VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД FIND US ON: YouTube Twitter
breakingnews
Go to main page   Programs   Prime Time Russia   News   Russian veterans salute war dead in London  

Russian veterans salute war dead in London

Published: 11 November, 2007, 06:37

Russian veterans travelled thousands of kilometres to meet UK comrades

(7.1Mb) embed video

Russian World War 2 veterans stood shoulder to shoulder with their British counterparts in Sunday's Remembrance Day Parade in London. The veterans from the northern city of Arkhangelsk travelled to the UK to remember the Arctic convoys, which delivered a

Every year on the Sunday closest to November 11, a stream of veterans file past the Cenotaph in London's Whitehall.  It's a way of remembering the millions who died in the two world wars. 

For many of the veterans, it also serves as a reminder of a time when Russia and Britain stood together to face a common enemy – Nazi Germany.
 
Between 1941 and 1944, Arctic convoys travelled from the UK and the U.S. to Russia’s northern cities of Arkhangelsk and Murmansk to deliver vital supplies to the Soviet Union.
 
The memory of the convoys stirs up strong emotions in those who took part in them. Some, like former British seamen Ronald Ainsworth and Russian veteran Dmitry Efimenko, are offended by claims that relations between Russia and the UK are at a post-Cold War low.  Ainsworth describes such descriptions as “complete rubbish.”
 
“The trouble is those people never experienced the Second World War,” he said.
 
“I have always been very fond of Russia because I saw so many Russian people during the war and how much they suffered. Their courage in defeating the Nazis is something I admire,” Ainsworth said.
 
“I’m already 80 and far from politics but I imagine that the peoples of Russia and Britain are friends. In my wildest dream I couldn’t imagine our countries going back to the Cold War years,” Dmitry Efimenko said.
 
Second life for Cenotaph
 
London's famous memorial to the war dead has now found a second life in cyber space.  it's part of an attempt to encourage young people to remember the sacrifices made by earlier generations.
 
The “Second Life” computer game offers plenty of opportunities.
 
There you’ll find a cyber version of the Cenotaph – familiar to millions who've passed the stone original in Whitehall.
 
Veterans welcome the computer version. They say anything that attracts the online generation’s attention to the destruction of war is a good thing.

0 (0 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
George Blake 11.11.2007, 06:04

Cold War super spy exiled in Moscow turns 85

The legendary double agent George Blake is celebrating his 85th birthday. The former British spy was recruited by the KGB in the 1950s, and went on to play a key role in Soviet intelligence gathering during the Cold War.

‘Alyosha’ monument 11.11.2007, 08:20

I'm still standing! Alyosha survives to make fifty

Hundreds of people in Bulgaria have gathered at a monument to Soviet soldiers – nicknamed ‘Alyosha’ – to mark its 50th anniversary.