by Faina Savenkova for The Saker Blog
(translated by “G” for The Saker Blog)
Faina Savenkova is 11 years old and in the 6th grade. She lives in Lugansk, LNR (Lugansk People’s Republic). Faina has lived more than half of her life during a war, half of her life hoping for peace. She wants the children of Donbass to be heard by adults.
Her essay is important and the parallels she draws to the Second World War are both poignant and real.
The summer of 1941 was very hot. Under the scorching sun, fields burned out and small rivers drying up, the nights were still cold and dark. The country was alive. No one expected trouble to knock on the door. People, of course, understood that war could soon begin, but they tried to believe in the best, in good. Just the same as we did in 2014.
Vasily, one of my great-grandfathers turned 41 in the year 1941. He was going to go to college and dedicated to himself a year toward study, he submitted the documents. But his dreams were not destined to come true. War had come. Then, there was no going to the institute.
War can do a lot. Grind a huge number of people under its millstone, bring destruction and hunger. It can change the fate of an entire generation. Leaving marks and scars in its memory. But if you resist it, then the war slowly recedes. And we remember our heroes and how hard this victory was gained.
Is it a lot or a little – the years taken from a peaceful life? For all the people, June 22, 1941 was the date that changed life to “before” and “after”. All these long painful years, my grandfathers and relatives fought for victory and for life. The war tested them for strength, tempered character, and created new personalities from them.
And I am proud that none of them became a traitor and a policeman (the 3rd Reich used local Ukrainian nationalists as police to hunt the resistance).
My great-grandfather Vasily was an artilleryman. He broke through the encirclement (ringed in by Nazi forces) with many soldiers at that time. He could just have given up, but he broke through battling to help his own. After this, even with a concussion, he again returned to his colleagues at the frontline after escaping from the hospital because he understood he was defending his homeland, his land.
He could not have done otherwise. The whole country could not do otherwise. During this time, his mother received three death notices for him. I’m even afraid to imagine what she felt every time. But, nevertheless, later my great-grandfather fought in the war against Hitler and helped liberate Prague, serving until 1949.
My other great-grandfather and both great-grandmothers were too young, so they stayed behind.
And it is still unknown where it was harder: at the front or at home, whereas children they worked on an equal basis with adults, blistering their hands bloody with the strain.
“Everything for the front! All for victory! ” For them, these were not empty words, so no one grumbled. And everyone did what he could. After all, they believed in their innocence and in the need to defeat fascism for the sake of a future world.
Some worked for victory at the front, some – at the rear. Only one thing has not changed – the children of war grow up too quickly and too early.
It is enough to recall the feat of our Young Guard or the boys who became the sons of the regiment. No matter how many of them were too young, they ceased to be children. But still, in their naiveté, they dreamed about sweets and carefree days. And they became an invisible pillar of this victory.
I am now 11 years old. I live in Lugansk and I know what shelling or an airstrike is. Half of my life is war. I don’t know what children like me felt in that difficult and terrible 41st year (when the 3rd Reich occupied), but it seems to me that this is like everything the children of Lugansk and Donetsk are experiencing now.
Sometimes I really want to write a letter to my peers from 1941. To say many words of support to them, but then I remember their life path and I understand that everyone can envy their stamina and dedication.
The lives of those children of war are not stories of despair and broken lives. They are stories of hope, even if they are full of tragedies. And let us then, who now don’t know what tomorrow awaits us and whether it will be there for us – it is “tomorrow” and we are confidently stepping forward. We did not get broken and become stronger every day, because the strength of spirit is in our blood.
When I come to the graves of my great-grandfathers and think about them, I know that I will continue their path because we walked it together and are going in the same direction.
And I know for sure, like them, that the war will end sooner or later, and we will create a new future. We will have the memory of the sorrows of war, but also with faith in the world. A future, in the quietness of which, the children’s prayers for peace as well as their laughter will be heard. Because when a child laughs, the war recedes.
