Selected text
It was a five-room apartment, and then during the Soviet regime it was divided. We were given three rooms. It was not a communal apartment [12], like most of the apartments at that time, but a separate apartment. One room was common, but the other two isolated. Then they cut us out of one room, and we were left with two rooms with two balconies. Now we lived in a communal apartment. But still it was enough for us. One of the rooms was over 40 square meters, the other one was over 30.
Our neighbors were Soviet organizational people. I do not know their names.
Our neighbors were Soviet organizational people. I do not know their names.
Period
Location
Sevastopol
Russia
Interview
Tamara-Alexandra Goldenberg