Vaskovo, a locality in the Arkhangelsk region, has a population of a little over 1,000 residents. Seven graduates of its only school went to war last year, and two of them are already dead. Sergey and Mikhail were buried at the local Patriot Park and decorated with Medals for Valour posthumously as guns were fired and fireworks were set off in their honour.
Tatyana (her name has been changed), a teacher at the local school, has known all the soldiers ever since they were little boys. She teaches a health and safety training course at the school, and also provides shooting training for teenagers at a local Centre for Early Military Education.
Two of her graduates came to Vaskovo on vacation in March: one of them serves not far from his home, while the other is in Ukraine.
“When I found out the boys were here, I invited them to attend an Important Conversations lesson (a weekly class in Russian schools where students are being “taught patriotism” — Novaya-Europe). I asked them to tell our kids about what salaries, social benefits, housing and meals servicemen receive,” Tatyana says. “The point of such meetings is to explain to high-schoolers that military service is a real career opportunity”.