Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Eyes On The Ice by Anna Rosner

Ten-year-old Lukas Burian, his twelve-year-old brother Denys, and six-year-old brother Alexander and their parents, Nadia and Josef live in a three room apartment at the top of a four storey building in Prague, Czechoslvakia. Lukas and his brothers sleep in the livingroom while his parents use the only bedroom. Lukas's father is a journalist who writes articles, all approved by the state, while his mother, who is expecting a baby soon, works in a nursery teaching music and art. Their Uncle Pavel also lives in Prague, sharing a four bedroom apartment with distant cousins. He was an mechanical engineer prior to the communist takeover and now drives a passenger train.

Lukas's best friend is Andrej Svoboda who lives with his parents, Rudy and Marta . Both Rudy and Josef write for the state approved newspaper but both are strongly anti-Communist. Lukas's father gets the banned American newspaper from a street vendor. He hides the paper and an English dictionary under the bathroom sink. 

Lukas, Denys, Andrej and Alex all love hockey. Lukas's favourite player is Czech-born Stan Mikita, while Denys and Andrej like Gordie Howe. They love reading out- of-date copies of Hockey News. After dinner, Lukas and his brothers go to the outdoor rink to skate and practice their hockey skills. Andrey plays real hockey, getting up early for morning practice, before school. As a result, he doesn't come to the arena in the evenings. One night Uncle Pavel brings over hockey sticks and their mother gives them a hockey puck. At the outdoor rink, Pavel tells their father, they are natural athletes. 

Once a week, Lukas and Denys have to attend a Young Pioneers meeting which indoctrinates them in Soviet propaganda. They have to attend every meeting otherwise this will be noticed. During the meetings, they chant slogans that Lukas recognizes as false.

One night Lukas is woken up when his younger brother, Alex is trying to hide a toy car. Lukas learns from Alex that their father has a secret hiding spot in the closet, behind a board in the floor. Lukas decides not to check the closet because he doesn't want to know what his father might be hiding. 

Then one night while Lukas and Denys are practicing on the outdoor rink, they are approached by a stranger named Novak, who invites them to train at a nearby indoor arena. They would be coached by a former player of the Czech national team. The two boys agree and on Saturday they meet Coach Peter who drills them on various skills.

At school one day, Lukas is told to stay afterwards as Mr. Hajek wants to talk to him. As he's heading out of class, Andrej warns him not to tell Hajek anything. Lukas doesn't understand. While his classmate Ivan is in the room, Lukas overhears their conversation and learns that Hajek is interrogating him. When it's his turn, Lukas finds himself questioned as to whether his "father likes to write things and hide them away?". He reveals nothing to Hajek who tells him their conversation is secret and not to tell his parents. Later that night, Lukas questions Denys about being questioned and what their father might be hiding. 

Unable to get anything from the children, both Lukas and Andrej's families are targeted by the oko, or state secret police, who are determined to stop their fathers. As the situation evolves into one of life and death, Lukas's family must make the decision to risk everything for the chance at freedom.

Discussion

In Eyes On The Ice, Anna Rosner has crafted a realistic story that captures life in communist Czechoslovakia in the 1960's.

Czechoslovakia became a state in 1918 after declaring independence from Austria-Hungary. During World War II the country lost various portions to Nazi Germany, Hungary and Poland. After World War II, the state of Czechoslovakia was reformed. In 1948, a Soviet-backed coup established communist control of Czechoslovakia, that would last until 1989. Communism had begun to gain ground in the country after 1920, as the communists had a record of working with non-communists and opposing Nazi rule and being seen as one of the country's liberators, along with the Soviet Union, in World War II. Communism did not fulfill the expectations of citizens of Czechoslovakia: life was exceedingly repressive. 

People were not allowed to own properties or businesses: the latter were all confiscated and nationalized. Communists feared the intellectual elite because they could criticize and debate communist policies and ideology: they were not allowed to work in their field of expertise, arrested, imprisoned and purged. Opponents of the communist regime were imprisoned. Priests and monks were sent to labour camps where they were tortured and murdered, their churches and monasteries closed. Censorship was enforced. Rosner portrays much of this in her novel. 

For example, Lukas's Uncle Pavel, once owned his apartment prior to the Communist takeover but now lives in a crowded one. Once "...a mechanical engineer, designing motors for vehicles" he now drives a passenger train. Food is scarce: "Fruit is rationed and buying more than one kilogram is forbidden." To obtain four small oranges, Lukas's mother has to barter pens and paper. There are long lines for fruit and vegetables and Lukas and his brothers often stand in those lines for their elderly neighbours who are not able to do so. Lukas mentions in his narrative that "Most everything we own seems to be missing a part, mended or broken."

Children are indoctrinated and often enticed and brainwashed into working against their own parents. The Young Pioneers group indoctrinates students in Soviet propaganda, something Lukas and his brother Denys are keenly aware of. Slogans like "Everyone is fed and cared for by the state." are known to be lies because Lukas has seen the overwhelming poverty when he travelled to Poland with his father. 

