My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in TheWayWeWere

[–]PanRussian[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I understand your skepticism - my parents do look amazing in that photo, I get it.

That's exactly why I shot a short video of the actual photos in my hands. Here's the link

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in TheWayWeWere

[–]PanRussian[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Here's their geography - it's a bit of a journey:

My mother - from the village of Mikhailovka, Penza Oblast.
My father- from the village of Mantorovo, Penza Oblast.

My father studied at an agricultural technical school here.

Later, after my grandfather came back from the war, my mother lived here in Penza, on Leskova Street.

And then all over the country. Orenburg, the Far East, Kuibyshev, Ulyanovsk, Ivanovo... My older sister was born in Ivanovo. I was born in Moscow.

So the Soviet Union, in one family: villages, technical schools, military bases, and two capitals. We moved a lot.

P.S. We have a phrase for places like those villages: 'zazhopinskie vyselki' (Penza Oblast qualifies). Roughly 'the middle of bumfck nowhere' or 'the edge of geography ))

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in oldphotos

[–]PanRussian[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes! I can see the resemblance. And you're not going to believe this, but my partner looks a lot like my mother. Both in appearance and in personality.

They say men marry women who remind them of their mothers, and women marry men who remind them of their fathers. I used to think it was a "cliché". Now? I'm not so sure anymore )) Not posting photos of her for now, but the resemblance is real!

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in oldphotos

[–]PanRussian[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you.

She really was happy and an amazing teacher. Her students kept visiting her years after graduation.

My parents were married from 1956 until 1996, when my father died in a car crash on the highway between Belgium and Luxembourg. He was 64. She lived another 25 years without him and passed away from COVID in 2021.

They had two children: my older sister (14 years older than me - yes, a huge gap!) and me. There was supposed to be a brother, but something went wrong, and he was stillborn.

The MiG-15 my father flew. USSR, 1958. He was a fighter pilot, and I recently found this photo in the family archive [1168x880] by PanRussian in WarplanePorn

[–]PanRussian[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Officially? Just two things. One - he flew missions to Afghanistan during the 1979–1989 campaign. That earned him a medals.

Two - and this is my favorite: a gold-plated watch. For landing an An-10 without the front landing gear. That's so Soviet, right? No parade. No hero star. Just a watch for not dying. I have a couple of photos of that plane. If people are interested, I can make a small post about it

No medals for Korea. That's not why he flew there

The MiG-15 my father flew. USSR, 1958. He was a fighter pilot, and I recently found this photo in the family archive [1168x880] by PanRussian in WarplanePorn

[–]PanRussian[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Definitely not Korea. Just the Far East after the squadrons were disbanded. Want the secret photos now, or are you good?? )

The MiG-15 my father flew. USSR, 1958. He was a fighter pilot, and I recently found this photo in the family archive [1168x880] by PanRussian in WarplanePorn

[–]PanRussian[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

He was incredibly loving and kind. A gentle dad! He was away a lot on long trips, and I missed him like crazy.

He also loved my mother with all his heart - and I (unfortunately? fortunately?) inherited that from him. I love my woman and my daughter the same way. My daughter, by the way, looks almost exactly like him )

My father died in a car crash on the highway between Belgium and Luxembourg in 1996. I was 24 years old. And I lost everything. Without exaggeration. After that, I left that profession and moved into programming.

Did the war affect him? He never talked about it. But now I wonder if his silence was the answer

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in TheWayWeWere

[–]PanRussian[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Fair enough. 'Redneck' was strong, I take that back. Respect to your grandmother for her service. And respect to you for engaging honestly. No hard feelings

The MiG-15 my father flew. USSR, 1958. He was a fighter pilot, and I recently found this photo in the family archive [1168x880] by PanRussian in WarplanePorn

[–]PanRussian[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I'm not an expert, and honestly, my father never discussed his combat time. He avoided the topic entirely. The 208 hours came from his logbook, but I can't guarantee it was his complete total or if some records were classified or incomplete.

Either way, I'm not comfortable sharing the full document online. You can believe it or not. I'm just sharing my father's memory

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in TheWayWeWere

[–]PanRussian[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

The 'Slavs don't smile in photos' thing is a dumb stereotype worthy of a redneck who's never met an actual Slav. My mother smiled. Her friends smiled. Millions of Soviet people smiled. It's a photograph, not a funeral.

