newsletter@paulcraigroberts.
Why Putin
Is Not
A Warmonger
Why Putin Is Not A Warmonger
My breathing mom was among corpses’: 
                    
                     
                                        
  ‘My dad was breathing
  via a reed in a swamp while the Nazis passed by, just a few 
  
 
  
  
  
 
  
  
 
  
http://rt.com/news/254445-
My breathing mom was among corpses’: 
Putin recalls his parents’ WWII ordeal
      
                        
                            Published time: April 30, 2015 11:21                                                    
                        
      
                        
Russian President Vladimir Putin (RIA Novosti)
Vladimir Putin has written a column (something he 
very rarely does), recalling the stories 
of his parents who survived the
 hardships of the Leningrad blockade, his dead brother and 
World War II 
with very personal details.
  ‘My dad was breathing
  via a reed in a swamp while the Nazis passed by, just a few 
steps away’
  Putin’s father, Vladimir, joined a small sabotage group under the
  People's Commissariat for 
Internal Affairs (NKVD), whose mission
  was to blow up bridges and rail lines near 
St Petersburg (then
  Leningrad), the Russian president recalled in his column in the “
Russian
  Pioneer” journal. Of the 28 members in the group, 24 died in
  battles with the Nazis 
near St Petersburg.
  One day, German soldiers were chasing them in the woods. Putin’s
  father survived because 
he hid in a swamp for several hours.
  “And he [Putin’s father] said that, when submerged in the
  swamp and breathing through a
 reed, he heard German soldiers
  passing by, just a few steps away from him and he heard 
dogs
  barking.”
  His father recalled how he sustained an injury, which invalided
  him for the rest of his life 
because he had to live with parts of
  a grenade in his leg. 
Father: Vladimir Spiridonovich Putin 
Putin-Sr was making a sortie behind Nazi lines together with his
  fellow fighters. However, 
they suddenly encountered a German
  soldier.
  "The man looked at us carefully. He took a grenade, then
  another, and threw them at us,
” Putin recalls his father’s
  words.
  "Life is such a simple thing and cruel,” the Russian
  president concluded.
  When Putin’s father woke up, he couldn’t walk and there was
  another problem – he had to 
reach his group stationed on the
  other bank of the vast Neva River which was frozen.
  “The Neva was constantly monitored and exposed to fire by
  artillery and machine guns. 
There was almost no way of reaching
  the opposite bank.”
  However, by chance Putin-Sr met his neighbor, who despite enemy
  fire managed to get him 
to a local hospital. The fragments of the
  grenade were lodged in his leg and the doctors 
preferred not to
  touch them in order to save the limb. 
  The neighbor waited for him [Putin-Sr] in the hospital, and after
  seeing that his surgery had 
been successful he told him: 
"All
  right, now you're going to live, and I am heading off to
  die."
  However, they both survived the war, though Putin’s father
  thought his savior had been dead 
for a decade. In the 60s, they
  met by chance in a shop and there was a tearful reunion.
‘My brother died from diphtheria during the Leningrad blockade’
  Putin’s elder brother was born during World War II. To support
  his little son, Putin’s father 
secretly passed his own hospital
  rations to his wife. But when he started to faint in the hospital
  “doctors and nurses understood what was happening,” said
  Putin, recalling his parents’ stories.
  The child was taken from the family by the authorities and put in
  a foster home from where he 
was set to be evacuated.
  “He fell ill there [the foster home] - my mother said it was
  diphtheria - and didn’t survive. 
And they were not even told
  where he was buried. They were never told.”
Russian President Vladimir Putin (Reuters / Mikhail Klimentyev)
It was only last year that Putin managed to find information
  about his brother and where 
he was buried.
  “And this was my brother,” wrote Putin. “Not only
  the address where he was taken but 
the name, surname, and date of
  birth all matched. He was buried in Piskarevsky cemetery 
[in St.
  Petersburg]. And even a specific area was mentioned.”
‘Among the bodies my dad saw my mom’
  When Putin’s mother was on her own – her son was taken and her
  husband was still
 in hospital – she got sick. The medics
  considered her almost dead and were transporting 
her with other
  bodies for burial. As luck would have it, Putin’s father made a
  timely return 
from the hospital.
  “When he [Putin-Sr] came to the house, he saw the medics were
  carrying corpses. And 
he saw my mother. He came closer and it
  seemed to him that she was breathing. 
‘She's still alive!’,"
  he told the medics.
  They insisted she would soon die, but he refused to listen to
  them, and instead attacked them 
with his crutches.
  “And he took care of her. She lived,” the Russian
  president wrote.
 His parents died at the end of the 90s. 
Vladimir Putin with his mother (Image from wikipedia.org)
‘My parents didn’t harbor any hatred for the enemy’
  Every single family lost loved ones in this war, Putin said. 
  “But they [Putin’s family] had no hatred for the enemy,
  that's amazing. 
To be honest, I still cannot fully understand
  this.”
He remembered the words of his mother, who said she didn’t hate
  the German soldiers 
as they “were common people and were also
  killed in the war.”
http://rt.com/news/254445-
 
 
 
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