Year: 2021

  • EPISODE 327 JAN. 1, 1993: THE DAY CZECHOLSLOVKIA DISAPPEARED…CEASED TO EXIST

    EPISODE 327    JANUARY 1, 1993: BREAK UP OF CZECHOSLOVAKIA INTO CZECH AND SLOVAK REPUBLICS


    EPISODE 327    JAN. 1, 1993  THE YEAR CZECHOSLOVAKIA DISAPPEARED…CEASED TO EXIST


    alan skeoch
    May 1, 2021


    A STARTLING AND UNFORGETTABLE MARCH HOLIDAY WEEK….1993

    “Mom and dad, why don’t you fly over here on the March School break?”
    “Is it safe?”
    “Perfectly safe.”
    “We read that Czechoslovakia is splitting…sounds like Civil War.”
    “No danger…the split is not violent.”
    “What will happen to you?”
    “Nothing, I will still be teaching English in Bratislava for $125 a month”
    “Are you still sleeping the jail?”
    “No…sharing an apartment in an Ex-Soviet building…only difference beween Canada 
    and Slovakia that I see around here is that nobody smiles much..except the students…they
    smile a lot…
    “Nice kids?”
    “Super….How would you  like to be guest teacher for a day in a Slovak High School?
    “Love to, Kevine…We are coming…sounds exciting.”
    “Good.  I will rent a Skoda…no one will know you are tourists.”
    (now that was a laugh…Marjorie wore her bright pink coat…No one else  did.)

    ON JANUARY 1, 1993 CZECHOSLOVAKIA SPLIT INTO TWO STATES…THE CZECH AND SLOVAK
    REPUBLICS.   

    Czechs and Slovaks did not really want to split   There were tensions between the two
    groups.  Many Slovaks resented the Czech dominance and general affluence.   But the
    resentment was not the kind that would lead to civil war.  Then why did the countries split?
    That was what they asked each other.  The answer in simplified form is that the two political
    leaders … a Czech and a Slovak.arranged the split even though it seemed to be against the
    national will.

    HOW DID OUR SON KEVIN BECOME AN ENGLISH TEACHER IN A SLOVAK HIGH SCHOOL?

    He needed a job.  Kevin had jus graduated as a Canadian high school teacher but there were
    no jobs in Canada.  At least he could not find a job.  But I am not sure he looked very hard.
    He was ready to venture into the world.  Wanted to do something different.  Then he heard that
     the American School (an international school) was hiring teachers for the Slovak school system.
    The wages were $125 a month…between $4 and $5 a day.  Money was not the incentive for Kevin.
    Adventure was what he wanted.  Young and full of piss and vinegar as they say.

    Eastern Europe was in a bit of turmoil.  The Berlin Wall had been pulled down. The Soviet
    Union had collapsed.  Many of the Soviet Republics were looking to the West…to the United
    States…for leadership.  The English language was seen as the key to fitting into the new
    world order.  

    Kevin was an English teacher.  Certified.  What a wonderful chance to be part of
    something bigger than himself.  He applied for a job…was accepted…and took off almost
    immediately for the new Slovak Republic which promised him free accommodation but did not 
    mention the room would be in a former jail.   He travelled blind along with a bunch of American
    newly certified teachers.

    Then in March 1993, Marjorie and I joined Kevin for a wonderful winter week in a
    place we had never heard of…the brand new Slovak Republic.   Kevin picked us up
    in Vienna and drove us to Bratislava.  We passed a large Slovak nuclear Reactor  that the
    Austrians felt was in danger of melt down.  That put a little extra tension into the visit.

    The Austrians feared this Slovak nuclear reactor was not safe.  No provision for the 
    retention of radioactive water in a containment pool was one of the reasons…I think.
      It was years later
    that another Soviet reactor became world famous at a glance called Chernobbyl.



    WHAT WAS LIFE LIKE IN THE NEW SLOVAK REPUBLIC?

    COMPLICATED.  Best answer I can put forward.  Life was  grim for many.  Some Slovaks were happy.  Some Slovaks were unhappy.  

