Journey to the West
A descendant of ethnic Germans who, due to a series of historical events found themselves strewn around the USSR, Yury, now 47, was born in Soviet Kazakhstan. When he was 21 in the late 1990s, he decided to move to Germany for a better life. There, he learned German, earned a second degree, started a family, and opened his own business.
After the fall of the Berlin Wall, a reunited Germany launched a government programme allowing Russian Germans to return to the country and obtain German citizenship upon proving their language skills and kinship. Over 2 million Russian Germans left the Soviet Union throughout the 1990s and early 2000s to start anew in Germany. Yury was among them, but 25 years later, he and his wife are leaving Bavaria, Germany’s most economically successful region, to return to Russia.
“After much reflection, I came to the conclusion that this is not my native home,” Yury says. “I mean, of course, German society has become very familiar to me. I speak German well, but I still feel isolated and limited there all the time.”
Yury chose Kaliningrad primarily because of its geographical proximity to Germany, where his children have decided to stay.