An interview in Timpul Magazine, Republic of Moldova edition

Winterkill, my Holodomor novel, is being published in a Romanian and English edition by Booklet Romania, for distribution in Romania and the Republic of Moldova. I was contacted by Sorina Rîndașu, a writer in Romania, and also the proofreader for this edition of my novel. She asked if she could interview me for Timpul, saying, “The magazine is led by two very courageous cultural figures: Dumitru Crudu, a novelist and an active activist on the issue of the war started by dictator Vladimir Putin against Ukraine, and Maria Ivanov, a writer and cultural journalist.”

There are so many parallels between what Stalin was doing during the Holodomor and what Putin is doing now. I was honoured to answer Sorina’s questions. Pasted below are my responses in English.



1. I am thinking about the fact that most of the themes in your books are based on explaining and contextualizing major historical conflicts. How do you position yourself, as an author, in this contemporary environment where historical negationism and disinformation are increasingly prevalent issues, especially when writing about historical facts that some are trying to rewrite or minimize? Do you feel a heightened responsibility, an additional one, to act as a kind of `guardian` of historical truth?

I don’t think of myself as an author so much as a vehicle for those silenced to be heard. I think of myself as a listener to individual life experiences, who then does the slow and boring research of placing that individual experience into the context of world events that have either been forgotten or hidden.

I don’t choose the topics; it’s more that the topics choose me. I have a fierce interest in history and life experiences that I knew nothing about, but that are monumental.

Before I wrote books, I was a freelance journalist for a small history magazine in my hometown. Canada, in addition to the aboriginal population, is largely comprised of people who came here as refugees, leaving everything they loved in order for their descendants to have a better life. When I was writing for that magazine, my theme was “coming to Canada” stories. I interviewed people about why they or their ancestor left everything that was cherished and familiar to start a new life in a land that wasn’t always kind to newcomers. Those interviews were the seeds to my books. 

What intrigued me was that the stories I heard from refugees were not in history books, nor in popular historical fiction. These stories had been ignored, erased or manipulated. And what we forget, we are bound to repeat.

I felt a responsibility to research, to verify the actual history and to shed light on it. I didn’t have any sort of great plan about this. It’s just that I couldn’t sleep. I would toss and turn, thinking about these stories that had been hidden. They needed to be seen and heard. The stories wouldn’t let me sleep until I wrote them.  

Russia’s current disinformation campaign against Ukraine in particular and the west in general is not new, but it has been honed to evil perfection. Russia’s disinformation campaign is particularly good at tricking its own people into believing lies.

2. Have you ever felt that you transitioned from the role of a writer to the role of an activist? Can a writer, especially in contexts like the one we are living through, with wars and genocides happening around us, truly remain neutral? And, if it is possible, is it right to remain neutral?

 I have always thought of my writing as a tool for activism. If I didn’t, you’d see titles from me about pink dinosaurs and sparkles. I have acquaintances who’ve made that sort of writing into a lucrative career.

I can only write if I’m passionate about the subject. I am banned by Russia for my writing, and when I first began writing on the Holodomor just around the time that Putin came into power, I endured death threats and hate campaigns. It would have been easier to write about pink dinosaurs and sparkles, but I wouldn’t be able to sleep at night if I had done that.

It’s moral abdication to remain neutral.


3. Beyond the valuable historical information in your books, how do you think and/ or hope young readers will apply the lessons of tolerance, empathy and vigilance to contemporary issues in their communities, issues that do not necessarily involve a major war, but may involve other matters, such as discrimination?

Every young person feels like they’re living in the midst of a war because they see events in their own life as oversize. They’re still in the process of sorting out who they are and where they fit in the context of society. As a writer, my goal is to plunge my reader into the shoes of a person who is living through an actual, horrifying series of events. By identifying with the protagonist, the reader sees the world through their eyes. This helps the reader develop empathy. It also gives them tools to see their own situation in context of what others have to live through. This context gives them appreciation of what they have, and empathy to help others.