Children are also weaponized by the communist state, to betray the very people who really love and care for them. When Lukas is interrogated by Mr. Hajek at school, he is told "Perhaps you can let me know if you see anything unusual in the houses. It's very important to keep your family safe...And let's not discuss this meeting with your parents." Later on, after Andrej's father is arrested, he is allowed to continue playing hockey only if he provides information on Lukas's father, Josef. When he doesn't follow through on this, he is removed from the team. This shows the overarching reach the Communist party has on almost every aspect of daily life.  

Both Lukas and Andrej's fathers work against the Communist regime: Andrej's father, Rudy writes the pamphlets and Lukas's father Josef, prints them. Anyone involved in such activities is brutally punished as both the Svoboda and Burian families are to learn. Andrej's father has been imprisoned at least once previously and the state agents continue to harass him and his family, frequently searching their apartment. He disappears soon after. Then the StB imprison Luka's father after searching their apartment. 

In an attempt to further manipulate and control the families of dissidents, the oko or state spies often involve them in questionable activities. Lukas, Denys and Andrej are approached by an oko and told if they want to help their fathers, they are to throw a game in an upcoming Soviet hockey tournament. While Andrey outright refuses, Lukas readily agrees. Andrej states, "If we do what he's asking, we'll become liars just like him." He explains that his father would die rather than aid the Communists and he won't help them either. For Lukas and Denys, they must question where their loyalty lies: to the state or to their father? Lukas knows he would do anything to save his father. Although Lukas plays terribly, despite trying his best and they lose the tournament game to the much larger Russian boys, Lukas's father returns home one week later.

Before the Burian family can't even talk about what has happened, Josef searches their apartment thoroughly for listening devices, even taking apart the telephone. He reveals that he has been released for two weeks but must return to prison. Nadia wants to run but Josef tells her if they do, Rudy will be killed. It's only when they learn that Rudy has died in prison that they plan to escape. Their dramatic escape by train is based on a real event that took place in 1951, when a four car train was driven through a barrier, into West Germany. In her Author's Note at the back, Posner reveals that the train's emergency brake was disabled by the engineer, Jaroslav Konvalinka, who was also helped by three other men. 

Eyes On The Ice explores the themes of resistance, loyalty, and freedom. Josef and Rudy are actively working to resist the evil of Communism, even though it might mean imprisonment, torture, and ultimately cost them their lives. The novel shows the difficult choices citizens in Communist countries had to make: to resist what was a great evil or to comply to save self, family and friends. For Lukas, the question of whether to throw the hockey game is one of loyalty to his father and that means agreeing to play poorly. But to Andrej, loyalty to his father means to not acquiesce to the demands of the oko, even if it means the death of his beloved father. 

The author has included a Historical Note that offers some information on Communism in the Soviet Bloc, a map of Europe in 1963, and Discussion Questions. Author Anna Rosner drew on several sources to write her story including the personal anecdotes of someone who lived in Communist Prague, as well as those who lived in Soviet Russia. Eyes On The Ice is a timely novel that offers young readers the opportunity to learn about life under Communism. It's unfortunate that a more engaging book cover was not designed for this well written novel.

Book Details:

Eyes On The Ice by Anna Posner
Toronto: Groundwood Books   2024
193 pp.

Monday, September 9, 2024

Wings To Soar by Tina Athaide

Ten-year-old Viva is with her older sister Anna and her Mummy in a refugee camp in England. Viva is Goan and she speaks English, Portuguese, Swahili and Konkani. Her father is still back in Uganda, at their house in the seven hills in Kampala. He is expected to arrive in England in five days. She's left behind many friends and watched as her best friend, Ella fled their country to Canada. The camp is RAF Greenham, an old military base that is being used by the Americans and the Royal Air Force. 

The camp has a common hall for the Indians to play table tennis and cards, listen to records or the news. There is a library run by Mrs. Robinson and her daughter, Miss Robinson. It is in the library where Viva goes to look for a dictionary that she meets the twins, Mark and Maggie Mackay whose mother is a volunteer at the camp. Viva also meets an American soldier named Leroy who notices her singing songs by the Supremes. He calls her Lil' Diana Ross and encourages Viva to be like her idol.

Viva's father is supposed to arrive at Stanstead Airport in the evening. To welcome him, Miss Robinson, Mark and Maggie make a welcome sign. However, he isn't on the plane and Viva and her family are devastated. She and her sister wonder if he's safe, or has been arrested or even dead. For two weeks planes from Uganda continue to arrive but Viva's father is not on them. Viva sneaks to the American side every night to wait at the gate, shivering in the cold and the rain. Anna tells on Viva but she still manages to sneak out again. Unfortunately, Viva becomes seriously ill with bronchitis and mild hypothermia and spends days asleep, recuperating.

