with any PHOTOS you may have

military-logo-home-carey-junior-high-school-29
CRA US Military

Filed Under: News and Events

100 YEARS COMMEMORATION OF THE EVACUATION FROM THE CRIMEAN PENINSULA

November 12, 2020 By cra-bm

This year marks 100 years since the “Great Exodus” – the evacuation of the Crimea (November 13-16, 1920) an event in the Russian Civil War, in which the Russian State evacuated over sea from the Crimean Peninsula, their last stronghold, on the Southern Front (Sevastopol, Yevpatoria, Kerch, Feodosia, Yalta).  Organized and led by Baron Pyotr Nikolayevich von Wrangel, nearly 150,000  soldiers, civilians and crew were evacuated. Wrangel’s White “Black Sea” fleet, foreign ships & temporarily mobilized, in total 126 ships of the  Voluntary fleet sailed to Constantinople.  While some of the evacuees left the ships here, a significant number of emigre’ soldiers and their families evacuated to other locations such as Gallipoli, the island of Lemnos in the Aegean Sea and the Tunisian port of Bizerte.

From there, many went to European countries, such as Yugoslavia, where they found refuge. The soldiers and civilians who stayed or were left behind in the Crimea, suffered under the  “Red Terror” organized by the new Soviet government, authorized by Vladimir Lenin. The White Army soldiers had been falsely promised amnesty if they surrendered.

In memory of those who evacuated, leaving behind their homeland (many, never to return) and for those who stayed behind and succumbed to the “red terror” of the Bolsheviks and Soviet Red Army, memorial services will be held at churches throughout the US and the world, including panihida after Divine Liturgy at the Russian Orthodox Church of All Russian Saints Outside Russia in Burlingame and the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Washington, DC. on Sunday, November 15, 2020 and at the Holy Virgin Mary Cathedral outside the church next to the Russian World War I Veterans memorial on Sunday, November 22, 2020.  All COVID-19 state restrictions will be enforced, incl. masks, distancing & other health & safety measures.

Congress of Russian Americans has been sponsoring commemorative events in honor of the 100 years, which includes producing a 4-part series film featuring interviews of descendants of this evacuation (USA only, as it has become overwhelming).

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

CRA is also proud to announce the publishing of a new book by one of our Russian American community and CRA  members – Tatiana Amochaev.  Writing under the pseudonym of Tania Romanov (her grandmother’s maiden name), she is a prolific author (many other books under her belt) and a descendant of the Amochaev family that evacuated on the last ship from the Crimean Peninsula port of Yevpatoria.  Her gripping story captures not just the evacuation from the Crimea, but further obstacles that her family had to overcome before coming to the United States.  The book has just come out in print and can either be purchased through Amazon or better-yet, send your check $30.00 which will cover cost of the book, tax and S&H charges to CRA (per above address, memo: Crimean book).  The book will be mailed to you and the donation will go directly to CRA, per the author’s generous contribution.   CRA is a non-profit organization, so any donations that you make are tax-deductible.

 

Filed Under: News and Events

CRA protests ethnic profiling

September 24, 2020 By cra-eb

[gview file=”http://just2009.temp.domains/~russiana/russian-americans/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/CRA-Letter-to-Mini-Storage.pdf”]

Filed Under: News and Events

Please sign the petition to save the statue of Alexander Baranov in Sitka, Alaska.

June 29, 2020 By cra-bm

We urge you to sign the petition against removing the statue of Alexander Baranov, founder of Novo-Arhangelsk (now the city of Sitka) and the first Russian governor of Alaska. Link to petition:

www.change.org/BaranovStatue

Here the letter that was sent to Mayor Paxton and Assembly members of the City and Borough of Sitka regarding removal of the Baranov statue:

[gview file=”http://just2009.temp.domains/~russiana/russian-americans/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/CRA-letter-Sitka-re-Baranov-monument.pdf”]

Filed Under: News and Events

75th Anniversary of the End of WWII. Russian-Americans in the United States Armed Forces during WWII.

