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Great-grandson Tolstoy, ‘I live the war crying, my great-grandfather would be sorry’ – RockedBuzz

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Milan, 8 March (Adnkronos) – “I live this situation crying. I cry for the people who are dying and because I relive what I experienced during the Second World War, which I spent with my grandmother, the daughter of Tolstoy”. She answers the phone from Switzerland, where she lives, Marta Albertini, great-granddaughter of Leo Tolstoy, Russian writer, philosopher, educator and social activist, emblem of world literature. The calm and firm voice, Marta does not give herself peace for what is happening in Ukraine. “I don’t have much to say, except that I feel a lot of sadness and a lot of concern for the future, for my grandchildren and for the young people – Albertini told AdnKronos -. The Russians are already revolting against Putin, at least those who manage to do so. I believe that this man has a capacity for infinite destruction, alas. Nothing can stop him, not even all the pacifists in the world. ”

His illustrious great-grandfather Tolstoy was a friend of Gandhi, the greatest symbol of the pacifist struggle. “They never visited each other, but they corresponded – Albertini says -. This is to underline the anti-war atmosphere that existed in the family”. Albertini, who is 85, has recently published ‘Una genealogy rediscovered. Tolstoy’s wife, daughter and niece ‘, memoir about some of the most important women in the writer’s life. His grandmother was Tatyana L’vovna Tolstaja, second and first daughter of the writer, his mother Tatiana Michajlovna Suchotina, favorite granddaughter of the Russian writer, who in 1930 married Leonardo Albertini, son of Luigi Albertini, founder and director of the ‘Corriere della Sera’. “What would my great-grandfather say about this human tragedy? I think he would take refuge more and more in his hermitage, in his family – observes Albertini -. I think he would be sorry as only I can do it, being totally helpless. Watching television, seeing these women. , today in particular “.

It has been 10 years since he last visited Ukraine but the memory of those places is still alive. “I was also in Crimea, where Tolstoy spent a year of his life, in Yalta-affirms-. Crimea is beautiful, Odessa is beautiful … they are magical places as we cannot imagine them and perhaps we will never see them” . Russia today, on the other hand, does not at all remind her of that of the Soviet Union. “I don’t think they can be compared – remarks Albertini -. My grandmother’s memories were those of a person who had fought against the regime’s impositions but silently, because he could not have done otherwise. In Russia there is a silent rebellion, unfortunately. Us. we have no news of our family because clearly they are all opponents of what is happening. I am not in contact with other great-grandchildren of my great-grandfather, out of respect for them. “

If there is one lesson that Marta is learning from this war it is that of dialogue. “Let’s talk to each other, let’s talk to each other, let’s talk to each other. Let’s do it as much as possible – she says -. Let’s expose our ideas, we respect others. Even after Covid there is less respect, less generosity, I’m a little disheartened”. Marta Albertini has four children, six grandchildren and a great-granddaughter. She has a Francophone culture, she has lived in Paris, Rome, Istanbul, London and Orvieto. And she attended Art History for four years at the École du Louvre, specializing in Art History of the Islamic world. “I am French-speaking – he underlines -. My mother and my grandmother did not want to teach me Russian because they thought they would never return to Russia. My grandmother never did but my mother did. Russia is a country of rare beauty. , almost as much as France. Today I share these feelings of sadness that I feel with many people, even if they were not lucky enough to have Leo Tolstoy as great-grandfather. I hope for better times, especially for the young “. (by Federica Mochi)