United States of America
Remarks by Ambassador of the Russian Federation to the U.S. Anatoly Antonov at a reception on the occasion of the 75th Anniversary of the complete liberation of Leningrad from the Nazi blockade (30 January 2019)
Dear veterans! Respected friends!
These days our country is celebrating a truly historic and memorable event - the 75th anniversary of the complete liberation of Leningrad from the Nazi blockade. For almost 900 days the city heroically deterred the pressure of enemy’s prevailing forces serving as the greatest example of bravery and selflessness of our people.
Back in the fall of 1941, Hitler set a task of totally destroying St. Petersburg. According to Nazi military directives, the city and its population were to be erased from the face of earth. The plan was to encircle the city with a tight ring and raze it to the ground by artillery bombardment and air raids.
The aggressor had no doubts in successful implementation of its barbarian plan. All odds seemed to be against Leningrad’s citizens. The city was heavily bombed on a daily basis. In spite of the fierce resistance of the Red Army, outnumbering enemy troops kept advancing to the city, thus cutting off all communication and preventing the defenders from receiving any supplies. By October 1941, Leningrad ran out of grain, meat and flour. Tens of thousands of people were killed by bombs, but even more died from famine. The Nurnberg process estimated the casualties at 632 thousand people. Modern researchers talk about 1,5 million victims of this Nazi crime.
Every Leningrad resident went through horrendous ordeals. Hunger, bitter cold, bombings spared neither old people, nor women, nor children. History will forever hold the heart-breaking words from the diary of 14-year-old Tanya Savicheva who lost all her family: «Everyone died. Only Tanya is left».
Nevertheless, the city did not submit and persevered against all odds. Unbroken spirit of its defenders is reflected in works by poet Olga Berggolts, who survived the blockade, as well as in the Leningrad symphony by Dmitri Shostakovich. Moreover, military factories of the city continued supplying weapons for the army without stopping for a minute. As Russian President Vladimir Putin noted in one of his speeches, the transfer of arms produced in Leningrad through blockade to Moscow in the fall of 1941 was amazing and unbelievable.
The battle for Leningrad became a common cause for the whole Soviet Union. Russians, Ukrainians, Belorussians, Kazakhs, Armenians, Georgians, Azerbaijanis, Turkmens, Kirghiz, Tajiks, Uzbeks, Moldavians took part in it. Central-Asian republics became the second home for thousands of children who were evacuated from the besieged city.
Heroism of the people of Leningrad caught attention of the whole world. Our allies in the Anti-Hitler coalition, including the United States, enthusiastically welcomed the news that the Red Army broke the blockade of Leningrad in 1943. U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt sent a congratulatory scroll to the city where he mentioned that the successful defense of the city symbolized the undaunted spirit of the peoples of the Soviet Union and of all the nations of the world resisting forces of aggression.
At Piskarevskoe Memorial Cemetery, where tens of thousands of the blockade victims were buried, a poem by Olga Berggolts is engraved on the granite wall which ends with the words «No one is forgotten, nothing is forgotten». Our sacred mission is to preserve and pass on to the next generations the entire heroic truth about besieged Leningrad. We will do everything to counter attempts aimed at rewriting history and glorifying Nazis and their accomplices.
Unfortunately, as time goes by, fewer heroes of the Great Patriotic War are still with us. On January 18, 2019 passed away Leonid Aleksandrovich Ermakov – the veteran of the battles of Kursk and Koenigsberg, holder of Order of the Red Star and Order of Glory Third Class, who participated with us in “Immortal regiment” Remembrance Walk in Washington. I would like to express my deepest condolences to the family of Leonid Aleksandrovich and ask you all to observe a minute of silence in honor of all veterans who left us.
Dear colleagues, let me congratulate all of you on this anniversary of the Great Victory and wish you good health and peaceful skies.
Our deepest gratitude goes to the residents of besieged Leningrad, all those who defended and saved this beautiful city, who fought and won Nazism.
Thank you for your attention.