May 8th, VE Day and Liberation of Poland from the Nazis by the Red Army and Communist Polish partisans. A Jewish girl’s memory:
“I was on my own when I heard the news on the radio. This was
the news I had been dreaming of throughout the
unimaginable horror of the war, of the ghetto, of my
years in hiding. Today, at last, was the day that, despite
everything, I had never for one moment doubted would
come.
It was May 8th 1945. It was my 12th birthday. And it was
the day the second world war in Europe ended.
This was a birthday I would never forget. I could not stay
in my room, I needed to get out. For the first time since
the opening days of September 1939, when I had hidden,
terrified, with my parents in the shelter beneath our
apartment in Lwow as German bombs exploded above
us, I was safe. I was free. I had survived. I was going to
live.
I raced down the street to the Planty Gardens, the
ring of parks that circled Krakow’s old city walls.
It was a warm spring day, the sun was bright, the flowers
beginning to bloom. Winter was over. It was – and it
remains – one of the happiest days of my life. It is
tempting to think that, everywhere I looked, I saw faces
lit up, elated, an entire city celebrating with me. But in truth I remember no
crowds, no parties. I was exhilarated, I know I was, I can
feel it still. But, for me, the abiding memory is of relief.
Relief that the war was over. Relief that I had survived.
Relief that I was going to live.
I had been on my own when I heard the news. But I had
not survived alone. I shared that temporary DP (Displaced Person) room in the Polonia
Hotel with my mother Cescia as for the last six years I
had shared every other room with her: in the ghetto in
Lwow; in hiding in Tlumacz; in Stanislawow as the
Nazis retreated and the Red Army took over; and later
back in Lwow, my native city that was no longer home.
My mother was clever, courageous, practical, hard-
headed, loving. But above all she was an optimist. If she
had doubts that we would get through, she never let them
show. And, somehow, she passed that optimism and,
some of that courage, to her cosseted, nervous daughter.
Without that blind belief, we could not have stayed
hidden, could not have escaped capture, could not have
survived.”
There are similarities, there are differences; but either way, Victory means a child’s laughter or it means nothing at all.
There is a tomorrow and I hope Faina will be there. But it’s children will laugh, and sing and play because our Creator is more powerful than most people imagine.
Soviet song – Winged Swings (english subtitles)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6HplUZq66co
A song for Youth. and those who never got old.
Exquisite, poignant and maddening.
That children have been the targets from the first day of this ethnic cleansing war against the people of Donbass is the premier truth of the war. There never has been a geographic target the Ukies have fought for. Their strategy has always been to kill and maim as many civilians as possible.
This essay should be sent to President Trump, Melania, Ivanka and let them think about the crimes agains the Children of Donbass.
Faina should also be brought to the UN where she could recite her writing for all to hear.
“This essay should be sent to President Trump, Melania, Ivanka and let them think about the crimes agains the Children of Donbass.
Faina should also be brought to the UN where she could recite her writing for all to hear.”
Exactly that, L445. So true.
I have to say that I was kind of speechless when I had read this.
Just compare this words out of her heart to the conducted and acted shrieking of that strange Swedish bride of Chucky before the UN.
I was touched by her words. I do hope that as many people as possible will too.
Cheers and stay healthy, Rob
Well Faina is certainly far better looking than that Greta Thunberg who failed to ‘excite’ President Putin.
But I am excited at her perspective and poignant message as well as her faith in her future.
I have experienced living with people ruined by vicious war and hopefully will be living with them again to help in whatever ways I could.
Their fortitude, to me, is always humbling as it forced me to self-reflect.
Keep up your hope Faina and keep up your faith in Jesus Christ (assuming that you are an orthodox Christian). I am sure He will answer your hopes and faith in His perfect timing.
Dukhovnost “Quality of Spirit” and don’t her words and smile shine through?
Such words sound so trite when coming from an adult, but their sincerity cannot be doubted when coming from a child. An extremely moving and wonderful essay.