    “Best not to smile when riding
    the Busses, Dad.  Most Slovaks are having a tough time right now.  Not much to smile about.  Many still believe
    that Marxism could have provided a Worker’s paradise. Problems happened when Joseph Stalin and Russian communism not took
    hold of Eastern Europe. “
    “Seems the bullets of World War II have pock-marked some of the buildings.”
    “That war …1939 to 1945 …is still part of the Slovak consciousness.”


    Why was this sign on this bridge in English?   

    We went to church on Sunday and could not help to see the huge ruin of a burned our synagogue next door to the Roman Catholic cathedral.
    That was chilling.  I wondered why the ghostly hulk was left standing.  Perhaps a symbol of the Soviet victory of Nazi fascism.   But I am
    not sure why?   Then there was a bridge with a memorial place engraved in English…also a reminder of World war II.



    Behind this overgrown scrub forest was a burned out synagogue as seen below.
    A reminder of the anti semitic terror that swept through eastern Europe in the 1940’s





    TEACHING HISTORY IN A SLOVAK HIGH SCHOOL

    “We have a guest  today,” announced the principal as we wedged ourselves into the packed classroom.
    “Welcome,”  And all the students…senior students in Grade 12…all of them immediately stood
    up and welcomed Marjorie and me with bug smiles. That courtesy does not happen in Canada.

    I do not remember what I taught on that cold March morning in 1993.  What I do remember, however, were the
    warm smiles … the joy the students seemed to feel … the hope they shared, hope that the West would change 
    their world.  The need to speak English.

    Take a look at their faces.  They were 17 and 18 in 1993.  Today they would  be 45 and  46 with teen age children of their
    own.  A really nice bunch of very typical high school students whose skills in English were very good.  Hopefully they can still smile the way they did in 1993.








    Elementary school students







    AT the back of the room, left to right, Marjorie Skeoch, VP, Kevin Skeoch, School Principal

    Principal of the Slovak High School in 1993




    We had quite a few adventures in our week.  Perhaps the most humourous was when
    Marjorie got mugged by a group of five or six older women.  Likely Roma.  They surrounded her outside a Slovak coffee shop
    where she lined up to go to a washroom.   Public WC’s were hard to find.
    wile Kevin and i were paying the bill.  Suddenly, Kev, yelled.  “Mom is getting robbed out there.”
    And sure enough the women were all around her in the line up which they used as cover.  Pushing…while looking
    away….distracting Marjorie while one woman slipped her hand into Marjorie’s purse and grabbed  her wallet.  Only it was not
    her wallet.  It was her glass case.  The women took off as Kevin arrived hollering like a stuck pig.  So the mugging turned into
    an adventure where no one got hurt…and five women were sharing an empty glass case.  Another group of gypsy women
    encircled me at the same time so Kev used back to save me.  I was in no danger…wallet tied down.

    NEXT EPISODE ON SLOVAKIA WILL BE AMUSING IN PLACES…STARTLING IN OTHERS.
    Difficult challenge:  See if you can find marjorie  in this slovakian crowd.

    ALAN SKEOCH
    MAY 1, 2021

    POST SCRIPT:  FOR ANYONE WISHING TO KNOW WHY CZECHOSLOVAKIA BROKE INTO TWO PIECES IN 1993

    BUSINESS & ECONOMY CZECH REPUBLIC POLITICS & INTERNATIONAL SLOVAKIA

    Why did Czechoslovakia break up?

    PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC – Last Sunday marked the 100th anniversary of the foundation of Czechoslovakia… a country which ceased to exist a quarter of a century ago. Which begs the question: Why did Czechoslovakia actually break up?

    On January 1, 1993, Czechoslovakia split into two independent states, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, in what is now known as the “Velvet divorce” (in a reference to the Velvet revolution) due to its peaceful and negotiated nature. Both countries divided their common “goods” (embassies, military equipment, etc.) on a two-to-one ratio to reflect their populations. Although the dissolution didn’t lead to any unrest or bloodshed, the new frontiers did create a few odd situations, like splitting border-towns in half.

    The split “was not entirely inevitable, but the political and economic costs of keeping the country together would have been extremely high”, pointed out Jiri Pehe, political analyst and former advisor to Vaclav Havel.

    The division of Czechoslovakia: an undemocratic decision?