I am continually impressed by the feedback I get from my young readers. As an example, readers of Making Bombs for Hitler would never have heard about Ostarbeiters before, and would never have realized that a Ukrainian young person would ever be in a Nazi slave camp.  But in addition to the history, my readers grow empathy. One young boy told me that after reading Making Bombs for Hitler, he realized how awful it would be to be separated from his sister even though they argued all the time. He said he’d never complain about what he got for supper, because it was much more substantial than the sawdust bread Lida got in the slave camp. This context that readers get is so important. They learn history, yes. But they identify with a person who is being mistreated, and that gives them empathy.
 

4. Your characters often struggle with oppressive forces and authoritarian leaders. I am thinking now especially of Nyl from Winterkill, and the disparity in perspective between him and Yulia. How important is it for young readers to clearly name and identify an aggressor, a dictator like Vladimir Putin as an extreme contemporary example, and understand the evil they produce, instead of just perceiving the conflict as a political abstraction?

Vladimir Putin is evil. Stalin was evil. There’s no abstraction about that. But it’s a moral abdication for us to slough it off all on them. The reason their evil is effective is because of their ability to get others to do evil on their behalf. Yulia is naïve and easily manipulated, but she takes the easy and selfish way out at every opportunity. Would the Holodomor have happened if there weren’t a lot of people like Yulia around to do Stalin’s bidding? I think we have to all be honest about the potential for evil that each of us has within us. It’s our moral responsibility to do the hard things that we know are right, even if sometimes that has dire consequences. 

5. Are there any moments when you find it necessary to develop a kind of emotional protection against the psychologically challenging material you research for your writing?

 Yes. It’s shattering to write on these topics, but it’s magnitudes harder to live through it. My husband is a huge emotional support and he forces me to get out of my head. I have good friends too, who stick with me even when I vent and rage. One respite from book writing is writing pysanky. It’s part of my creative process. I reward myself after a marathon of writing to take a break for a few days and create a marathon of pysanky.

6. Considering the perspective that literature is one of the most important forms of art, how do you see the collaboration between it and other art forms, such as painting, illustration or even documentary films, to convey these lessons of history and morality to the younger generations?

 Each form of art gives a different window to the past. I don’t like to think of art as giving lessons, so much as giving a window, a perspective. When I was young, I couldn’t decide whether I would be an artist or a writer. I am a writer, but I see each scene as painting a picture. My pysanky marathon sessions help untangle my story knots. A friend is a documentary producer, but he’s also an artist and actor. Each of these activities informs the other. And for the art consumer, some will connect to one medium better than another. They are all interconnected.

7. The war between Russia and Ukraine includes, among other tragedies, the deliberate destruction of schools, museums and libraries in Ukraine. From the perspective of a writer who often struggles with the tacit erasure of historical records, what does the destruction of Ukrainian cultural heritage represent, and how does it affect the present, as well as the future identity of the people?

It enrages me.

Moscow has tried this time and again over the centuries, yet Ukraine’s cultural and literary history remains strong and will only get stronger.


8. How do you think the moral and historical reparation for the Ukrainian victims of this war should look, beyond material reconstruction?

 There were no Nuremburg type trials for Soviet murderers after the Holodomor or after World War II, and because Russians have never had to acknowledge their true and gruesome history, they live in a mirage of exceptionalism. There’s needs to be a moral reckoning for every citizen of Russia. Those so-called leaders of Russia need to be arrested for war crimes and genocide and subjected to public trials.

For individual Ukrainians living through this horror, I worry most about the post-war trauma and the psychological damage that the survivors will live with for the rest of their lives. I hope there will be a system in place to deal with this. The magnitude of the emotional and psychological damage will reverberate through generations.


9. After dedicating so much of your career to documenting and telling the stories of history’s darkest chapters, and in light of today’s disturbing events, what is the essential message you want every reader of yours to remember about the power of truth, empathy and human resilience?

