One of the letters is addressed to a resident of the besieged Leningrad Zoe Romanenko.

Cologne resident Regina Schwartz congratulated the veteran on the upcoming 75th anniversary of Victory Day.

“I am glad that I can express in a letter my sense of solidarity with you and the Russian people. Especially because the Russian people suffered the most in the war against fascism and suffered the greatest number of victims in order to defeat the enemy, ”wrote Schwartz.

She noted that she was very moved by the story of Zoe Romanenko.

“I want to express my condolences in connection with what you and the whole Russian people had to endure, especially through the fault of German soldiers. I was glad to know that you too could have been in Berlin when the Russians put an end to these atrocities, ”she added.

The second letter is addressed to the defender of Stalingrad, Colonel Boris Shaposhnikov.

“You, Mr. Shaposhnikov, have not lived your life in vain ... I bow to you ... as low as possible,” the letter says a resident of the German Bad Belzig.

He added that, in his opinion, most Russians have a warm soul, and even a stranger can feel it.

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.