    A widespread narrative argues that the divorce was a purely political move decided behind closed-doors by Czech and Slovak leaders Vaclav Klaus and Vladimir Meciar against the will of the population. There is some truth in that: all the opinion polls at that time showed that a vast majority of Czechs and Slovaks was in favour of the preservation of Czechoslovakia and against the country’s break-up.

    In its January 1, 1993 edition, the New York Times wrote: “A multi-ethnic nation born at the end of World War I in the glow of pan-Slavic brotherhood, Czechoslovakia survived dismemberment by the Nazis and more than four decades of Communist rule only to fall apart after just three years of democracy”.

    Although no referendum was ever held on the matter, democracy was indeed at the heart of the issue: all the problems associated with the federation of two states of unequal weight and size only appeared after the centralized, communist regime collapsed as Czechoslovakia reconnected with democracy. The decision-making paralysis and the federal government’s inability to push any significant reforms in the early 1990’s strongly contributed to the top-down decision of Klaus and Meciar.

    Yet, the truth is slightly more complicated. Although most Czechs and Slovaks wanted to preserve Czechoslovakia, both sides yearned for a reformed, mutually incompatible version, founded on deeply-rooted historical grievances and frustrations. And while Slovak nationalism sentiment strived for more autonomy, Czech nationalism embraced Czechoslovakism, mainly due to their privileged position within the federation.

    The “arrogant” Czechs

    Slovaks didn’t completely adhere to the concept of Czechoslovakism, which they often saw as a patronizing and paternalist Czech policy ever since the foundation of the First Republic in 1918. “The majority of people in Slovakia really considered Czechoslovakia as their genuine home”, Juraj Marusiak from the Slovak Academy of Sciences pointed out.

    But they wanted more autonomy, more control on their own decision-making and were weary of feeling that their fate was decided by bureaucrats in Prague (the federal capital) who looked down upon the less-developed Slovak “little brothers”. “Some Slovak demands – for example the modification in the name of the country – were ridiculed by the Czech media and understood as petty of Czech politicians, who did not appreciate the symbolism of such steps for the Slovaks”, Jiri Pehe highlighted.

    Despite having largely benefited from economic assistance from the Czech side during their common life, “resentment of what some Slovaks saw as a distant, arrogant federal government in Prague, was skillfully fanned by Mr. Meciar, a former Communist who saw the reviving Slovak nationalism as his ticket to power”, wrote The New York Times.

    The “ungrateful” Slovaks

    Czechs, on the other hand, felt like they were paying out of their own pockets for the economic and regional development of the poorer (and seemingly ungrateful) neighbor. Although Slovak GDP per capita had already reached roughly three-quarters of the Czech figure in 1992, “the animus created on the Czech side by these payments (…) was exploitable by ambitious politicians”.

    First and foremost, Vaclav Klaus, a liberal economist who wanted to bring the Czech Republic at the forefront of Europe’s liberal economic transformation and needed centralized power to launch sweeping and radical reforms. This explains why Klaus was not so keen on granting more autonomy to Slovakia and appeared, therefore, more than willing to get rid of the Slovak “burden”.

    Moreover, many Czechs saw as a betrayal the fact that, in 1939, Slovakia formed its own autonomous state which, despite being a puppet regime of Nazi Germany, was separate from the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, under direct Nazi occupation. On the other hand, this experience of statehood empowered part of the Slovak elite, which perceived the restoration of Czechoslovakia after the war as a “re-provincialization” of the country.

    Similarly, many Czechs believed that their punishment and suffering were much greater than what the Slovak side experienced after the 1968 invasion – Gustav Husak, first secretary of the Communist party of Czechoslovakia, Czechoslovakia’s President and architect of the “normalization era”, came from Slovakia. czechoslovakia break up

    The aftermath of the break-up of Czechoslovakia

    After the split, both countries went their own way: “In the aftermath, M. Klaus pursued the rapid privatisations that made the Czech Republic an economic star of central Europe, but also created public resentment, as ex-communist insiders and foreign multinationals benefited disproportionately from the process”, wrote The Economist. “M. Meciar, meanwhile, tightened his grip and ruled as a semi-authoritarian strongman, slowing the progress of his country’s accession to the European Union and briefly making it a regional pariah, until he was democratically displaced in 1998”.

