mashenka will tell. mashenka already knows this story. the fact is that my mother, father, my grandfather were supposed to sail on this barge, and they were brought there to load. and this is alexander vasilyevich, my mother’s grandfather, my great-grandfather, right now their father rurik alexandrovich is there yes, and they were brought to be loaded onto a barge and evacuated, and it was at that moment that an order was given that we were loading back, we were loading to another course and barge and in front of those who had just could escape and leave for evacuation on this barge falls bomb. and everyone who was supposed to be saved is gone. and this story there, the first name was barge 752. this is a story, just a barge that carried people, uh, from besieged leningrad, but, unfortunately, saved a lot of people. it is very important and very expensive, and somehow it turned out so symbolically that we are together. we went through it all together, but you will never go through it , because dad used to say until the end of his days that i always lived with a sense of guilt, that i should have died there, and i stayed alive, and someone else died for me. and that's why he's after one operation the next after the next another one more more to save as many lives as possible. dad was born in kharkov. dad in kharkov, this grandfather was from there. no, grandpa was sent there by grandpa, he founded a department there, uh, oncology, and uh, moreover, when i am now uh at godfather uh, the son of dad alexei german was filming in kharkov, we found the place where the house where dad was born stood opposite e nkvd but during the war it was later destroyed. what do you think, how would grandfather dad, who went through the war, saw in his own eyes? who lived uh, all the more often there in ukraine outwardly, how would they now look at what is happening that the war, it turns out, is not over, dad is a very patriotic person and dad is very sensually sensitive, so i am convinced that the experiences at home would be incredible . i don't think he reacted actively to it, but the fact that his heart would break inside it, yes. he adored time, despite the fact that dad was very naughty in childhood and in kharkov he graduated from a school for difficult spirits, because all the rest of him they kicked him out because he liked to ride on the bandwagon, the tram was behind there, because he liked the wall newspaper on the walls. uh, taking your photo on the footboard of the tram to paste it there. uh, a photo of the principal of the school and the concept reaches he he liked to have fun, so, well, then the same as here are my brothers, they were naughty naughty, and then brilliantly ended the institute stopped as ideal specialists. and what is there now in kharkov, these are the department of oncology, it’s the same, even interesting, i, i uh, i went, i was looking for sent official inquiries. i found a person there who, uh, and this was even before this conflict situation that we have now . i starred 7-8 years ago in that film. i am now here and mashenkalong time ago, that is, i was looking for, uh, both official letters and verbally that the girl who worked on the picture, who lives in kharkov, went around, she said anastasia and i was so attached to you for this the time that i will go looking for times they are until you are here answer, and then she came to me with a letter, which, unfortunately, said that such a person did not exist at all and never. and who created the department, they said, but we do not know, we have no documents . that is, for some reason, departments of this department exist? i don’t know how it is now, but then there were no documents. how then, so that today your father would be sitting, they would say, now, if they saw that this is a fascist, from which once the father almost died, and again raised his head and there on the land where he lived on they wouldn’t say to ukraine, they would, uh, how my grandfather developed a system of folding operating theaters back in the first world war and along with the