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SPECIAL THANKS TO... |
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THANKS FOR YOUR CO-OPERATION The National Russian Documentary Film Festival in Yekaterinburg The International Documentary Film Festival in Krakow Warsaw International Film Festival: Jewish Motives Europe´s Point of Divergence/Convergence, Rozstaje Europy in Lublin SPECIAL THANKS TO Telewizja Polska S.A, in Warsaw International Film Festival on Human Rights in Moscow STALKER The Polish Institute in Stockholm and Miroslav Chojecki, Irada Ismaylova, Ella Mitina, Rita Tjernenko, Alena Polunina Irina Rubanova, Grzegorz Linkowski Ekaterina Gabakova, Alexej Radov, Krzysztof Gierat, Irina Gedrovich, Piotr Cegielski, Aleksandra Biernacka, Isak Reichel, Kay Glans, Yael Katzir, Cay Wesnigk, Cornelia Widmark. Leo Kantors speech at the opening of the
15th Open Russian
Dear friends,
More recently, in April 2004, I was a member of the jury of a major
And before I return home to Sweden, I whould like to relate another story about another boy and his mother. In 1941, the Germans were about seven kilometres from the city of Charkov, when a beautiful young woman fled from her place of work at the citys civil defence office, where she was a secretary. Those who were employed in these institutions were the last to be evacuated. She arrived at her apartment, collected her small son and a few photographs, hurried to the station, jumped into the last carriage of the last train, and set off for the Ural Mountains in the direction of Ekaterinburg. The boys father was killed at the beginning of the war. The train stopped close to Ekaterinburg, in the town of Alapajevsk. Here the woman met a Polish non-commissioned officer who had escaped from imprisonment by the Germans in 1940 and had had the good sense to make the journey from Germany on foot as far as the Russian border. Because he was an engineer, he was not shot by Stalins supporters but was sent to work in an armaments factory in Alapajevsk, near Ekaterinburg. He adopted the boy and took both him and his mother to Poland in 1946. The boy grew up with his mothers sense of longing for Charkov, in an atmosphere of impending danger. Fate subsequently led him to the West. He has devoted the whole of his adult life to working with people, among people, for people. He later became an organizer of film festivals about humanity and human dignity. He has been extremely fortunate in his own life. He now works at a university, writes articles for European newspapers, represents an organization with several thousand members, which is committed to upholding human dignity, and participates in opinion-forming activities. Now that he is no longer quite as young as he once was, he is visiting you here in Ekaterinburg, not only to watch films, but also, and perhaps first and foremost, to bow down and thank the place on this earth that was itself forced to endure such interminable suffering and yet, in spite of everything, was able to save the young woman and her small son. |
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