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.)