It’s almost impossible to explain to people who didn’t grew up in the Soviet Union, or in the 90s, how truly these songs bring people together. Performed by the Russian people living under an occupation by our historical enemies, these songs bring tears even to my eyes. Even though, I am not a sentimental person.
A serious campaigns in mass media is on its way to discredit this singing movement. The entire spectrum of threats from the threats to go after the performers personally, to calls for the “authorities” to crackdown on this “Soviet revisionism.” I think that a military junta’s crackdown on these grandmothers might have far reaching consequences.
In comments for these videos people write: “Our darlings, get well soon,” and “Come back home. You know the way.”
Students in Donetsk sing a song from the movie “The Officers” 1971
The eternal flame(From heroes of the Past) [ Ot geroev bylykh vremen (Вечный огонь(От героев былых времен))
The eternal flame(From heroes of the Past)
Nothing is left of the heroes of bygone days.
Or names sometimes.
Those who sacrificed their lives,
Became just ashes and dust,
Only their formidable courage
Settled in the hearts of the living
This eternal flame was bequeathed
For only us
And we will keep it in our hearts.
Look at my soldiers,
The whole world remembers their faces.
Here stood a battalion in line-up.
I can recognize my old friends again.
The hard times they had to go through.
Though they were only twenty-five years old (or less then)
They were those, who with bayonets in their hands,
Stood as a single entity.
Those who took Berlin.
There is not some family in Russia,
who has not remembered their heroes.
And the eyes of young soldiers
Are looking at us from faded pictures
They look at us, and it is like the High Court
For the guys that are growing now.
And the boys cannot lie. They cannot deceive
And they have no way to turn away.
On December 3rd, in Mariupol local ladies gathered inside and outside of the Central Post office to sing “I love you, life.” A 1956 song
Music: E. Kolmanovskiy Lyrics: K. Vanshenkin
On December 3rd, in Nikolaev people gathered to sing a song Hope once performed by a singer Anna German
Hope
The unknown star is shining
Again we are torn out of our homes
Again cities are between us
and airport’s runway lights
Here is mist and rain
Here is a cold dawn
Here on this unexplored path
like complex movie plots
Hope – my compass on earth
And luck – trophy for bravery
I’m only satisfied with one song
One that is only about the home
Believe me, that here from afar
A lot is lost in the view
The stormy clouds are melting
The arguments seem absurd
Need to learn how to wait
Need to be calm and stubborn
To get sometimes from life
Restrained telegrams of happiness
And I can’t still forget
Everything that we haven’t sung
My dear tired eyes…
Moscow’s blue snowstorms…
The life is separating us, like before
In the sky there is an unknown star
Shines, like a monument to hope
On December 1st, Students in Lugansk sing Dark Hills are Sleeping (Спят курганы темные), 1940 song from the movie This Great Life.
Thank you for your time,
Scott
Inspiring use of cultural heritage as a weapon of resistance. Music, song, patriotism and love of language are insurmountable weapons.
Amazing.
Thank you for sharing more of these emotion-filled signals to the Hegemon, Khazarians and Nazis that Russia will never be defeated, her people never separated no matter time and distance.
This trend is spreading like wildfire. Link to a long singing in Moldova late today, I think Chisinau.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T_ckdVjvSck
I was discussing this phenomenon early today on a forum and couple of them were worried the the orcs might send in the goons to stop this in Ukraine. My argument was Porky wouldn’t dare at this time with DJT looking over his shoulder so to speak.
Auslander
The soviets should have executed all the collaborators and their families. Now we have to del with these vile nazi scum. Our children will never be safe as long as these people walk the earth.
Here is one, “even” in Kiev. Singing a rousing Cossack song. That is played at almost all Cossack concerts (throughout Rus territories).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vT_ibS2aF9Q
The junta “rightly” must fear these singing flash-mobs. They aren’t just a symbol of pro-Russian feeling. For the junta its a far more deadly fear.They are a symbol of pro-Soviet feeling.Almost all the songs come from the inclusive Soviet past. Especially from the Great Patriotic War (WWII) period.And were sung “throughout” the USSR.That Soviet patriotism was what cemented the regional republics together.If you lived in Moscow,or Kiev,or Minsk,etc,etc, you heard and sang those songs.Letting you know that whatever regional dialect you spoke at home,you were “one” people throughout the Union. And that is the great danger for the junta and their Western backers.That the “peoples” of Rus would want to reclaim their “togetherness”. That’s why the junta (and backers) work so hard to spread disunity among those peoples. They know that only by building ultra-regional “nationalism” can they destroy Russian feeling in their peoples.
I feel connected to my singing Slavic brothers from the East. Though our gene pool here in the Central Europe is mixed with a lot of our neighbours’ one (Eintopf is pretty concise metaphor), it’s not about “flesh and blood”, but about the heart, culture and spirit. Bless ya!