    The demographics also significantly changed: while the Czech Republic became an ethnically homogeneous country, Slovakia was still home to a strong Hungarian minority (nearly 600.000) and Roma community (between 300.000 and 500.000).

    The “Velvet divorce” has often been conjured to tackle contemporary separatist movements throughout Europe (Catalonia, Scotland, Brexit, etc.). “Policymakers wondering how a euro zone disintegration would play out could do worse than study one monetary union collapse that went well: the split of the Czech-Slovak currency union” in February 1993, even wrote Reutersczechoslovakia break up

    Czech Republic and Slovakia go their separate ways: what’s the situation today?

    Despite their break-up, the Czech Republic and Slovakia remain more closely linked than any other two countries in Europe. Although the dissolution was experienced as a defeat and a failure for many people, no one is seriously pleading for reunification. We should also point out that Czechs and Slovaks were separated throughout most of their history: their Czechoslovak “joint-venture” appears more as an exception than the rule. Even within the Habsburg Empire, Czechs were under the rule of Vienna, while Slovaks were governed from Hungary.

    Their relationship to their common past remains highly asymmetrical and strained by long-running prejudices on both sides. While the aforementioned grievances have something to do with it, more current grievances (like the fact that the Czech Republic cunningly stole Czechoslovakia’s flag after the break-up) also play a role in the enduring stigmas on each side of the border.

    Last week-end’s celebrations proved it well. While the Czech Republic celebrated the centenary of the foundation of Czechoslovakia in style and with great pomp, no event of such magnitude was held in Slovakia. October 28 is one of the major Czech public holidays to celebrate the independence and statehood… of a country that no longer exists.

    In Slovakia, it’s only qualified as a “memorial day”. However, to mark the centenary, the country instead decided to implement a one-off public holiday on October 30 this year. January 1, meanwhile, despite being the official “independence” day for both states, fails to have any real significance today: partly because neither Slovakia nor the Czech Republic want to “celebrate” the 1993 dissolution, and partly because it’s overshadowed by New Year’s Day.






  • EPISODE 326 VERY LITTLE LIFE IN OUR 3 LARGE PONDS: WHAT IS HAPPENING?

    EPISODE 326   VERY LITTLE LIFE IN OUR 3 LARGE PONDS: WHAT IS HAPPENING?


    alan skeoch
    april 2021



    SOMETHING BAD IS HAPPENING TO OUR 3 FAR PONDS

    SURE…WE ARE CONCERNED.  YOU SHOULD BE AS WELL.

    It is hard for us to read about the importance of ponds..wetlands…in local ecology.  We know how
    important wetlands are to all kinds of creatures.  And we have made sure our farm ponds are not
    touched.  As a matter of fact these ponds are much larger than the days when my grandparents tried
    to eke out a bare subsistence living on our 25 acre farm.  Today the ponds occupy about 7 to 8 acres
    of the land.   No vile chemicals drain from local fields into the wetland.

    But where has all the pond life gone?   We will never know that.   Perhaps a better questions is “Why has
    pond life diminished catastrophically over the past three decades or longer.  There was a time when I was
    a boy that the frog population was immense.  Hard to take a step on the pond margins without a hurricane of
    frogs jumping helter skelter.   Today we have a few frogs…Leopards mostly…but we have to look for them
    carefully.   With few frogs we have fewer snakes.   A decade ago garter snakes bred in the flower pots in the
    green house. Today?  I have not seen one yet (April 29, 2021).

    I wince every time a Great Blue Heron lands on our pond margins.  Seeking frogs.  We do  not have enough
    to feed that interesting bird.  So the life of many creatures is now restricted leading to the die off that no one
    notices.

    Large creatures are still here but in reduced numbers.  We still have a home for a big snapping turtle.  Canada
    geese return each year to raise a brood.  Sometimes their previous progeny join them and are hustled away by
    the parents.  Five years ago we had a healthy population of painted turtles…20 or 30, all sizes…then suddenly
    we found turtle carapaces in the farm field and today we only have a few living in the big pond.  Something happened to our turtle
    breeding ground at the eastern end of the big pond which also happens to be the break point where drainage
    flows to the Grand River (ultimately).  Our wetlands are the final height of land for the Grand River watershed.

