The Iron Curtain
I grew up with the Iron Curtain, the dividing line between the Soviet Union and the West. A strange image, "iron curtain." Not iron wall, though the Berlin Wall was part of it. Not iron fence, though barbed wire and guard towers were part of it, too. But iron — hard and unbendable — combined with curtain — soft and pliable.
It was Winston Churchill's phrase, part of a March, 1946, address where he said, "From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an Iron Curtain has descended upon the land." I didn't know he used these exact words until I looked them up just now.
But I did know that something was terribly wrong with the world, that adults were afraid of the division, that it posed harm. The Iron Curtain was not just a dividing line; it was a feeling. It was rigid and gray and hopeless, life drained of color. The Cold War. Nuclear stand-offs.
My children were born as the Berlin Wall was falling. They grew up with a far different Europe than I did. To them, Russian's invasion of Ukraine must seem preposterous. To me, it seems all too familiar.
It was Winston Churchill's phrase, part of a March, 1946, address where he said, "From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an Iron Curtain has descended upon the land." I didn't know he used these exact words until I looked them up just now.
But I did know that something was terribly wrong with the world, that adults were afraid of the division, that it posed harm. The Iron Curtain was not just a dividing line; it was a feeling. It was rigid and gray and hopeless, life drained of color. The Cold War. Nuclear stand-offs.
My children were born as the Berlin Wall was falling. They grew up with a far different Europe than I did. To them, Russian's invasion of Ukraine must seem preposterous. To me, it seems all too familiar.
(Prague, capital of the Czech Republic, a city I never dreamed I'd see. In the old days, it was on the wrong side of the Iron Curtain.)
Labels: events, history, perspective
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