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My Diary from 1949

Autor Danguole Rudokaite-Raudonikiene
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 aug 2020
In March 1949, Danguole Rudokaite-Raudonikiene's family were among the unfortunate ones who were exiled from Lithuania to the remote settlements of the Soviet Union. Her diary depicts the journey from their beloved homeland to an unfamiliar place in Eastern Siberia through the eyes of an 11-year-old girl. She writes about the horrifying journey on trains used for cattle. These trains did not have any windows. The conditions were gruesome and beyond unsanitary. They were often deprived of food and water for days at a time. Danguole portrays their journey with lots of emotions: happiness was replaced by fear, joy was replaced by sadness, and hope was replaced by despair. She continued writing her diary for a year, describing events, her feelings, and the life of people in Eastern Siberia. The epilogue is a short summation of the events from the ten years Danguole spent in Siberia (names, places, and events are authentic).
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781641829694
ISBN-10: 1641829699
Pagini: 90
Dimensiuni: 127 x 203 x 6 mm
Greutate: 0.22 kg
Editura: austin macauley publishers llc

Notă biografică

Danguole Rudokaite-Raudonikiene is a celebrated artist in Lithuania now, but her life's journey was not easy. With her family, she was exiled to East Siberia by the Soviet regime in 1949. Danguole spent her childhood and teenage years in the remote settlements of Russia. By 1958, her family had been released from exile in Siberia, but it was not until 1960 that Danguole returned to Lithuania, having graduated from the Institute of Foreign Languages in Irkutsk.

Descriere

In March 1949, Danguol Rudokait-Raudonikiens family were among the unfortunate ones who were exiled from Lithuania to the remote settlements of the Soviet Union. Her diary depicts the journey from their beloved homeland to an unfamiliar place in Eastern Siberia through the eyes of an 11-year-old girl. She writes about the horrifying journey on trains used for cattle. These trains did not have any windows. The conditions were gruesome and beyond unsanitary. They were often deprived of food and water for days at a time. Danguol portrays their journey with lots of emotions happiness was replaced by fear, joy was replaced by sadness, and