    Coyotes are here…and deer…and wild turkeys.  They seem fine.  Although all we see are their tracks and
    the occasional fluffing noise as a turkey family shuffles out of view.

    Small water life has  just about disappeared.  There are no leaches.  None?  There was a time when we
    had so many that it was a concern.  Needed a supply of salt to get them off after a swim.
     Today none.  We still have dragon flies…that ancient survivor of life on earth…
    but not as many.   Little bugs like water spiders and back swimmers are few in number if they even exist.
    And honey bees seem OK but they are managed by humans.

    My question?   Will pond life return.  Will the small creatures at the bottom of the food chain repopulate our
    ponds naturally.  Or is climate change about to turn the world I knew upside down?

    I think I will send this note to the Grand River Conservation people.   Maybe they have an answer.

    alan skeoch

    Post Script

    Make a Pond for Wildlife

    Ponds are places where cyanophytes still gleam with bubbles of pure oxygen, as they did two billion years ago. They are places where dragonflies still live as they did when they dominated the air 300 million years ago. Ponds are conservation in action.

    Ponds are the whole world for many fascinating aquatic insects – whirligig beetles, backswimmers, water striders. They attract many of our favourite birds – swallows, flycatchers, wrens, ducks. But, they are a special boon to frogs. All Canadian frogs require clear water in which to breed – several require it year around.

    Marshy ponds are the most valuable places of all to maintain biodiversity in most areas of Canada.


  • EPISODE 325 DEMOLITION OF THE TEXACO REFINERY IN 1985…NOW CALLED BRIGHTWATER …A NEW PORT CREDIT COMMUNITY 2021

    EPISODE 325     DEMOLITION OF THE TEXACO REFINERY… IN 2021 CALLED BRIGHTWATER, A NEW PORT CREDIT COMMUNITY


    alan skeoch
    april 2021



    heritagemississauga.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Port-Credit-Brickyard-1908-570×424.jpg 570w, heritagemississauga.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Port-Credit-Brickyard-1908-600×446.jpg 600w, heritagemississauga.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Port-Credit-Brickyard-1908-300×223.jpg 300w” sizes=”(max-width: 588px) 100vw, 588px” apple-inline=”yes” id=”07D6D618-47D5-4BB1-8B63-DE1C0A02C490″ src=”https://alanskeoch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Port-Credit-Brickyard-1908.jpg”>
    Picture of Port Credit Brick Yard in 1908

    THE DEMOLITION DAY AT THE PORT CREDIT TEXACO REFINERY — YEAR 1985

    1) Port Credit established 1834
    2) Brick Yard on site for 40 years from 1889 tp 1929
    (ceased making bricks in 1920,  land sat unused to 1929
    3) Lloyd Refinery 1932 to 1937
    4) Good Rich Refinery 1937 to 1946
    5) Regent  Refinery to 1959
     6)   McColl Frontenac 1955
    7) Texaco Refinery to 1959
    8) Demolition  1985
    (Soil polluted – expensive to reclaim…so  families of coyotes took residence)
    10) Vacant Land 1985 to 2021
    11) Brightwater Development 2021





    6)


    ALAN SKEOCH
    DEMOLITION PHOTOS  1985
  • EPISODE 324 A DIRTY BUSINESS…OUT OF SIGHT: SEWERS IN TORONTO 1870 TO 1913



    EPISODE 324     A DIRTY BUSINESS…OUT OF SIGHT:  SEWERS IN TORONTO   

    1. alan skeoch
      April 2021

      1910? - Davenport Road sewer, brick worktorontoguardian.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/1910-Davenport-Road-sewer-brick-work-209×300.jpg 209w, torontoguardian.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/1910-Davenport-Road-sewer-brick-work-265×381.jpg 265w” sizes=”(max-width: 678px) 100vw, 678px” apple-inline=”yes” id=”A3B6C0FB-EDF2-4218-A53B-FE59E9004392″ style=”caret-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family: Helvetica; font-size: 18px;” src=”https://alanskeoch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/1910-Davenport-Road-sewer-brick-work.jpg”>

          
      Some readers will not like this Episode.   The information, however, is important
      We have come a long way since the back house was  a necessary fixture.  The story
      of Liverpool Andy and the Stonehooker fleet was written in Episode 323.  I thought
      there was a need for a little more proof as to the horrific sewage problem in Toronto harbour.

