Chermalyk
Chermalyk
Johanna Maria Fritz
November 17, 2021
When Fritz travelled to Chermalyk in 2018, the village regularly came under fire from separatists. There was a shortage of food, and numerous houses and streets were destroyed. Anyone with enough money had fled long ago. Those who stayed behind had no other choice. Most of them are Greek, and Chermalyk is their home. Their original story of migration into the region dates from the 6th century. In the more recent past, the 1940s, many of them fled there convinced of, and believing in, Communism. Approximately 90 000 Greeks live in Ukraine, mostly in the area around Mariupol, forty kilometres from Chermalyk.
Today, Chermalyk is a village made up of the aged and those left behind – people who, despite all the adversity, try to make themselves some kind of everyday life. An everyday life in the middle of an armed conflict. It is a harsh everyday life, defined by war and a poverty. Fritz remembers the most fascinating thing about the people living there was their solidarity and hope. “No one gave even the slightest impression of giving up. I don’t mean about winning the war, but rather about continuing to live their lives.”...
Read the full story in LFI Magazine 8/2021.
Johanna Maria Fritz+-
Officially speaking, Johanna-Maria Fritz lives in Berlin. However, in reality she trav-els most of the year. She studied Photography at the Ostkreuzschule in Berlin and since 2019 is a member of the agency bearing the same name. Her work has been published in Spiegel, der Zeit and National Geographic, among others. She has earned a number of recognitions, including the Inge Morath Prize and the VG-Bild grant. More