
Growing up in Soviet Ukraine during the Cold War, Ihor's experiences were shaped by censorship and a complex family history. He recalls a stark contrast between city life, where his parents avoided discussing the past, and summers with his grandparents near the Polish border, where stories of war and shifting national identities were openly shared. His grandfather's service in the Austrian army during World War I and his great-uncle's role in forming armed forces for an independent Ukraine in 1917 highlighted the region's turbulent past. The family also had an uncle who defected to America after being released from a prisoner-of-war camp by American troops, a secret they guarded carefully due to potential repercussions. School education included heavy doses of Russian literature and communist propaganda, alongside military training, reflecting the pervasive influence of the Soviet regime.
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