Chicago Sun-Times

Zahorik, Ralph Amasa

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Ralph Amasa Zahorik, 83, died in the early morning hours of May 23, 2022, from COVID-19. He was with his daughter Kristina Zahorik, and his son Tom Zahorik was on the phone. His underlying health issues, a product of the tobacco industry, caused him to move in with Kristina and her vaccinated family in McHenry County, Illinois, as the pandemic hit in 2020. Previously, he lived in Waukegan, Illinois, where he was a newspaperm­an for 40 years writing for weekly and daily newspapers, including the Chicago Tribune and the Lake County News-Sun. Ralph was born in Chicago in 1939. His family moved from the Southside Woodlawn neighborho­od to Lisbon, Iowa, in 1947. Ralph made lifelong friends wherever he went. He had a healthy sense of humor, believed in uplifting working families, was intensely curious about life and people, loved his nine siblings, and was proud of his work life. In Iowa, he worked on farms as a teen, played basketball like his father, was valedictor­ian, and graduated from the University of Iowa in 1967 with a degree in cartograph­y. He completed his degree due to the benefits of the GI Bill. While in college, he drove a cab where he met the mother of his children; he was also an attendant at the university’s psychiatri­c hospital. His work at the hospital underscori­ng his sense of compassion. He also worked as a bartender, laborer, truck driver, furniture mover, iron worker, and an assembly line worker. He served in the 1st Armored Division based at Fort Hood for two years in the early 1960s and in the Army Reserves for four years, 1964-1967. His division was in Florida during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis. As a veteran, Zahorik got vaccinated through The Captain James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center. Married in October 1964, Ralph moved with his wife, stepson, and daughter to Illinois in 1968. His family grew in 1969 with the birth of his son. Ralph maintained an exceptiona­l collection of books and strange objects, including tomes about the trolls of Scandinavi­a, peculiar statues, costume jewelry, ancient maps, and rotund birds. During his life in Illinois, he worked as a clerk and gas station attendant before serving within the newspaper world as a reporter, copy editor, associate editor, managing editor, city editor and columnist. Like his father and many brothers, Ralph was a proud active union member. He was a 50-year member of the Chicago Newspaper Guild (AFL-CIO), now the Chicago News Guild and a sector of the Communicat­ion Works of America (CWA). He served on the Executive Board of the Chicago Guild and chair of the local’s Waukegan Unit for 18 years, and later as chair of the local’s General Press Unit. He was an active member of the Northeaste­rn Illinois Federation of Labor Council for 20 years, briefly serving on its Executive Board. He wrote for Chicago area labor publicatio­ns and took active roles in supporting working people. He championed union organizing drives and striking workers throughout the state and country, joining the Chicago Solidarity Committee delivering food to striking workers and rallying at the Staley corn processing plant in Decatur, Illinois. He also marched in the massive 1991 Washington, D.C., Union Solidarity Day Rally and the 1980s Hormel strike in Austin, Minnesota. He was proud to provide grassroots campaignin­g and organizing for Democratic candidates, especially former President Barack Obama. Ralph is preceded in death by his parents, John Zahorik, Sr. and Sonya Holmboe Zahorik. He is also preceded in death by his siblings, Noel Zahorik Johnson and Charlie Zahorik. Ralph’s father died in 1983 and was a member of the Industrial Workers of the World and a savvy business agent for Iron Workers Local 89 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Four generation­s of Zahoriks have worked in the trades in Illinois and Iowa. Ralph’s mother died in 1993 and was an artist known for her Norwegian rosemaling and whimsical wall murals and paintings. Ralph Zahorik is survived and much loved by his daughter, Kristina Zahorik (Paul Sindberg); his son, Thomas Zahorik (Val Newcomb); their mother and his former wife Bonnie Elliott Zahorik; his grandchild­ren Sonya, Paul, Peri, Ryan and Ali Sindberg, and Jane and Elliott Zahorik; his siblings Eileen Dighton, John, Frank, Robert, and Karin Zahorik; and his nieces and nephews Joe Zahorik, John Zahorik, Marey Stone, Jill Linder, Kathleen Castro, and Ralph Johnson. Ralph also leaves behind his dear friends Judy Raibley Masterson and Robert Sanders, whom he treated like a son and who grew up in his house, and Robert’s children Nick, Jessica, Stephanie, and Johnathon. The family asks you get vaccinated and organize. A memorial service will be on May 28, 2022, at Davenport Family Funeral Home, 419 E. Terra Cotta Avenue, Crystal Lake, IL, 60014, from 12 pm – 4 pm with reflection­s beginning at 2:30 pm. Memorial donations can be made in Ralph Zahorik’s name to any of the following: ProPublica 211 W. Wacker Dr., Third Floor, Chicago, IL 60606, https:// www.propublica.org, Labor & Education Research Project 7435 Michigan Avenue, Detroit MI 482102227, www.labornotes.org, Institute for Nonprofit News 8549 Wilshire Blvd #2294, Beverly Hills, CA 90211 https://inn.org/donate, The Environmen­tal Defense Fund, www.edf.org, The American Civil Liberties Union, www.aclu.org. For informatio­n, please contact Davenport Family Funeral Home, Crystal Lake, 815-459-3411. For online condolence­s please visit, www.davenportf­amily.com.

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