Center for Citizen Initiatives

Bringing Russian and American citizens together in Peace since 1983.

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You are here: Home / CCI News

HAPPY NEW YEARS — 2019!

January 1, 2019

Dear CCI Friends,

To those of you who have participated directly in our face-to-face diplomacy both across Russia and here in our American cities, we are so grateful to you. Also, many thanks to those of you who have become informal educators, resending CCI’s educational emails to your colleagues, friends and families. We greatly appreciate your notes and support for our joint missions to create a better educated and safer world in the immediate future!

Best Wishes to You for a

Wonderful Creative Year in 2019

upon which we are now embarking!

I wonder if you are deeply grateful, as I am, that our planet has survived this past tumultuous year?

Given the numbers of surrogate war-making threats and incursions in numerous areas of the world, i.e. Syria, Afghanistan, Ukraine, Iran, Iraq, Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua, the Baltic states and others … we are lucky that none have ignited an all-consuming conflagration. Perhaps parity of nuclear weapons and instant delivery systems maintained the tenuous peace between the two nuclear giants of the world––our nation and Russia.  For whatever the reasons, I’m deeply grateful that we have a bit more time ahead to develop beyond the warring mentalities among us.

Traveling around the U.S., I continue to be so impressed with the sheer goodness of ordinary American citizens. This year I visited Rotary clubs, witnessed over a hundred fathers signing up to volunteer at a lower-income school and others volunteering to benefit local disadvantaged children and families. I’ve witnessed men, women and their children raising funds to serve the needs in their communities.

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CCI Travelers Visit Asian/European Russia

December 17, 2018

Dear Friends,

You may be asking, “How does CCI find all of these Russian people to host Americans in cities and regions across Russia?” It’s very simple. Between 1988 and 2008, we brought more than 8,000 Russians to American cities. They came on various CCI trips: from simple citizen diplomacy to more sophisticated programs such as learning business and non-profit management. They still have a great fondness and gratitude to CCI for their exposure to the outside world and, in many cases, the life-changing business education they received in the U.S.  Many still keep in touch with us on occasion. The next paragraph is about one of these Russians whom we hadn’t heard from since 1989.

On June 12th of this year, I received a message from an unknown man in Kungur, a small town in the Perm Mountains region, where the East meets the West in Russia. The email said, “Dear friends, I am one of 400 lucky people who visited the USA in 1989 according to your program, Soviets Meet Middle America. This trip greatly changed my life and since that time I have become the leader of the region-wide Association of Teachers of Foreign Languages. One of our goals is to present the American way of life to Russian students. We would be grateful if we could have a link with a similar organization in the USA and organize an exchange program among our students. We do believe and hope that citizens’ diplomacy is still as workable nowadays as it was in 1989. Sincerely yours, Victor Alexeev, PhD.”

At that very time, I was getting in touch with various Russian cities inviting them to host our September 2018 delegation of American travelers so I answered this email immediately. Victor Alexeev was delighted to get a response and learn that he could host three first-time American travelers to Russia in his small town of Kungur. This town is near Perm, a large industrial city, which had also contacted us in 2017 to inquire if they could in some way participate in CCI’s activities. It was a delight to correspond with this former CCI program participant. Please meet Victor Alexeev!

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(Video) A Glimpse Inside Russian Orthodoxy Today

December 8, 2018

Dear CCI Friends,

If there is any month that seems appropriate to discuss ‘things of the spirit,’ it is December, since Christmas, Hanukkah and other spiritual traditions are clumped together in this month. I’d like to share with you my evolving thoughts on Russian Orthodoxy, in addition to a CCI YouTube below that we recently put together on this topic:  A Glimpse into Russian Orthodoxy.

An American Antiochian Orthodox father and his two teenage sons applied to go on our September trip to Russia. Among other reasons, they hoped to visit with an American Orthodox priest who moved his family to Russia to continue his life as a Russian Orthodox priest. Our videographer and I traveled on this leg of the journey with them to Rostov Veliky as you will see from the YouTube video. This opened up another porthole for me into the faith which Russians are gradually beginning to explore in varying degrees.

Numbers of Russians today have begun for the first time to identify with the long religious history of Orthodoxy. They find comfort in being part of these traditions whether they go to church regularly or not. Quite a few of them wear small crosses around their necks … more so than at any time since the 1917 Revolution when the church was forbidden, sanctuaries were used for storage dumps and many priests were killed.

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Re-addressing the Azov Debacle!

December 5, 2018

Dear CCI Readers,

Never have I had more supporters and detractors than with yesterday’s post regarding the Azov debacle!

Worse still, I quoted Patrick Buchanan (whose humorous pieces I usually enjoy) regarding the Azov waters being like a “Russian lake.” It sounded reasonable at a quick glance… but later, looking at a larger map of the area, I saw that Mariupol was on the shoreline!  Was Pat thinking the port was in Eastern Ukraine, therefore it is in Russian-dominated territory? In any case, Maritime Law would have still been the same.  By this time, my piece was out.  I acted thoughtlessly in an area where I have no expertise!  Has this ever happened to you?  Argggg!  I spent the day reading emails and responding to them. Finally I decided to write to the whole list.  I hope the following is understandable.

From a reader came this note that gave me (I think) the essence of the situation. He said: “Sharon, my initial reaction was, likewise, that it isn’t our business (to be policemen). However, Craig Murray, a former British diplomat who is usually very sympathetic to the Russian point of view, says that the Law of the Sea is involved and that in this instance Russia is acting incorrectly:”
https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2018/12/azov-again/
Murray reports (I have underlined below to accentuate the confusing rights and wrongs):

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Crimea-Kerch Bridge Question!

December 4, 2018

CCI Friends,

Pat Buchanan poses a question below that we hope Donald Trump and his advisors will take seriously.

Crimea was taken back into Russia with a citizen-demand of 93% of her voters… thus making the Sea of Azov a Russian lake. With vast technology supporting the whole process, above and below the bridge, it makes sense that it is no longer a free-for-all waterway! Ukrainians knew this, their NATO advisors knew this …

Buchanan asks the right question, “Why is it any of our business?”  What is your answer?  I will get your answers to a few Congress members who likely will agree with Buchanan.  We need to be buttressing sane members of Congress with our citizen comments.

A wonderful December day to you!

Sharon (signature)

 

 

Sharon Tennison
Center for Citizen Initiatives


The American Conservative
November 30, 2018

Why is Ukraine’s Kerch Crisis Any of Our Business?

By Patrick J. Buchanan

Upon his departure for the G-20 gathering in Buenos Aires, President Donald Trump canceled his planned weekend meeting with Vladimir Putin, citing as his reason the Russian military’s seizure and holding of three Ukrainian ships and 24 sailors.

But was Putin really the provocateur in Sunday’s naval clash outside Kerch Strait, the Black Sea gateway to the Sea of Azov?

Or was the provocateur Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko?

First, a bit of history.

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