That one person equals one person. And that we need to give each person the grace, the love and respect that we’d hope to receive for ourselves.

Roberts ES 5th grade students

It was such a pleasure to speak with 5th grade students from Roberts Elementary in Suwanee GA on Good Friday morning. Virtually visiting Roberts has become something of an annual tradition! Here are pics from one of the participating classes. Students asked thoughtful questions and made good connections between my WWII novels and Under Attack: Kidnapped from Ukraine, set during Putin’s current war on Ukraine. 

This review made my day

Thank you, Becky, for this wonderful review of Under Attack.

I am particularly gratified with this paragraph:

My thoughts: What a novel!!!! Truly I cannot do the book justice. It’s an incredible read from cover to cover. I am not surprised–I’d expect nothing less from Skrypuch. She excels at everything–writing, plotting, characterization. But it is the characterization that particularly wows me every time. Because though it shouldn’t be rare, it mostly is. The depth of characterization is outstanding. It isn’t just that there’s depth and substance of the main character, but it is how expansive the characterization is. There’s no shortcuts, no character too small to not get treated as important. It makes it impossible not to get invested and thoroughly absorbed in the story.

awesome review of Under Attack by

Canadian taxpayers have funded a Russian propaganda film

Here is the core of the letter that I’ve sent to my MPP and MP. Please feel free to model your own letters from this.

There is a new pro-Russian documentary titled Russians at War currently being shown at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF). This propaganda piece was partly funded by Canadian taxpayers. This is a worldwide humiliation for Canada, that we would allow public funding to normalize the genocidal acts of Russian soldiers in Ukraine.

The filmmaker is Anastasia Trofimova, a Russian Canadian. She imbedded herself into a Russian unit as they invaded Ukraine. Is it not treasonous for a Canadian to accompany the invasion of one of our allies?

Ms. Trofimova claims that she embedded herself at great personal risk. Given that an American-Russian ballet dancer was jailed in Russia for merely donating $50 to a Ukrainian charity, this claim doesn’t hold water. This filmmaker has done many documentaries for Russia Today (RT), a Russian propaganda outlet banned in Canada. This film is propaganda, with the goal of “normalizing” Russian soldiers who volunteer to go to Ukraine to rape, steal and kill. It was produced in association with TVO and BC’s Knowledge Network, and partly funded through the Canada Media Fund (CMF), that gets its funding from the federal government and telecommunications companies.

In the short term, please demand that TIFF delist the film and post a public apology.

The larger question is how did we let this happen? Canadian taxpayers’ money should not be used to fund Russian propaganda.

Deal news: New Trilogy

I never thought I would be writing about a war as it’s happening. When the war in Ukraine began, I had been writing a companion novel to Winterkill, but had to set it aside. I plunged in to a project I had been working on for a long time: a novel set in the 1500s. Then Scholastic asked me to pivot. It took a lot of soul-searching, but in the end I realized I had to do this. The emotional pain of researching and writing these three books is nothing compared to what Ukrainians are enduring every minute, every hour. I invite you to step into the shoes of 12 year old Dariia and her twin sister Rada. Feel what it’s like to wake up one morning to your bed shaking from bombings. To have your country invaded by a jealous neighbor who doesn’t acknowledge your right to exist.

Kidnapped from Ukraine, book #1: Under Attack

Published by Scholastic on Jan 7, 2025.

This gripping, accessible novel by celebrated Ukrainian Canadian author Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch follows two sisters as they struggle to survive the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

12-year-old twin sisters Rada and Dariia Popkova couldn’t be more different. Dariia is outgoing and chatty while Rada is a quieter and artsy. But what they have in common is their love for each other and their home. The family lives in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol, which is attacked by the Russians on Feb 24th, 2022.

