"Leningrad survivors recall one of the most ...." Topic
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Tango01 | 26 Jun 2019 1:14 p.m. PST |
…horrifying episodes of World War II. "Tamara Chernykh, 81, still can't forget those tiny pieces of bread that her granny used to put under her pillow as a night treat for a starving four-year-old girl in besieged Leningrad during the deadly winter of 1941-1942. Chernykh's grandmother, who gave the bread out of her own scanty food ration, said they would bring good dreams. What her granny didn't tell her was that while sharing her bread with the little girl she was dying from starvation herself…" Main page link Amicalement Armand
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14Bore | 26 Jun 2019 2:02 p.m. PST |
The siege of Leningrad is tough hard reading, not for the faint of heart. |
langobard | 27 Jun 2019 3:06 a.m. PST |
+1 14Bore, I read everything I can about the eastern front, but the suffering of the civilians in Leningrad (and Stalingrad) is almost impossible for us to comprehend. |
Tango01 | 27 Jun 2019 12:15 p.m. PST |
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