Thank you Miss Savenkova for reminding us how very deep and intelligent youth are! Please keep laughing.
I don’t cry much….but…
Faina, thank you for leting us know your perspective on life , i could easily grade your life history as good, or bad, but life is neither one, life is only one, and always in the present, wherever the circunstances, it will always will be that way, and if we stop remembering or comparing from the past into future it will help tremendously to center ourselves into this always present, i know culture always trains us to expect a great deal from the future, buy in relity life itself comes our way without our imput, or effort, life, nature and the universe is always watching us to procure and provide our needs, all we need to do is enjoy this wich is called life
Wow! She writes that well and is only 11? Amazing.
The words of this child touches something deep within me. I got reminded me of words one read in a book written by, Mme. de Salzmann
“The child wants to have, the adult wants to be.
The wish to be is behind all my manifestations.
To learn to see is the first initiation into self-knowledge.
We struggle not against something, we struggle for something.
I believe I need to pay attention when, in fact, I need to see and know my inattention.
When I begin to see, I begin to love what I see.
Where our attention is, God is.”
(Jeanne de Salzmann – “The reality of being”)
“When a child laughs, the war recedes.”
One of the most incredibly beautiful pieces you’ve published, Saker. I don’t know anything to compare it to.
A big Thank You to everyone involved in sharing it here.
All the credit go to Faina and “G”!
I just was lucky enough to be offered this beautiful text.
Friends, thanks for reading my essay. Thank you for your kind words.
With this essay, I wanted to say that the meaning of my life is not the search for those responsible for the war, but an attempt to stop it and build peace in my homeland. It is always difficult to create a new world after the war, but our ancestors coped, which means that the children of Donbass will succeed. Once, St. Nicholas of Serbia said: “The Lord is looking for creators, not destroyers. For he who creates good – thereby destroys evil. ” It may be very childish to think so, but I believe that it is true. That is why I usually write fairy tales so that to make the world a kinder.
I’m sorry that I do not answer everyone, but I do not know English well and am afraid to accidentally offend someone because of my ignorance and inaccurate translation.
Моя дорогая юная леди, пожалуйста, примите мои извинения за то, что не написали раньше.
Я впечатлен вашим писательским мастерством и хотел бы посмотреть, что вы пишете. Вы можете написать мне на русском языке, у меня есть очень хороший переводчик в моем компьютере. Я писатель и написал одну книгу, которая может вам понравиться. Посмотрите на мой веб-сайт, вы увидите способ связаться со мной с этого сайта.
Моя книга “голубое облако” – это маленькая фантазия, написанная собакой, русской собакой. У меня есть русский перевод книги, я могу отправить его вам, и мы сможем поговорить о том, что вы пишете. Я живу в Севастополе уже много лет. Я на пенсии старший сержант.
С самыми добрыми пожеланиями,
Аусленде
http://rhauslander.com/books/blue-cloud-my-life-annya-koli/
http://rhauslander.com/
(My dear young lady, please accept my apologies for not writing before. I am impressed with your writing skills and would like to see what you write. You can write to me in Russian, I have a very good translator in my computer. I am a writer and wrote one book that you might like. Look at my website, you will see a way to contact me from this website. My book “Blue Cloud” is a little fantasy written by a dog, a Russian dog. I have a Russian translation of the book, I can send it to you, and we can talk about what you write. I have been living in Sevastopol for many years. I’m a retired senior sergeant. Best regards, Ausland…..google translations..)
Stay a child and free of life’s burden for as long as you can. Adulthood and responsibilities will catch up like it or not. There’s something to be said about innocence and it should be lost slowy…
A wonderful horror,
She doesn’t promise it will be easy. She does remind me it was horrendous to the extreme in 41. I can’t even imagine how bad it was. An awful lot of them died and they all did their duty.
