MY FAMILY HISTORY, part 1

in #story7 years ago (edited)

MY FAMILY HISTORY, part 1


On the left: my grandfather’s parents, Maria and Ivan (ca. 1960)
On the right: my grandmother’s parents, Andrey and Elizaveta (ca. 1950).
Below: my grandfather, Nikolai (ca. 1945).

I want to share with you the history of the two previous generations of my family on my father’s side, the story of my great-grandparents and grandparents. The narrative below sheds light on the chain of unlikely events that eventually led to my birth in Southern Russia, Rostov region, the traditional land of Don Cossacks nearly forty years ago. This chronicle was compiled and written down by my father, Leonid Izyumenko, to pass down to me and my sister. I am publishing it on Steem with his permission.

FROM UKRAINE AND RUSSIA TO SIBERIA

My two great-grandparents of the Izyumenko branch of the family tree were born the citizens of the Russian Empire. In their youth they witnessed the fall of the empire and the birth of Soviet Russia, which later became the core part of the Soviet Union.

My great-grandfather Ivan Izyumenko was born in 1903 in Ukraine. Probably in Mykolaiv in Southern Ukraine, although I also heard another version from my great-uncle Ivan about the Poltava Governorate (the modern Poltava Oblast in Ukraine) being his father’s place of origin. My great-grandmother Maria (née Tiabina, later Izyumenko) was born in 1898 in Russia, in Tambov Governorate.

Modern-day Omsk Oblast
Image source: Wikipedia
Somehow both their families ended up in Western Siberia – in a tiny village of Ol'gino in Omsk Governorate. Curiously enough, Ol'gino is situated in the Poltava district of the Omsk Region. The first 35 families who arrived there in May 1896 were all from the same village in Poltava Governorate in Ukraine, as were the settlers who had arrived a year earlier and founded the district’s centre, the village of Poltavka. This makes the version of my great-grandfather’s origin in Poltava region of Ukraine seem more likely.

(I heard different explanations for their move to Siberia from my relatives, but the mass colonisation of that land, envisioned and executed by Pyotr Stolypin, the 3rd Prime Minister of Russia, is one likely explanation. The timing checks out, too.)

When my great-grandmother Maria was a little girl, she met a Kazakh hermit known to be a seer, who lived away from people and only visited nearby villages to get food in exchange of foretelling of one’s future. She brought him a few chicken eggs and he told her that she would become a mother of many, but three of her children would be taken by water. Keep reading to see if his prediction came true.

A YOUNG WIDOW


My grandfather Nikolai and his siblings. From left to right: Nikolai, Lidia, Nina, Valentina, Ivan (ca. 1960).
Maria married early and in 1922 gave birth to a son Leonid. Her husband died in a tragic accident involving some piece of agricultural machinery and she was left alone with a baby-boy on her hands. A year later, in 1923, my great-grandfather Ivan married her and adopted the little Leonid. Together they moved to the village of Vishnevka in the same region. On January 25th 1924 they got another son, my grandfather Nikolai. A year later Maria’s first son Leonid died from pneumonia. So when the couple got another boy in 1926, they christened him Leonid, in loving memory of the departed eldest son. Between 1928 and 1938 Maria would give birth to four more children: Anna, Nina (1931), Lidia (1934) and Ivan (my great-uncle).

FROM HUNGER AND COLD TO PARADISE ON EARTH

Life in rural Siberia in the first half of the 20th century was tough. Feeding six children and surviving in the harsh climate was not an easy thing to do. In spring of 1941 my great-grandfather Ivan decided to visit his remaining relatives in Ukraine and see what life was like there. When he arrived in the warm and abundant country of his ancestors and saw fruit trees in full bloom, Ivan thought he discovered a paradise on earth. He decided to move his family from Siberia back to Ukraine.

Ivan arrived back to Vishnevka in May 1941 and all he could see of his family’s house was the chimney stack sticking out from under the heaps of snow that had buried the house. Ivan went mad with worry and shouted into the chimney stack: “It’s me, your father, I am back! Are you still alive?” He heard his children crying and started digging furiously in the snow with his bare hands, making a tunnel towards the entrance of the house. Meanwhile, Maria was trying to push-open the door and started digging towards her husband. Once they had dug the tunnel, Ivan rolled into the house, with two sacks of foods, candies and presents from Ukraine on his heel. Seeing his nearly starved wife and children, he began to sob and cried: “Here you are about to starve to death, buried under the snow, all the while apricot trees are blooming in Ukraine! Let’s pack, we are moving there together!”

DRAMATIC JOURNEY

Packing didn’t take long: all their possessions were stuffed into two sacks made of women’s shawls. Ivan, Maria, and their six children – Nikolai, Leonid, Anna, Nina, Lidia, and Ivan were ready to embark on a 3,300 km / 2,050 mi journey. The seventh child, yet unborn and unbeknown to them at that time, would make the journey with them, inside Maria’s belly. Another family from their village decided to join them; they had relatives in Southern Russia, in the town of Morozovsk, so they could travel part of the way together.

