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Age 22, from Istra, Russia.
Lena
was our first child. My husband
graduated from the college of chemistry at Moscow University
in 1980, and on October 22nd our little ‘Lenochka’ was born. My husband went straight away to graduate
school, but I really wanted a daughter, and so she was born. Oh, how happy it was! All mothers believe that their children are
the very best, and so did I. At a very
young age Lena showed character. Once I put her in the corner and she stood
there for several hours, declaring that she was not going to beg forgiveness,
because she did not know how. Lena started reading at age 5. By age 7 she had already read ‘The Magician
of the Emerald City’.
Back then it was her favorite book, and she read it over and over.
Lenochka got straight A’s, and participated in all possible knowledge Olympiads
and took home prizes. From eighth grade
on she attended the physics and mathematical class at the Moscow Aviation
Institute base. She graduated top of the
class, with a gold medal, and entered MAI without having to take the entrance
exams, since in the spring of 1997 she got first place in the math
Olympiad. At the MAI she studied at the
3rd college (ASU) to be a programmer. It was very difficult. We did not have a lot of money back then (nor
did anyone else), but Lena never
complained. Lenochka was very
thoughtful, serious, goal-oriented, and a very industrious person. Each summer we traveled to grandmother’s
village in the Stavropol district, and Lena knew how to do everything: pull weeds, wash clothes,
cook, and even milk cows.
My husband
and I were always proud of Lena. Lenochka was gifted in every way, not just
able to understand physics, mathematics, and programming, but she even wrote
poetry, sketched, and did embroidery.
She was superior in Russian and English, and literature. And she was also a beauty.
That year
on October 22nd Lena became
twenty-two. We joked that only once in a
lifetime was a person 21 on the 21st of October, and 22 on the 22nd.
We celebrated Lena’s birthday as a family, and Lena
was going to celebrate with her student group on Saturday, the 26th. On the 23rd Lena
and two girls from school went to the musical ‘Nord-Ost’ (row 10, seat 22 on
the balcony). Fortunately her friends
made it. Lena
had seen the musical on June 23rd that year. She liked it very much, and said: “Mama, you
must see it without fail.” Somehow I
never found the time, and Lena decided to go
see it with her girlfriends. We live in
the city of Istra, in Podmoscovy, and I work
here, but on the 23rd I needed to go into Moscow.
I was able to stay in the city awhile, but some strange sense of unease
drove me back home. I arrived home just
as Lena was getting ready to leave for the
theater, and I watched her get dressed, do her make up, and in general the
usual girlish preparations. After the
musical Lena was going to spend the night in Moscow at a girlfriend’s. I watched Lena
through the window while she walked to the E-train. Had I only known that it was the last I would
see her alive! That evening my husband
and I turned in, never suspecting anything, but we were awakened by a call from
the mother of one of Lena’s girlfriends: “Turn
on the television, they’ve taken our children hostage”. And so began Hell…
On Friday,
October 25th, we had returned home after spending the entire day at
the Polytechnic (note: where the relative of hostages collected to receive
updates from government officials). We
have another daughter, who was 12 at the time, and we could not leave her alone
for the night. Once home we got a call
from the grandmother of one of Lena’s
girlfriends, and she said that the girls had been freed and would soon be sent
home. The parents of Lena’s two friends
were still in Moscow and said that there was no need
to come to Moscow. A car was sent from Istra to bring our girls
home. All night long we waited, and in
the morning we learned about the assault.
Back then we knew nothing about the gas, but then we learned that no one
had released our girls, and to this day I do not know why they had to deceive
us so cruelly. All day Saturday my
husband drove from hospital to hospital in Moscow while I stayed home by the phone. All our friends called, and all of Lena’s as well.
They found Lena’s two friends in different hospitals, but we had no idea
where Lena was. On Sunday, the 27th, we spent all
day at the Polytechnic waiting for information.
We ignored the bureaucrats’ suggestion to drive to from morgue to morgue
to identify our loved one. We believed that
Lena was alive. Finally, towards evening, they brought in a
list of victims in the hospitals, but Lena was
not among these. Twice they assembled
those who were unable to find their loved ones and read from a list of those
identified as dead. Lena
was not on those lists, either. Later,
already at night, they brought in albums of photographs from the Moscow morgues. That is where we found Lena. In the photograph Lenochka looked as if she
were asleep, her face was so peaceful and beautiful. Later, at the morgue, they
told us that she had died at Hospital #13 on the 26th. They were never able to awaken Lenochka. We buried her on November 1st in
our city cemetery, in the alley where they bury heroes of the Great Patriotic
War. All the fuss and expenditures were
taken care of by the Istra city administration.
It seemed to me that no one in our city remained indifferent to our
grief. We thank everyone who shared our
sorrow and made it easier to bear this intolerable suffering.
Every year
on Lena’s birthday her friends, classmates,
and our friends gather together. We talk
about Lena as we would about someone living,
and it seems to me that she is among us, and listening.
After the
funeral the police brought us Lena’s
jacket. Inside the coat we found my husband’s
business card, on which Lenochka had written this note:
“Mommy,
daddy, Natashenka!
I love your all very much. That is all I
am thinking about now. And about all my
friends. I must tell you this because it
is possible that we will never see each other again.
Forever
yours, Lena.”
After Lena’s death our younger daughter
started writing poems. Some of them are
here .
Written by
her mother, Tatiana Volkova
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1. норд-ост Written by Светлана Михайловна Назарова. , on 27-08-2008 18:53 Во время осады Норд-Оста я была рядом с родителями Е. Волковой в спортивном зале. Ее мама показала мне ее фото и рассказала про очень странную историю. Лена жила вместе с родителями в Истре, на спектакль она поехала во второй раз, вместе с 2 подругами. На второй день ей позвонила мама одной из подружек и сказала, что всех троих выпустили, мама Лены так обрадовалась, что даже не запомнила, кто звонил. Они прождали сутки и в пятницу 25.10.02 приехали в Москву, после штурма они, как и я, ждали списков раненных и погибших, но их девочки не было ни там ни там. Похоже, что под ее именем вышла кто-то другая. А Лену я увидела в альбоме неопознанных погибших женщин, этот альбом привезли поздно ночью, я опознавала самой первой и там же я увидела свою сестру - Л.Антонову, правда узнать ее было очень трудно - верхняя часть лица ( лоб) была страшно расширена, поэтому глаза как бы пошли под углом к вискам. А вот лицо Лены не было деформировано, поэтому я ее сразу узнала.Но родителям Лены я не сказала, что увидела их дочь в этом альбоме, мама Лены была уже в очень нервном напряжении. Я пишу об этом с опозданием, но надеюсь, что родители Лены уже рассказали об этом.
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