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Eric Gemmell and Elena Ivanova

Eric Gemmell was just 21 years old when he was sent to Russia on the PQ17 convoy as a naval telegraph operator in June 1942. The convoy was bound for Murmansk but after an attack the ships scattered and he ended up in Arkangel instead. Eric was a very good footballer, and this, according to him, was the reason he was kept in Arkangel - so he could play for the navy team. There he met Elena Ivanova, who was working as a librarian in the medical library, and they fell in love. When she became pregnant they tried to marry, but this was not allowed and instead Eric was sent first to Moscow, where he was a naval representative at the British Embassy, and then, at the end of 1943, home to England before being posted to Bermuda, where he remained for the duration of the war.

 

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21, 1942 PQ17 - . , . , , , , - . () , , . , , , , - , , 1943 , () , .

 

Their son, Edward Erikovich Ivanov, was born on January 19th 1944, and Elena registered Eric as his father on the birth certificate. Eric continued to write to her until 1947 he had hoped that when the war ended they would be able to marry and Elena and his son would come to England. Instead, in October 1946 Elena was arrested and in January 1947 was sentenced to 10 years hard labour in Siberia as an enemy of the people. She later said that she only survived because of her love for Eric and their son, and she remained faithful to him, always hoping that one day they would be together again.

 

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For over 50 years the cold war meant there could be no communication and so Eric had no idea of this. When he heard nothing from her he assumed that she no longer felt the same confirmed for him when the only word was an official letter in 1955 asking him to renounce paternity of Edward something he was not able to bring himself to do for another 4 years. He married a childhood friend and had three more children, Jean, Anne and Ian, who knew nothing of this tragedy in his past.

 

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In 1995 veterans from the convoys were allowed to go to Archangel to celebrate with citizens there the 50th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany. Among them was Bill Lowes, who asked one of the journalists who was present, Olga Golubtsova, to help him to find Zina, his wartime sweetheart. Looking for her, Olga found many other women who had loved one of the sailors from the convoys, including Elena Ivanova.

 

Bill Lowes knew Eric, and in 1998 they met and Eric heard for the first time what Elena had suffered because of their love, and of the death of their son in 1994. By this time he was nearly 80 and not in good health and this unexpected news was a terrible shock to him. He wrote to Elena telling her You were my first love and we could have been very happy together but fate decreed otherwise. He hoped that they would be able to meet again in the kingdom of Heaven. Elena died in 2002 and Eric in 2008.

 

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In the last years of his life Eric had dementia, and as the past became more real than the present he began to talk about Elena and he finally told his children about their Russian half brother. A friend in Moscow helped them to find Edwards daughter, Irina Lomteva, and in October 2011 Jean and Anne went to visit her in Arkangel. When she and her husband, Volodya, came to England in May 2012 for a family wedding they met with all their other English relatives, and it was also a celebration of hope after so much sadness.

 

Jean Glasberg June 2012

 

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, 2012



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