When she recovers, Viva learns that her father checked into Entebbe Airport but never boarded his plane. Anna also reveals that they have to leave the RAF camp. Viva and her family learn from Mrs. Robinson that they will be settled in Southall, a borough in the west part of London. It is sixty miles from the RAF camp in Greenham Common and Viva wonders how her father will find them.

Meanwhile Viva continues to look up new words at the library but she also sees from the newspaper headlines that people in Southall do not want more Asians. This upsets Viva, who believes her sister Anna doesn't care about anything but her books. But Mrs. Robinson tells Viva that books offer Anna an escape.

The government begins moving Indians out of RAF Greenham camp into English towns and villages. Viva, who is Catholic, prays to St. Anthony, asking him to find her father. She doesn't want to go to Southall but wants her family to move to Canada as they originally planned.

As their plans do not work out as intended, Viva faces racism and an uncertain future and must draw on her own kind of courage, her "supremeness" to help herself and her family.

Discussion

Wings To Soar is a historical fiction novel set England, from October 1972 to July 1973 during the Ugandan refugee crisis. Ugandan dictator, Idi "Big Dada" Amin ordered the immediate expulsion of about seventy thousand Ugandan Asians, whom he accused of corruption and sabotage, from the country. They were stripped of their citizenship and given only ninety days to leave. The Asians in Uganda had been brought there in 1894 to help build railroads. They stayed in the country and soon were part of the business community and working in the government. Amin believed that they were iin control of the country and taking jobs from African Ugandans. 

In her Author's Note, Athaide, who was born in Uganda but emigrated to England and then Canada, states that sixteen resettlement camps were organized including RAF Greenham Common which was run by the U.S. Air Force. The arrival of so many Ugandans - Asian immigrants - caused social upheaval in England.

In Wings To Soar, Athaide focuses on the refugee experience through the eyes of  ten-year-old Viva Da Silva, a Ugandan Asian who has been forced to flee to England along with her mother and older sister, Anna. Her father remains trapped in Uganda, struggling to make it out before the ninety day deadline. The family's plan is to emigrate to Canada, but they cannot do this until their father arrives in England, meaning that their future is uncertain. Amid this uncertainty, Viva and her family feel fear and and sense of loss while experiencing racism and violence.

 While many English were welcoming of the refugees, many were not. Viva becomes aware of this when she reads the newspapers at the library and when she and her family move to Southall where they experience racial hatred and violence. This feeling of being unwanted and without a home, leaves Viva deeply angry and sad. But Leroy, the American soldier helps to put things in perspective. With a white mom and a black father, Leroy often felt like hiding. His mother told him,
"You get courage
by doing small things
one at a time." 

This helps Viva to find her own "supremeness". She confronts her mother, asking her to tell them the truth about what's going on with their father. And she also find the courage to ask Officer Graham to help find out what has happened to her father, Charlie DaSilva. 

Leroy also gifts Viva with a wing pin, telling her that "When you're down because of your troubles, and you want to fold up your wings, 
"DON'T do it.
Spread those wings wide
                        Soar
                                    high above the skies of gray,
                        Higher
                                    than the storms gathering.
Face life's storms, Viva.

                        Be STRONG.
                        Be COURAGEOUS.
                            
                                        SOAR!"

However, when Viva and her family go to live with the Guptas in Southall, she feels even more overwhelmed because she feels she has no choice and no voice. In the poem, The Colored Girl, Viva expresses how people see her. 

"They don't see me.
All they see is a girl
with skin the color
of dark tea,
with eyes
brown as roasted chestnuts,
with hair as dark as coal.

They don't see me.

They see another refugee
    from Uganda.

        A colored girl."

When a brick is thrown through the front window of their flat, Viva quickly loses hope. But the author also shows that many people were willing to help the refugees through the characters of Mark and Maggie, Leroy and Mrs. Robinson and Miss Robinson. Ultimately, they step up and offer the DaSilva's a safe place to live until the situation with Mr. DaSilva is resolved.

Athaide has crafted a realistic heroine in Viva DaSilva. She is vulnerable, both as a child immigrant and as a daughter missing her father. The hatred she experiences because of her skin colour and her nationality make Viva afraid and humiliated. But she is also determined, resilient and courageous. Viva offers to stay behind to allow her mother and Anna to travel to New York so they can care for their father after he's injured in an accident. And even though she's disappointed at the delay in reuniting with her parents and Anna in the United States, Viva is able to reach out to help another brown girl she meets in the park. That girl, Uma believes she will  never belong because she can't change the color of her skin but Viva tells her that she does belong and that there are people who want her and will help her. To encourage her, Viva gives Uma her treasured wing pin that Leroy gave her, reminding her to soar, to achieve her own dreams.

Wings To Soar is an inspiring refugee story set during a much forgotten historical event, the expulsion of an entire part of the Ugandan population at the direction of a murderous dictator. Although Athaide does show the problems the Ugandan refugees experienced, the story is one of resiliency and hope.

Book Details

Wings To Soar by Tina Athaide
Watertown, MA: Charlesbridge Moves       2024
346 pp.