Showing posts with label communism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label communism. Show all posts

Saturday, July 22, 2017

POW Toan Huynh warns about Communism in Vietnam

Toan Huynh has been a Cleveland school teacher for the last 36 years.

During the Vietnam War, Huynh was kept prisoner and beaten daily in a communist concentration camp.  He warned of the evils of communism in this short presentation at the American Nationalities Movement of Ohio’s 56th annual Captive Nations Dinner on July 20, 2017.

Video and photos of Toan Huynh speech


Toan Huynh




Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Jim Craciun to be inducted into the Cleveland International Hall of Fame

Jim Craciun will be inducted into the Cleveland International Hall of Fame next Tuesday April 18.

Jim has witnessed firsthand the devastation of communism.  His lifetime commitment to human rights began in 1974 when he smuggled bibles and catechisms into Communist Romania.

  Read more about Jim Craciun


Monday, July 20, 2015

Captive Nations Dinner – Jim Craciun Keynote Part 3 of 3

James M. Craciun was the keynote speaker at the American Nationalities Movement of Ohio 54th annual Captive Nations Dinner in Cleveland Ohio.  End  of the speech.





Captive Nations Dinner – Jim Craciun Keynote Part 2 of

James M. Craciun was the keynote speaker at the American Nationalities Movement of Ohio 54th annual Captive Nations Dinner in Cleveland Ohio.  Part 2 of the speech.





Sunday, July 19, 2015

Captive Nations Dinner – Jim Craciun Keynote Part 1

James M. Craciun was the keynote speaker at the American Nationalities Movement of Ohio 54th annual Captive Nations Dinner in Cleveland Ohio.  Part 1 of the speech





Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Honoring Those Who Fought For Freedom In Warsaw

Honoring Those Who Fought For Freedom In Warsaw 

By U.S. Senator Rob Portman

Seventy years ago, as American and British forces were liberating France and the Red Army was pressing forward on the Eastern Front, the people of Poland were fighting for their freedom. After five years of Nazi oppression, the Polish resistance in Warsaw launched an insurrection against their occupiers.


For two months and with little support from outside forces, thousands of resistance fighters—men, women, and even children—fought against the far better armed and better supplied German army. As one German officer later remarked, they fought to the very last bullet. Before it was over, more than 16,000 resistance fighters would give their lives. In retaliation for this act of defiance, hundreds of thousands of Polish civilians were murdered by the members of the SS. When the Red Army finally did arrive, what should have been a liberation turned into yet another form of captivity, and for the next 45 years, Poland endured the oppression of Soviet communism.

But the Polish people never forgot the bravery and the sacrifices of those who stood for liberty those 63 days in the late summer of 1944. Many of the survivors came to the United States, where they continued the fight for an independent Poland. Others joined the Solidarity movement, and the memory of the Warsaw Uprising served to inspire everyday people to fight for liberation. When Poland won its independence in 1989, the dream of the uprising was finally realized.

Earlier this year, I had the opportunity to travel to Poland to meet with Polish officials and visit U.S. troops in the country. I also had the opportunity to visit the Warsaw Uprising Museum to see firsthand the moving commemoration of this chapter in Poland’s history. Poland is a staunch ally of the United States, and the Polish people have stood with us in our struggle against terrorism around the world. As the United States and Poland continue to fight for freedom and democracy, the historical ties that bind us are more important today than ever.

Recently, I joined with my colleagues in the Senate to cosponsor a resolution marking the 70th anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising. The bravery of the men and women who took part in the fight against Nazi oppression will never be forgotten. Neither will their sacrifices. Their legacy lives on today.

So too does their cause.



U.S. Senator Rob Portman received the American Nationalities Movement ‘Freedom Award’
 at the 2014 annual Captive Nations banquet.