The attack separates the family — Dariia is with her mom and Rada with her dad. Dariia and her mother are then separated by Russian officials and Dariia is sent to live with a Russian family. As the war rages around them, the sisters and their family must overcome unimaginable hardships. But they will learn how powerful hope is in the face of disaster.

Reviews:

*”Gut-punching: This is essential reading.” — Kirkus, starred review

*”Fans of Alan Gratz and Jennifer Nielsen will devour this fictional account of the all-too-real ongoing experiences of hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian children.” — Booklist, starred review

Starred Selection, Best Books 2025. Canadian Children’s Book Centre.

“important and tough to read novel, which fictionalizes, in harsh detail, true events from a child’s point of view.” — Publishers Weekly

“Despite its hefty 309 pages, this powerful tale of innocence lost moves along at an exemplary pace, engaging readers at every turn. Complete with two black-and-white maps, an author’s note and &A, Under Attack is an invaluable must-read and a must-have educational resource for public, school and home libraries everywhere. Lingering long after the last compelling page is turned, this timely book is inarguably a stirring catalyst for in-depth discussion, empowering readers to engage in further research and get involved in helping to rescue the thousands of Ukrainian children who’ve been kidnapped. Very highly recommended.” — Jennifer D. Foster, Canadian Children’s Book News.

“While a fictionalized story, Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch takes the time and effort to understand the truths, like the truth about how the war started, the propaganda levelled at both Ukrainians and Russians, and the impact of the war on Ukrainians, from children to workers to the elderly. It is a tough story because of these truths which are so distressing and disheartening. Still Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch is a master at telling such stories (e.g.WinterkillTraitors Among UsDance of the Banished, and Making Bombs for Hitler), ensuring a sensitivity to her characters and her readers, and a thoroughness and accuracy of details.” — Helen Kubiw, Canlit for Little Canadians

“I just read this must-read and could not put it down. Thoughtful, gripping, well researched and nicely paced. A hell of an accomplishment. An important novel. A brave author.” — Pam Withers, author.

“Under Attack is fast moving and gut punching. It will appeal to a vast audience, hitting on current events, adventure, family and friendship.” Crackingthecover

“A must-have for all libraries, the perfect historical fiction!! A ‘can’t-put-down’ read!” Goodreads

“I loved the book. It’s my favorite book I’ve read so far. Some people rush through books, but I wanted to understand it, so I tried not to read it too fast.” Coco Kettmann, Growing Up in Santa Cruz.

“This is a must have for libraries serving grades 5 and up and readers should be encouraged to read the author’s note for information on the history that is still unfolding and reminded that this is why learning about world history is so important: If we do not learn from it, we are destined to repeat it as it is being repeated now.” Goodreads

“No one does historical middle-grade fiction like Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch. While “Under Attack’ is set in present-day Ukraine, I am sure fans of “Making Bombs for Hitler” and Skrypuch’s other historical books will enjoy it. The novel is captivating, meticulously researched, and heartbreaking. Another must-read by Skrypuch.” Netgalley

“Teachers and librarians will find this novel to be an important addition to any middle-grade collection. While the language remains straightforward and accessible for readers ages 8–12, the story doesn’t shy away from the harsh, real-life events of the war, making it a compelling way to introduce students to current events and inspire empathy and understanding. It also opens up opportunities for classroom discussions around resilience, survival, and the human cost of war..” Netgalley

What a novel!!!! Truly I cannot do the book justice. It’s an incredible read from cover to cover. I am not surprised–I’d expect nothing less from Skrypuch. She excels at everything–writing, plotting, characterization. But it is the characterization that particularly wows me every time. Because though it shouldn’t be rare, it mostly is. The depth of characterization is outstanding. It isn’t just that there’s depth and substance of the main character, but it is how expansive the characterization is. There’s no shortcuts, no character too small to not get treated as important. It makes it impossible not to get invested and thoroughly absorbed in the story. Becky’s Book Reviews.

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