“My name is Huang Jianxin, I live in China ... I saw your video, and it really touched me. I would like to express my respect to you. Your fortitude can serve as an example for our generation, we need to learn from you. Your experience helps us to re-evaluate the fact that we live in a happy peaceful time, and you gave us this world with blood and tears. It’s good that we are alive. Dear Anna, let me call you my great mother. At that terrible time, you lost your husband and only son, but you were able to overcome everything. Looking at this, I better understand the meaning of the marathon. Our whole life is a marathon. And in this marathon there is everything - both sweet, and bitter, and acute moments, ”he writes.

According to Jianxin, in the "marathon, the main thing is perseverance."

“If you don’t give up, then in the end you will see the sun. Your life experience is a marathon. I would like to express my respect. This year marks the 75th anniversary of the Russian Victory in the war. You are a true hero of Russia. Let me express my deep respect to you. In China, living well. All Chinese rallied in the face of the coronavirus epidemic that began during the Spring Festival. I believe that under the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party, our people will be able to defeat this epidemic. I wish you happiness and health in Russia. Your friend from afar, Huang Jianxin, ”he wrote in a letter to a veteran.

On February 10, the first story was published within the framework of the project # Post of Victory, the heroine of which was the home front worker Anna Georgievna.

In 1941, Anna Georgievna Teryokhina found out that she was expecting a child. In the same year, her husband went missing at the front. She was 21 years old. Throughout the war, Anna Georgievna worked with her son in the rear, a teacher at school, and after school, sawed logs for the hospital.

She never married.

On February 25, Leningrad defender Konstantin Fedorovich Meleshko and Anna Teryokhina read a letter sent by the German writer Wolf von Fichtenberg as part of the project.

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

With the help of the project #Post-Victory, anyone can write letters to veterans, the history of wars and victories of which will be told over the next months.

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