Eggert said her parents and grandparents survived World War II.

“Father and grandfather were injured. My mother was born in Königsberg and, as a child, was forced to flee with her family from the war. They survived war, hunger and poverty. It was, as I heard in their stories, indescribable suffering, ”she wrote.

She promised to do everything possible to fight for peace and unite peace-loving people.

Velert addressed a letter to the rear worker Anna Teryokhina. He recalled a conversation with an accidental acquaintance during his trip with a friend to Moscow through a youth travel agency in 1982.

“He explained to us that it was important for him, even more importantly, that there would never be a war between our countries again ... I still remember his story. Now, I probably at least told him how much I am grateful to his country, his compatriots and those millions of victims for having partly liberated my country, most of the world from Nazi fascism, ”he said.

The project #Post-Victory contains the stories of those who survived the siege of Leningrad, signed on the walls of the Reichstag, those who hid Soviet soldiers who fled from concentration camps.

Over the next months, the project will tell the story of their war and their victory. With the help of the project #Post-Victory, anyone can write a letter to a veteran.

Letters sent to the editorial office of the channel will be transmitted to all veterans.

The heroine of the first story was the home front worker Anna Georgievna Teryokhina.