Survivors came back stronger, much stronger. They do and deserve my deepest respect no because they were alive but because they were much stronger and better persons. I hate the price to be such people. I admire the result.
The Donbass region is in this predicament. This young lady tells me the same spirit her ancestors brought home is alive. She impersonates it.
She also gives me hope to carry the “shit” we’re in now. I do fear the next episodes.
Thank you Faina for your words and thoughts.
Love and laughter and solidarity are the only things that will bring light to the darkness.
While reading your essay, I was reminded of all the children in Syria and Yemen and Iraq that have been targeted by the same dark forces that have also targeted your homeland.
Power and Greed are like addictive drugs, that the powerful feed on for their own extreme selfishness.
There is far too much selfishness and division and hatred in our World.
I wish you and your family all the best, and I wish you well with your studies.
Dear Faina,
Thank you for your essay, it is a gift to share in words your feelings and experiences in life, they reach many people. I hope you keep writing, even only for yourself and friends, your family, and also to write to your peers from 1941, to anyone, words have meaning beyond what we know, like words on a scrap of paper, placed in a bottle and thrown out to sea, no one knows who will find them, and where…
I’ve learned that your name means “shining”; your writing shines.
How many of our children will they kill before we wake up?
Here is another tragic, tragic story. NATO in 1999 killed around 3000 people in barbaric bombardments and through the use of Albanian terrorist and regular Albanian army proxies. Amongst them 78 Serb children and even more Albanian children as a “collateral”. Milica Rakic was only three years old when the NATO air bomb shrapnel found her on the potty.
Here is a video translated by Graham Phillips:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IV2-cSusrZE
Dear Faina,
This is a beautiful essay and you are a wonderful writer. You must keep writing! Write very day, keep a diary of the everyday events of your life. You don’t know how valuable it will be for people in the future.
I remember spending an hour in a museum in Krakow reading a translation of the diary of a Polish Jewish girl your age who ended her days in Auschwitz. Every ordinary event in her life became fascinating because of the tragic history she was caught up in. You are also caught up in a tragic history — the attack on the people of the Donbass by the neo-Nazis and our Western governments that shamefully arm and support them. Only by telling the simple truth of what is happening to you every day will you make the world finally wake up to the evil the West is doing.
I hope and pray you and your family come through this safely, Faina. You are a beacon of light in the darkness.
Michael Antony
Dear Faina,
I want to thank you for your beautiful essay. It touched me, I feel honored to be able to read it and it is so special to emerge on this blog when we celebrate the end of WW2.
What struck me especially, is that you don’t blame anyone, but have the strength and hope that one day it will end and a brighter future is ahead. That is true. Keep this hope on a strong leash.
I want to tell you something as well.
I live and work in Germany, so these celebrations give some odd sentiments, though almost all around me have no living memories about it.
A colleague of me (who I only knew for one day) said to me that he really couldn’t believe that people are capable of such perversities.
I replied to him that unfortunately we are, and on this very day perversities like that are happening all over the world (Yemen for example, Donbass as well, and alas so many other places), before our very eyes, and I don’t know what to do to stop it.
Strength, hope, and faith cannot be defeated. Keep that in your heart and laugh as much as possible.
Best wishes from Germany,
Cheers, Rob
Spaciba Faina,
You speak from the heart with a lot of feeling that touches me in a way that journalists cannot. I hope your letter inspires more children in war zones like yourself to speak from their hearts like you have done. More children and adults need to know about experiences like yours. In my homeland, the United States, there has not been a declared war for over a hundred years. Many people here don’t even know that a war has been going on where you live, and even for those who know there has been a war, many really don’t understand what such a war means to children, like yourself who have been living through it. I pray that peace and liberation will come to Lugansk and Donesk soon and I pray that you and your family and friends stay safe until it is. Thank you for your courage and your bright spirit.
Hugs from all of us to all of you,
William Spencer
What if they held a war and no fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, sons or daughters attended because they loved and/or were loved by somebody?