The exhibition of the Iskitim Museum of Arts and History features a portrait of Vera Alekseyevna Popova, painted in 1966.
Portrait of Vera Popova
Makar Leontyevich Shukshin, Vasily’s father, was among the hundred Srostki peasants who were repressed and shot near Barnaul that year. Mikhail Sergeyevich Popov, the brother of Mariya Sergeyevna, also faced repression but survived. Even his family was allowed to move and live with him in Kolyma, but their fate took a tragic turn… Pyotr’s father, Ivan Nikitich, was taken away that night along with other men. It became known later that he alone did not sign the investigative report. However, this did not save him… Later, we found out some shocking things. It turned out that the repressed Srostki peasants were not guilty at all! Why were they shot and starved in cold prisons? Gradually, the curtain of ignorance fell from our eyes…
The women of Srostki had extremely hard lives. Most of them lost their husbands at a young age for no good reason and had to raise children alone. They worked under the same conditions as men. They found a rare source of comfort and distraction in fortune-telling using cards and mirrors. Ivan Popov recalled, “Late at night after all the work was done, the women would gather at our house for their ‘night vigils’. They would take turns sitting in front of two mirrors, light three candles on each side, and look into the depths of the reflections… I saw them watching the mirrors, waiting for a glimpse of their loved ones. I remember seeing them patiently wait for their husbands to appear… Now I look at old photographs of these loved ones — Mikhail Sergeyevich and Ivan Nikitich… wearing their soldier’s uniforms… long before their arrest… I read their naive and sweet confessions on the backs of the pictures, ‘Taken on October 12, 1919. Here, my dear wife Vera, look at me and do not forget about me.’ These words speak volumes. Who even had the nerve to brand them as enemies of the people?!“
Portrait of Vera Popova