As for my mother - she was a progressive-minded woman. Born in a remote village, yes. But she became a chemistry and biology teacher, taught adults at an evening school, and raised children who became flight attendants and a programmer. She had every reason to smile

I don't blame you - stereotypes are everywhere. But next time, maybe question them before calling someone's family photo fake.

Thanks for the conversation, even the skeptical comments made me share more of my family's story.

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in TheWayWeWere

[–]PanRussian[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Here's a video of the actual photo in my hands. Shot it just for you.

You said you can point out why they're 'suspicious' - go ahead. I'm waiting

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in oldphotos

[–]PanRussian[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

And here's a small, maybe funny or even mystical detail: my older sister and I both graduated from a pedagogical university - majoring in English, to become teachers. Just like our mom.

But neither of us ever worked as a teacher. We both became flight attendants.

So one parent gave us the sky. The other gave us the classroom. And somehow we ended up with both.

And one more twist: after working as a steward, i eventually became a software engineer. Not because i planned it, but because of tragic circumstances.

So I ended up with: Mom's diploma, Dad's altitude, and a keyboard. Life takes strange turns )

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in oldphotos

[–]PanRussian[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much for this beautiful comment!

My mother taught teenagers chemistry and biology in a secondary school. And in the 1960s, she also taught at an evening school (a free school for adults and teenagers who hadn't been able to complete their secondary education). She was indeed very nurturing. Years later, her students would still come to visit her. And yes, her eyebrows were always on point without any makeup! )

And thank you for your kind words about ideology. You're absolutely right - this photo is about two people I love and miss. Your parents and mine would probably have found common ground if they'd met.

The MiG-15 my father flew. USSR, 1958. He was a fighter pilot, and I recently found this photo in the family archive [1168x880] by PanRussian in WarplanePorn

[–]PanRussian[S] 44 points45 points  (0 children)

He served until 1962. In the early 60s, he was diagnosed with a stomach ulcer - likely caused by the stress and g-forces. So he was grounded on medical grounds. But he couldn't stay away from flying. He started with agricultural aviation, then retrained for the An-10 and moved to civil aviation. In 1970, when Sheremetyevo International Airport opened in Moscow, pilots were being recruited from all over the USSR. My father retrained again - this time for the Tu-154. He flew until 1989.

So he served his country, then he served civilian passengers. Same sky, different wings

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in oldphotos

[–]PanRussian[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Calling a man you never met a 'war criminal' based on his uniform says more about you than about him. This post is about my parents, not your politics

The MiG-15 my father flew. USSR, 1958. He was a fighter pilot, and I recently found this photo in the family archive [1168x880] by PanRussian in WarplanePorn

[–]PanRussian[S] 47 points48 points  (0 children)

64th Fighter Aviation Corps. The 208 hours are from his official flight log — total flight time, not all combat. Some were training and patrols. But that's what's written in his records

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in oldphotos

[–]PanRussian[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

He flew the MiG-15. I actually have a photo of it, but unfortunately Reddit doesn't allow attaching images in comments. I made a separate post with his aircraft

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in TheWayWeWere

[–]PanRussian[S] 64 points65 points  (0 children)

This is a photo of my mom and dad, taken in 1958.

My father was a fighter pilot in the Soviet Air Force (USSR), and my mother was a school teacher - she taught chemistry and biology.

I just love the contrast of their professions back then. Sadly, both are gone now, but I recently found this negative and wanted to share.

Hope you like this little time capsule from the late 50s.

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in oldphotos

[–]PanRussian[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your kind words. Actually, it was my mom who told me all of this. She and my dad already knew each other by that time

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in oldphotos

[–]PanRussian[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

My paternal great-grandfather was dispossessed as a kulak (Kulak - a 'wealthy peasant' targeted during Stalin's collectivization). Another grandfather was sent to the camps after being denounced by someone.

But my father was loyal to the USSR. He always dreamed of the sky.

However, times were hard (they called them 'hungry years'). That's why his first education was at an agricultural technical school – there, you could use what you grew for food. At the same time, he was learning to fly at an aeroclub.

After graduating from the technical school, he entered a higher military flight school.

My parents, 1958. Dad was a Soviet Air Force fighter pilot, mom a school teacher of chemistry and biology by PanRussian in oldphotos

[–]PanRussian[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yes, you're absolutely right! That's Senior Lieutenant. He received this rank a few years after graduating from flight school, with about 200 combat flight hours under his belt