Minds of the Movement

An ICNC blog on the people and power of civil resistance

Olga Kravets

Olga Kravets is a documentary director, investigative journalist and creative producer telling complex stories about human rights, religion and conflict. A graduate of London College of Communication and a Chevening scholar, Olga picked up photography in 2004 and filmmaking in 2006. She directed It’s Getting Dark, which premiered at IDFA. She co-produced Israel’s radical Left and Young and Gay in Putin’s Russia (VICE). Her long-term reporting work on Chechnya was awarded the Prix Bayeux Calvados-Normandie Prize for War Correspondents and exhibited at Rencontres d’Arles. She has published two books, Grozny Nine Cities and More Fear Than Allah.

Writings from Olga Kravets

Articles

Ukrainian Freedom Special Series

When Your Motherland Wants to Annihilate Your Fatherland

“My generation thought that the Soviet Union collapsed bloodlessly and were really proud of it. So were the politicians in Europe and the U.S. In fact, the Soviet Union is only collapsing now, and this collapse is very bloody. And this blood already starts to spill into Europe. Thanks to Ukraine, it has not yet been flooded—but a war an Interrail trip away is a war at your doorstep. My role as a European, French, Slav, who bears the heritage of the perpetrator and the victim at the same time, is to reclaim what my Russian grandmother tried to erase from my family: the Ukrainian part of myself. […]”

Read More
Ukrainian Freedom Special Series

“My Grandmother’s Crime against History”: Where Family Ancestry and Putin’s War Meet

“Between 2004 and 2018, I covered Russia’s war and the aftermath in Chechnya. On the way to and from Grozny, my childhood friends often called me a killjoy at their parties in Moscow, when I shared the stories from the field and said that the Russian war machine was using Chechnya as a training ground to then expand beyond the borders. I wish I had been wrong. But when I heard the first reports of the Bucha massacre in 2022, it vividly reminded me of my nightmares based on testimonies collected in Chechnya. But now my uncle Samuil and other family members were part of these nightmares. […]”

Read More

Sign up for our twice-monthly blog newsletter

* indicates required