Please join me for an interview with Lyudmilla Hrihorivna, a character from The Woman Behind the Waterfall, that I reviewed here earlier this week. The author, Leonora Meriel has gone undercover as a reporter, to interview Lyuda in her home in a village in Western Ukraine. We can have a piece of honey cake as we read the interview. Enjoy….
Reporter: Good evening, Lyuda. Thank you for agreeing to talk to me.
Lyuda: I don’t talk to many people. I don’t know why you’re interested.
Reporter: I’m wondering why you look so sad Lyuda. You’re so young, and you’re very pretty. Why aren’t you smiling?
Lyuda: [struggles to answer] I’ve been like this since the birth of my daughter. My life just keeps getting worse and worse. [tears fill her eyes]. My mother … died just after Angela was born. I couldn’t cope. I didn’t’ know how to run a household. I didn’t know how to make soup. I didn’t know how to take care of a baby. I was only 17. And then Volodiya used to get so angry with me. I couldn’t do anything right. And then he left.
Reporter: I’m very sorry, Lyuda. That’s terrible.
Lyuda: And then I was on my own with this baby. I hadn’t even finished school. I just didn’t understand what had happened to my life. One minute I was in school and happy. The next minute my mother was dead and I was living on my own in the house with a baby. I loved Volodiya. I believed him when he said he was going to build a house for us, build a life for us.
Reporter: And why didn’t he? Why did he leave?
Lyuda: I don’t know [cries]. It was so awful. It was like one minute everything was made out of dreams, and the next minute everything had turned black and I just couldn’t find my way out.
Reporter: How do you cope?
Lyuda: I’m ashamed to say really. [looks around the kitchen]. I drink vodka. It helps. My neighbor, Kolya, brews samohon – it’s homemade vodka. He gives me bottles of it. It really takes away the pain I feel all the time. I’m ashamed though.
Reporter: Tell me about your daughter, Angela. She’s 7 years old now? Look – we can see her. She’s dancing in the garden? It looks like she’s playing a game. She’s smiling and laughing.
Lyuda: She’s the most wonderful girl in the world. She’s the reason I’m still alive. She helps me a lot. She gets the water from the well. She picks flowers and fruit and vegetables.
Reporter: Do you think she knows how unhappy you are?
Lyuda: I hope not. I pray not. When I cry, I try to hide it from her. One day I will have to tell her about everything. But I don’t know what to say to her. I could say – I made terrible mistakes. I could say – I ruined my life. I didn’t listen to my mother. But then – all those terrible mistakes led to her being alive. So what is right and what is wrong? Were they mistakes?
Reporter: That’s a difficult question, Lyuda. Thank you for trying to answer it. Now, why don’t you show me around your home?
Reporter: Where is the bathroom and the toilet?
Reporter: And I notice there isn’t a fridge in your kitchen?
Lyuda: No. We keep meat and milk on the windowsill or the porch near the door, to keep it cold. We’re careful to use things quickly.
Reporter: That sounds like quite a struggle to live. No fridge, no running water. No toilet. It doesn’t feel like the late twentieth century!
Lyuda: It’s just how we were brought up. It isn’t a problem when you’re used to it. Of course, I dreamed of leaving the village and having a different life. A better life. But then… but then Volodiya left and…
Reporter: Yes, yes, that must have been terrible. Lyuda, before we finish, can you share with me a Ukrainian recipe? Maybe a favourite of yours or something Angela likes?
Lyuda: We eat a lot of soup; and I make cakes. I’ll tell you the recipe for a Honey Cake or “Medyanik”. It’s very easy to make. Angela loves it. It’s very filling though. It’s best if you make it with the “grechnii med” – the buckwheat honey. It’s black and thick and has a very intense taste. But the cake works with any honey.
Reporter: That would be wonderful, Lyuda. Thank you. (Lyuda writes out the recipe and hands the paper to me.)
Reporter: That sounds delicious. Thank you so much for your time today, Lyuda. I do hope that your sadness goes away.
Lyuda: I doubt I will. It feels sometimes like I am trapped behind a waterfall.
Reporter: I’m sure it can’t last forever. Thank you once again. And goodbye, or “do pobachenya” as they say here in Ukraine.
Lyuda: “Do pobachenya!”
Recipe for Medyanik: Ukrainian Honey Cake
1 cup of crushed walnuts
1 cup sour cream
1 cup sugar
1 cup honey
3 eggs
3 cups flour
1 tablespoon of sunflower oil
Pinch of salt
1 teaspoon of soda, dissolved in a tablespoon of vinegar
Pour the whole mixture into a buttered dish and bake at a medium heat for 30 to 40 minutes.
Best made in a round buttered dish with a hollow center.
Eat as cake or bread, or cut in half and spread with jam.
BUY LINK
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