May 7, 2020 By cra-bm

This year marks the 75th anniversary of WWII. Victory Day, commemorates the surrender of Nazi Germany 1945. It was first inaugurated, following the signing of the German Instrument of Surrender late in the evening on 8 May 1945 (after midnight, thus on 9 May Moscow Time). V-E Day was observed on May 8, 1945, in Great Britain, Western Europe, the United States and Australia, and on May 9 in the Soviet Union and New Zealand.
Regardless of the day that the world acknowledges victory over Nazism, CRA recognizes the many lives lost throughout the world, no where more than the Soviet Union, with over 24 million military and civilian lives lost there alone, and salutes all of our veterans for their heroic courage under fire, who gave the ultimate sacrifice – their lives.
For many years, Congress of Russian Americans collected data of Russian-American veterans in the US. This “Golden list of Russian-American veterans” was collected by one of CRA’s founding members and US Army Colonel Oleg Olegovich Pantukhoff, son of Oleg Ivanovich Pantukhoff, founder of ORUR, Russian Scouts St.George Pathfinders and himself a colonel in the Life guards of the Russian Imperial army and published in various issues of CRA’s “Russian American” magazine and CRA’s Biographical Dictionary, compiled by Prof. Eugene A. Alexandrov.
During the war some 16 million Americans served in the United States Armed Forces, with 405, 399 killed and 671,278 wounded. Colonel Pantiukhov listed 159 Russian-American WWII veterans in the US military, which included 39 who gave their lives on the front. Photos and biographical data (both in English and Russian) of those were featured in CRA’s “Russian American”, as well as the Biographical Dictionary of Russians of North America (including those Russian-Americans who gave their lives in WWII, were kamikaze suicide flier, Vladimir Klochkov, Lieutenant Commander Nicholas Elin, Seargent Paratrooper John Lukashevich Jr., Lieutenant Georges Koushnareff, commanding a mine-throwing mission, wounded flying over Algiers, where he subsequently died, Lieutenant with the tank division of the US Army, Victor Staradoub, Army Air Force Lieutenant Alexander Rusecky, Private Marine Corp. Walter Valaskov, Peter Kisel with the Infantry Division, who participated in the Invasion of France, Sergeant 1st Class Special Agent CIC, Michael Varenik, who had already been a veteran of the Russian Civil War before serving in counterintelligence in WWII and many more).
Famous Los Angeles historian, A.Dolgopolov (himself a veteran of WWI & Russia’s Civil War) gathered lists of Russian veterans in America,  his list included  more than 2399 names. All three (Pantukhoff, Dolgopolov, Alexandrov) continued to state that this work has not been completed and we must continue the work of gathering these names. To further complicate finding many of these people from the 2nd and 3rd generations of Russians in America, many changed their names. such as Evgenyi Kiaschenko who Americanized his name as Eugene Kayes. 

The main logo: DOD, DVIDS and Graphics by Lynn Kaczenski.

IMG_8668IMG_8670IMG_8669IMG_8672IMG_8673IMG_8671

 

Filed Under: News and Events, Uncategorized

Христос Воскресе!

April 19, 2020 By cra-bm

Христос Воскресе!  Воистину Воскресе!
On behalf of the National Board of Directors of the Congress of Russian Americans and myself, we wish all of our members, sponsors, donors, supporters, friends,
a most blessed and joyous Easter.   Wishing all of you strong health and prosperity during these difficult times.
Natalie Sabelnik
President, Congress of Russian Americans

Filed Under: News and Events

Public announcement re Coronavirus.

April 1, 2020 By cra-bm

With the rapid spread of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) throughout the world, and specifically the United States, Congress of Russian Americans’ office, headquartered in San Francisco, CA, will remain closed until further notice.   We thank our CRA members for their continued membership, donations and support. However, we will be unable to respond to your telephone calls or letters, as the building is virtually closed for access.
 
All of CRA’s currently planned events have been canceled in the SF Bay Area, as well as throughout our nationwide chapters.  
 
If you need to reach CRA for any reason, please email crahq.sf@gmail.com.   We will be checking our email periodically and respond to inquiries in a timely manner.  
To all our members, friends and extended families you are all in our thoughts and prayers, especially those that are afflicted or must continue their jobs as first responders or providers of essential services.  All are at risk and we want to stress the importance of sheltering in place and social distancing.
 

Filed Under: News and Events

32nd annual Russian Festival in San Francisco.

March 5, 2020 By cra-bm

Congress of Russian Americans was a proud sponsor of the 32nd annual Russian Festival held at the Russian Center of San Francisco on the weekend of February 21, 22, 23, 2020.
Each year the festival brings together the Russian American community to celebrate “Maslenitsa” with 3 days of traditional Russian food, drink, desserts, arts & crafts and a variety of entertainment
featuring Russian dancers, musicians, singers in authentic colorful costumes.  The Museum of Russian Culture is open throughout the 3 days and displays their collections, archival material and exhibits,
as is the Library with their collection of over 20,000 Russian books.  Local Russian artists display their artwork, which can be purchased, as well as admired.  Other arts & crafts for sale include Matrioshka
stacking dolls, Russian shawls, souvenirs and a large collection of jewelry of precious and semi-precious stones.  CRA has a table throughout the 3 days of the festival with information about our organization,
our events, humanitarian aid and historical programs, funds, as well as a photo display of last year’s work, as well as information about CRA’s upcoming commemorative events and sponsorships.DSC_6495

Filed Under: News and Events

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The Congress of Russian Americans (CRA) is a national non-profit, non-political organization founded in 1973 to preserve Russian culture, language and spiritual heritage, combat Russophobia and are the recognized voice of Russian Americans in the US. CRA's humanitarian programs aid handicapped, orphaned and underprivileged children & youth and help families in crisis.

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