First by horse-drawn sleigh to the train station in Isilkul 120 km / 75 mi west of Omsk, then by train to Central Russia, following by a steamboat down the river Volga to Stalingrad (modern-day Volgograd). The children, never having seen such large river in their lives, were ecstatic. My grandfather Nikolai and his brother Leonid were having fun, jumping from the boat into the river. They would catch the rope trailing from the boat and draw themselves back onboard.


Wehrmacht soldiers with civilian population in Southern Soviet Union
Image source: Bundesarchiv, Bild 101I-020-1262-26 / Harschneck / CC-BY-SA 3.0
Once the two families came ashore in Stalingrad, Ivan went to the railway station to buy tickets to Ukraine. On his way to the station he noticed many tense faces and frantic activity of the locals. When he tried to buy train tickets to Mykolaiv, the ticket clerk asked Ivan bitterly if he was in a hurry to meet the Germans. Remember: this was way before the smartphones and the Internet, so my great-grandfather had no way of knowing that while he and his family were travelling by boat, the Nazi Germany invaded Belarus and Ukraine and that German troops were rapidly progressing towards the central parts of Russia.

to be continued…

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this is a great post. one of the best..my grandfather was from Ukraine (vilnius/lithuania)..happy to follow ad upvote.

Hey, thanks for stopping by! I enjoy your coverage of the history of baseball in the U.S.! It would also be cool to read more about some of your favourite specimens of gold and silver that you’re stacking. I’m going to make a post about my most recent purchases of silver rounds soon.

will do...
and thank you.

Interesting story...interesting times, as well. I hope they go to Ukraine after all, as Stalingrad was not a good place to be...
Nice idea of putting your ancestors on the blockchain...good way to preserve the past!

Thank you, @ladyrebecca! Finally we can write history that will remain uncensored for generaitons to come. Who knows, maybe someone will be reading this post (including our comments :)) 200 years from now.

If you thought that part 1 was interesting… Oh my, you have to wait for part 2!! Some pretty dramatic turns of events are to follow… Romantic, too.

Waiting for the continuation, very interesting. Thank you for sharing :)

Thank you for reading and commenting! :) I’ll try to prepare and publish part 2 tomorrow. And I’ll post this family chronicle in Russian afterwards too.

You once mentioned that you have Ukrainian roots, and finally we have got a more detailed explanation. It turned out an interesting story, will be waiting for the second part.
p.s. Do you know Russian?

Russian is my first language, so yes. :) I will be publishing this family chronicle in Russian too, once I’m done with the English version first.

The second part will introduce even more of my Ukrainian roots, once my grandfather gets to meet my grandmother. ;)

Thank you for sharing. I know only little pieces of my family history. Our family is similar but we left Russia to America before that during the Tzar in the 1890s. I guess it is time to get family record straight. Adding this to the block chain assures generations share the story.

Thank you for sharing this! Were your great-grandparents speaking Russian then? You, I was thinking about that book, ‘Pachinko’, when I read this family chronicle that my dad compiled.

On a non-related note: do you teach in Korea? Or what is it you do for work? Teaching English in South Korea is one of the options I am currently considering for this fall. There’s a number of other things I could do and hopefully I’ll have more sense of direction by mid-April.

Yes. I'm in Seoul. I teach in the public schools. You are a citizen of Sweeden, right? All the public schools require applicants to come from countries with the official first language to be English. However if you are highly qualified you can try teaching English in a private school or academy. If you have teaching experience and certification from Sweeden you can apply to teach in an international school. I'm not sure but I think it would be easier to find a job teaching in a south east Asian country. If you are qualified I can help you apply to Seoul Public Schools. They give a one year contract and hire in March and in August.

Oh I almost forgot... There are a lot of universities that need foreign lecturers so if you have a lot of education background Universities hire and give a great package in Korea.

And last but not least Scrooger is in Pusan so you can stop by and say, "hi"... which I have yet to do.

University looks best for you. The public schools will only a hire from select countries. Look at Hankook Aviation University and some others near Seoul and I think you will find a great place. Except for the dust in the Spring Korea has been real good to me.

Best regards and blessings to you.

Don't hesitate to ask if you have any question.

@scrooger lives close enough to Busan, so I met him there last summer! :D

Thank you for all the tips! I will seriously consider all the options for South Korea. And yes, I do have long enough professional experience teaching English and other languages in schools in Sweden and abroad. Also, in Sweden English is nearly everyone’s second language. And maybe I could try for a university, given my academic background and lecturing experience. Food for thought, for sure!.. Thank you!

interesting story. Where after Mykolaiv? I'm just from Odessa

Cool, welcome to my blog! I was in Odessa once, when I was 9, with my father. I was so impressed by that trip, I still have the fondest memories of it. Would love to get back there one day! :)

Stay tuned for part 2, in which you’ll get to know how the rest of my great-grandparents’ journey went…

I will wait for the continuation)

Thanks Oleg. And thanks to your dad for writing this down. I feel so sorry for Maria. She suffered so much loss. I really loved the part where Ivan digs his family out of the snowed-in house. It's amazing, the hardships they had to face. Loved it!

Anj :)

I found this quite interesting, thank you for sharing your family history with us!

Thank you for the upvotes and resteems, Michelle!

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fantastic job...my grandfather, mother's side from Vilnius..(lithuania). Ukraine

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