This story, set during the Famine of the 1930s, tells of a young girl’s attempts to save her village from starvation. Marusia’s ingenuity gives her the opportunity to go on a magical journey to the North American Prairies to find more food for her village. Generosity triumphs over greed in this spirited Ukrainian folktale.
Continue reading “Enough”
Tag: Holodomor
Writing YA books about the Armenian Genocide
From this interview.
Interview with Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch: Dance of the Banished and the Armenian Genocide
Posted on April 23rd, 2015 by pajamapress
On April 24, 2015, Armenians around the world will mark the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, a systematic campaign by Turkish leaders in the Ottoman Empire to remove the empire’s Christian Armenian population. As evidenced by recent headlines, the subject is controversial today because the Turkish government denies that these deportations and killings can be labelled “genocide.” Continue reading “Writing YA books about the Armenian Genocide”
Enough — Teacher’s Guide
by Marsha Skrypuch
art by Michael Martchenko
Fitzhenry & Whiteside 2000
isbn 1-55041-509-3
Generosity triumphs over greed…
Continue reading “Enough — Teacher’s Guide”
Holodomor exhibit in New York
The Ukrainian Museum in New York is hosting an exhibit on the Holodomor, starting on Tuesday.
Stalin boasted privately that 10 million people – 25% of Ukraine’s population – had perished during the Holodomor. At least 3 million of the victims were children.
Despite the magnitude of the atrocity, the Soviet regime, behind its Iron Curtain, denied the existence of the Holodomor for decades, denouncing any reports as “anti-Soviet propaganda.” It was not until the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the subsequent establishment of an independent Ukraine that the contents of many sealed government archives were uncovered, exposing a wealth of gruesome information.
Much of that information is included in Holodomor: Genocide by Famine, which consists of 96 panels of photographs, documents, government reports, eyewitness accounts, and other archival material detailing virtually every aspect of the tragedy.
The photo below shows peasants swarming a railroad station in 1933, trying to get to cities in search of food. From: The Ukrainian Museum Archives.


