qertdepot.blogg.se

Liya akhedzhakova
Liya akhedzhakova










liya akhedzhakova

But, besides the opposition and history, I still believe in God. And history is such a thing that everything changes and passes into another stage. I don't know what needs to happen for history to happen.

liya akhedzhakova

And the opposition is squeezed and intimidated. Apart from 1937, what metaphor, what comparison with the situation in Russia and Belarus seems to you the most accurate? After all, the situations are similar. Some observers compare what is happening now in Belarus with the period of persecution of the first Christians. Both in Russia and Belarus, the siloviki are “running the show.” This should not be so, otherwise, we will again come to concentration camps, executions, and "NKVD troika." I can only address people who are suffering, in a dire situation. Who am I to him? And I don’t want to address him. I know where the wave is coming from.Īnd Lukashenka won't listen to me anyway. This is not the first time bots have been writing on my behalf to bring me under sanctions. I do these things thoughtfully, on time, and in such a way that no one gets punished for it. And if there was an opportunity to appeal to Lukashenka, what would you tell him? But you're a witness to the fact that I'm not good at using the Internet. Already one lawyer is working on this issue, now another. They say things that I would say differently or not say at all. I did not appeal to Lukashenka in social networks. You appealed to Lukashenka in social networks, asking him to leave. “Lukashenka will not listen to me anyway, and I don’t want to address him”

liya akhedzhakova

I love Belarus so much, I toured there so much. It was in 1937 in Russia, in the USSR, but we thought that we had already moved away from this. So many people have been to Akrestsina Street and experienced monstrous humiliations and such rage. Scientists, journalists, actors, students. Such dislike for our people, for those people who are the pride of the nation. The way people are treated makes one want to cry. Difficult for historians, artists, and some directors. In Russia, it is hard for journalists who work seriously. What would you say to Belarusians in these dramatic days? I know that you are closely following the events in Belarus, that you are in solidarity with the Belarusians. You know, it's a happy day for me - my colleagues, the journalists of Radio Svaboda, who were imprisoned on Akrestsin Street in inhuman conditions, were released after their arrest (the conversation took place on July 26 - ed.). “The way people in Belarus are treated makes one want to cry” What is Belarusian happiness, and why they are trying to take away the title of People's Artist of Russia - there are answers to these and other questions in an interview with Russian actress Liya Akhedzhakova for Radio Svaboda.












Liya akhedzhakova