      Between 1870 and 1880  sewer construction was well underway in Toronto but 6,700 of the 11,000 homes visited by health 
      inspectors in  1885  still had outdoor privies….68%.  And of these 28% were full and 20% were rated foul.  

      Up until the sewer construction boom in the late 19th century the City of Toronto dumped all of its sewage into Lake Ontario from which
      the city drew most of its drinking water.  Officials in 1835 believed the huge size of Lake Ontario would dilute the sewage enough to minimize any
      pollution problem.   Not so.  The ‘dreadfjull smell’ along the Toronto lake shore got worse and  worse.  The Toronto island acted as a break wall and reduced
      current flow so that the Toronto harbour was quite still and the sewage built up.  In 1884 Mayor Boswell expressed his frustration with opposition to sewer 
      construction. “The sewage of this city is now assuming large proportions. Year after year new sewers are being erected. Where does all the filth from these sewers accumu- late? In the Bay of Toronto, of which you and I are so proud. Gentlemen, this cannot go on with safety, for our Bay will soon become a cess-pool…” Taxpayers did not
      want taxes increased os most resisted efforts to construct a sewer system.  Out of sight, out of mind.



      Beneath Woodfield Road

      Where the shape changes from balloon-shaped to round, beneath Gerrard St. E.

      Finally, on Tuesday, July 14, 1908, the qualified electorate of the City of Toronto approved a by-law for raising $2,400,000 towards the construction of intercepting sewers and a sewage disposal plant and $750,000 for the construction of a water filtration plant.55….For the first time in its 74-year existence, the City of Toronto would stop discharging raw sewage into Lake Ontario. Furthermore, water drawn from the lake for human consumption would be filtered. In 1891 Kivas Tully had estimated that 12 tons of un- treated solid matter were being deposited in the bay per day. In 1908, H. Rust, the City Engineer, reported that there was three to four feet of sludge on the bottom of the harbour.56 …However, even after the by-law was passed there were delays while a suitable site was located for the sewage treatment plant. …However, even after the by-law was passed there were delays while a suitable site was located for the sewage treatment plant. Work finally went ahead on the intercept- ing sewers, pumping stations and a treatment plant which were completed in 1913, sixty years after the idea was first mooted and over thirty-five years after the Council had begun to consider the plan seriously. By 1930, there were over 678 miles of sanitary sewer and 65 miles of storm and relief sewers and private drains were being installed as a matter of course from new buildings….Sewer gas is that rotten egg smell that is produced by the sewage system. It is the result of the decomposition of waste materials. The gasses are a mixture of methane, hydrogen sulfide, ammonia and other chemicals and they are more than “just unpleasant” to smell. Even at low levels, the gases can irritate your eyes, make you cough or produce dizziness. Higher levels are very serious and they can pose a serious health risk and in some cases they can cause fires or explosions.”

      This interesting and lengthy scandal is detailed in Catherine Brace, One Hundred and Twenty years of Sewerage – the Provision of Sewers in Toronto 1793-1913, (unpublished University of Toronto M.A. Thesis, 1993) 121-131.


  • EPISODE 324 THE HANCOCK FAMILY GIVE A FOREST OF RHODODDENDRONS TO THE CITY OF MISSISSAUGA…WORTH AVISIT

    EPISODE 324    THE HANCOCK FAMILY GIVE A FOREST OF RODODENTRONS TO CITY OF MISSISSAUGA


    Alan skeoch
    April 2021

    There is a forest in Mississauga that is just waiting to explode into full colour and not many
    people even know it exists.   It was once a market garden specializing in rhododendrons …it
    is now part of the Mississauga park system.

    Marjorie took our dog Woody and I on a tour of the forest…before the main event.

    When the blooms arrive we will go again…Before  and After.

    WHERE?  CAMILLA ROAD…near Hurontario and  QEW….