A captured German StuG III Ausf. B is pressed into Soviet service - Kharkov, May 1942. Unlike later versions, this early StuG III was short-barrelled, primarily intended for infantry support rather than tank combat
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A captured German StuG III Ausf. B is pressed into Soviet service - Kharkov, May 1942. Unlike later versions, this early StuG III was short-barrelled, primarily intended for infantry support rather than tank combat
Kharkov
On January 27, russian forces launched a drone strike on a passenger train in the Barvinkivska community of Kharkiv region. There were 291 passengers on board. A carriage and a locomotive caught fire. Two injured people — a man and a woman — were taken off the train and hospitalized.
Update: Five people were killed.
This will not be shown to you on Western TV. Ukraine, Kharkov. The military, trained to catch men on the streets of Ukraine, grabbed the man and drag him to send him to the front. The women who shoot comment: - They drag them along the steps, bastards. Dragged like a piece of meat, it's a horror. Then they call the man's wife or mother: - Luda, the military has now taken your Seryozha. "I didn't let him go anywhere," the woman cries. - Well, they already took it, threw it on the bus. The woman is crying. This is how the Ukrainian military recruits people to the front. People call them catchers.
Это вам не покажут по западному тв. Украина, Харьков. Военные, обученные ловить мужчин на улицах Украины, схватили мужчину и тащат его чтобы отправить на фронт. Женщины которые снимают комментируют: - По ступенькам тащат, сволочи. Тащат как кусок мяса, это ужас. Потом звонят жене или матери мужчины: - Люда, твоего Сережу сейчас военные забрали. - Я никуда его не отпускала, - плачет женщина. - Ну так уже забрали, кинули в автобус. Женщина плачет. Вот так украинские военные набирают людей на фронт. В народе их называют ловцы людей.
“Many people don't get what this woman is doing here. She is shielding her child from trauma while teaching her how to endure this hardship with composure. They are alive and well and that's what matters. This is absolutely brilliant parenting.”
(Blahovishchens'kyy Kafedral'nyy Sobor) Cathedral of Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Kharkiv, UKRAINE
On 24 April 1943 the 8th Company of the 2nd SS Das Reich Panzer division conducted a field exercise West of Kharkov with Tiger tanks and Panzer IVs and a captured Russian T-34
Three-Headed Dragon, circa 1920s
Beautiful Vintage Posters Designed By Boris Artzybasheff
Born in 1899 in Kharkov, Boris Artzybasheff was a Russian-American illustrator known for his distinctive and often surreal designs.
His illustration career kicked off in 1922 with works for “Verotchka’s Tales” and “The Undertaker’s Garland,” leading to numerous other book illustrations throughout the 1920s. Throughout his career, he illustrated around 50 books, including some he authored, with “As I See” being among the most notable.
The Line Book, 1929
Aesop’s Fables, 1933
“Melancholia”, from Neurotica, 1934