ABSTRACT

The German occupation of Ukraine was marked by extraordinary savagery, seared into international consciousness by the slaughter at the Babiy Yar ravine northwest of Kiev. By the end of the Occupation, the Germans had killed around 40,000 Jews and 100,000 people of other nationalities. Starting from the first bombardments of the capital, many citizens fled to relative safe havens elsewhere in the Soviet Union. However, there was no official evacuation of the Kiev Conservatoire, and many of its students and professors were unable to leave.

This chapter reconstructs the dramatic events that took place during the two years in which Kiev musicians remained in the city, using the reminiscences of eyewitnesses, in particular the almost daily diary entries of artist Irina Khoroshunova (1913-1993), a close friend of Anisiya Shreyer-Tkachenko, head of the music history office at the Conservatoire. The story of how musicians endeavoured to maintain some sort of artistic life under conditions of extreme deprivation and fear is here left largely to speak for itself. It is stark and profoundly moving.